Friday, March 20, 2009

Vault Master's TOP TEN KILLER ANIMAL FILMS: #10 - Prophecy (1979)


Prophecy (1979)
a.k.a. Prophecy: The Monster Movie
102 minutes / Color / Rated R


The Culprit(s): Mutated Wildlife; most notably "Katadin," a fig-bucking mutant grizzly bear with a foul temper.

The Plot: Dr. Robert Verne (Robert Foxworth) is an inner-city doctor who is investigating claims that a logging company is polluting the environment, somewhere up in Maine. His continued testing and research eventually reveals that the loggers are using methyl-mercury, a harmful substance (and mutagen!) that can result in severe medical problems, deformed babies, giant tadpoles, enormous trout, killer raccoons, and giant mutant grizzly bears! Once he obtains proof (in the form of two sickly mutant bear cubs), Dr. Verne, his wife (Talia Shire!), and their Native American allies (Armand Assante and Victoria Racimo!) prepare to blow the lid off the logging firm's dirty secret. But a monkey-wrench is thrown into the works by the cubs' vengeful mother, Katadin, and soon, Doc Verne and company find themselves in a desperate fight for survival against a deadly freak of nature.

Why it made the list: I'm sure many of you are surprised that this eco-thriller made it to my list, and I can't blame you. Director John Frankenheimer took a very serious approach with this film, and that resulted in some extensively boring scenes and many unintentional laughs. (Frankenheimer most definitely should have made this a tongue-in-cheek affair.) Still, despite the ludicrous plot and lethargic pace, this cautionary tale does provide us with some much needed mutant bear-on-man action. The real show-stopper here, is the "exploding sleeping bag scene." It is easily the best kill in the film and is, in my opinion, one of the greatest deaths ever captured on celluloid!

What's that? You say you're not familiar with this historic cinematic moment? Then check it out for yourself below!



Why YOU should watch it: Because it has a mutant f*cking bear as well as the aforementioned "exploding sleeping bag" scene. Sure there are other highlights (e.g. Talia Shire getting mauled by a slimy mutant puppet; an Armand Assante stunt-double doing a cannonball through a window; an insane raccoon that gets tossed into a fireplace), but nothing will ever top that sleeping bag scene. Never.

Is it worthy of a remake?
Hell yes! If someone like James "Slither" Gunn got his paws (no pun intended) on the rights to this film and wanted to redo it, he would have my blessing. I really think it could work if the film makers (and script writers) had a sense of humor about the proceedings. My only stipulation for the (highly unlikely, but not impossible) remake of "Prophecy," is that they keep the sleeping bag scene, but this time around, make sure there's some gore to go with the explosion of feathers!

Stay tuned for number nine on my "Top Ten Killer Animal Film" list, which ended up as a tie between two "nature strikes back" flicks from the 70's!

6 comments:

Saucerman said...

The poster art for "Prophecy" scared the ever-loving crap out of me when I first saw it, about eight years ago.

FilmFather said...

Hi there; officially de-lurking to chime in...

I agree with Saucerman and add that not only the poster, but the trailer for Prophecy scared the proverbial poop out me too!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xyB1P-1kfI

Then I made the mistake of watching this movie on HBO when I was about 11. It was PG, so HBO could run it at any time of day.

You're based in Susquehanna? I grew up in Tamaqua. Small world!

The Vault Master said...

I think the film had an amazing ad campaign. The poster (and later the video box art) was cool as hell (and creepy to a young child as you both pointed out), and the trailer is pure genius. Sadly the rest of the film didn't quite measure up to all the hype, but I still enjoy it quite a bit. (Or rater, I enjoy showing it to other people, just to see their reactions.)

Yeah I originally grew up in Scranton, FilmFather, then moved up here with my folks about six years ago. It's a nice area; pretty quiet, but there's not very much to do up here. How far away is Tamaqua from here anyway?

FilmFather said...

Google Maps tells me Tamaqua is about 2 hours due south from Susquehanna, with Scranton wedged almost perfectly in between. (Huh. I always thought Susky was west of Tamaqua. Now I know...)

The Vault Master said...

And knowing is half the battle! GI JOE! (Sorry, couldn't help myself.)

The Black Glove said...

Great list. Prophecy is one of those defining moments for me as a horror fan. I saw it with my parents, during daylight hours, left the theater feeling ill at ease- knowing that I had to spend the night hours in the woods where we lived. Yeah, I had some nasty nightmares that night. HA! Keep up the excellent work,VM.