Saturday, April 01, 2006

Slither Puts The Creepy Back Into Horror-Comedy!

It’s refreshing to see an old-fashioned horror-comedy where a room of hardened critics laugh only in the right places! For that that matter, it’s refreshing to see a horror-comedy where all the laughs are intentional – and where there is more than just a series of jump moments. James Gunn’s “Slither” is creepy, scary and hilarious – simultaneously…

In an opening that is an homage to the original “The Blob” [the 1958 creepiest that introduced Steve McQueen to movie stardom], we see a meteor rumble towards the Earth, before cutting to Police Chief Bill Pardy [Nathan Filion] and Constable Wally [Don Thompson] sitting in their squad car behind a sign welcoming us to Wheelsy, North Carolina.

Wally is timing a bird with his radar gun while Pardy appears to be napping. Clearly, Wheelsy is not a thriving metropolis. As Wally laments overestimating the bird’s speed, Pardy tries to get back to sleep – as the meteor flashes to ground behind them. We see the meteor, in the forest, as it cracks open…

The next day, we see Starla Grant [Elizabeth Banks] teaching a class – and the male students paying more attention to her demurely clad body than to the lesson. We also meet Mayor MacReady [Gregg Henry] as he blasts someone for parking in his spot – then smiles sweetly at some children across the street and says “Good Morning.” Nobody throws an onscreen tantrum better than Henry.

That evening, town rich guy and definite redneck, Grant Grant [the wonderful Michael Rooker] turns down a come on from Brenda Guiterrez [Brenda James] and heads home. When he climbs into bed feeling amorous, and is turned down by his lovely wife, Starla, he drives directly to Brenda’s place. She tells him she’s had a crush on him forever and takes him into the forest to show him where she had carved their initials into a tree.

Grant discovers the crash site and follows a trail of slime that leads away from the meteor – and comes upon something that shoots a dart into his chest and we’re off to the proverbial races!

Between Gunn’s intelligent, witty script and a terrifically atmospheric score by Tyler Bates, “Slither” mixes humor, creepiness and some genuine scares to give us one of the best horror movies – comedy or not – in recent years. There’s enough gore to satisfy most splatter fans and more than enough terrific dialogue and visual gags to generate laughs.

The best humor comes in weird places – like Grant’s explanations for the physical changes he’s undergoing. “It’s a bee sting,” he intones as his wife flinches from his rapidly swelling, and lumpy head. Another character tries to explain his changes Sheriff Pardy with a hopeful, “Poison ivy, maybe?”

Something else that’s refreshing about “Slither:” despite the zombification of the townspeople by the monstrous Grant, this is not “Dawn of the Dead.” Gunn is not trying to camouflage socio-political commentary here. The movie is all about making people laugh, shiver and jump – and not necessarily in that order.

Besides the opening shout out to “The Blob,” there are other homages, as well. My personal favorite is a double-barreled shout out to two movies: a bathtub scene that recalls both David Cronenberg’s “Shivers” and the scene that, in turn, homaged – the bathtub scene in Wes Craven’s “Deadly Blessing.” In Gunn’s hands, the scene is both scary and, due to some blatant sexual innuendo, hysterically funny – it got one of the biggest laughs from the critics at the screening I attended.

Another great thing about the film is that Gunn’s script features set-ups that don’t pay off in the ways you expect. When Otis Shutmeyer [William MacDonald] heads off to help a posse track down the morphed Grant, he tells his family to stay inside – but the camera cuts to his teen-aged daughter, Kylie [Tania Saulnier], as if to suggest that she will be disobeying him later that evening. The payoff to that set-up is so different that it plays a pivotal role in the story.

Nathan Filion’s Sheriff Pardy shares a number of idiomatic traits with “Serenity’s” Mal Reynolds, but somehow, Filion spins these traits in such a way that instead of being anything resembling heroic and commanding, Pardy comes off as being clearly inept and completely unprepared for any emergency – let alone this one. It’s a bravura performance that also sets off other characters extremely well.

Saulnier’s Kylie doesn’t enter the story until we’re well into it, but instead of being the annoying kid that no one takes seriously, she winds up being pivotal to everyone’s survival. The scene that puts her in the know is one of the film’s more grotesque moments.

Some of the best pure scare moments come hard on the heels of humor [and vice-versa]. One of the best of these is the fate of Brenda – and the realization that – without her even knowing it – she is being used by Grant in two equally horrifying ways. An ambush, of sorts, is one – the other is much worse.

Banks’ Starla does a great job of dealing with the hideous changes to her husband. She seems, at once, smarter and tougher than Pardy – and she’s definitely smarter than Grant. She also makes it possible for us to understand why Pardy’s been in love with her forever.

Another cool thing about “Slither” is that Gunn has cast a number of genre veterans in small, but key roles. You may not know where you’ve seen them before, but you will recognize William MacDonald, Ben Cotton and Lorena Gale, for example. Troma studio head Lloyd Kaufman, and Rob Zombie also make cameo appearances.

With a horror movie, naturally effects are key. Gunn has used a mix of CG and practical effects for “Slither.” We can see the CG when Grant’s arm is “all bendy,” for example; and when we see the hordes of evil worm/slug thingies later. Virtually all the rest of the time, Grant and Brenda are in monster make-up – the prosthetics for the movie are very good.

James Gunn is a horror movie fanboy, and here, he’s made exactly the kind of movie that he likes to watch himself. In doing so, he’s made a movie that the rest of us will enjoy immensely. “Slither” is grand, unpretentious horror-comedy fun. If you’re a fan of the genre, then slide on through the slime and viscera, and check out this movie.

Grade: B+

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