Gremlins (1984)
In
the early 1980s, Steven Spielberg became a superstar director with
hits like E.T. and Raiders
of the Lost Ark. However, people often forget he scored
just as many hits by producing films for his filmmaker buddies,
including box-office champs like Poltergeist
and The Goonies.
One of the finest of these early-80s Spielberg productions was Gremlins,
a good old-fashioned monster movie that was just as funny as it
was scary.
Gremlins begins with inventor Rand Peltzer trying to
find a quick gift for his son Billy before returning home from a
New York trip. He settles on a unique pet in a Chinatown curio
shop - a cute, furry creature known as a Mogwai.
Before he leaves, he is warned by the shop's owner that three
rules must be obeyed by a Mogwai owner: 1) Keep it away from
bright light, 2) Don't get any water on it, and 3) Never, never
ever feed it after midnight.
Rand takes note of these rules and returns home with the Mogwai
to his idyllic small-town home of Kingston Falls.
Rand's gift is an instant hit: Billy loves his adorable new
pet, naming it Gizmo and taking it everywhere he goes.
Unfortunately, he and his friends also begin breaking the rules of
Mogwai care. When water is accidentally spilled on Gizmo, it
causes him to multiply and produce a number of mischievous little
brothers.
Among
these is the mean-tempered Stripe. Soon enough, the new Mogwai get
hold of some food after midnight and this causes them to change
from cute fur-balls into nasty, scaly monsters dubbed 'Gremlins'.
In a matter of hours, the suburban paradise of Kingston Falls
transforms into a riot zone as the Gremlins multiply by the
hundreds and overtake the town. Billy manages to escape the mayhem
along with Gizmo and his girlfriend Kate.
Together, this trio has to figure out how to end the Gremlin
menace before they escape the town and spread out into the rest of
the world. This quest leads to a climax that manages to be amusing
and horrifying all at once.
Gremlins is a delight of the most wicked variety,
succeeding both as a horror movie and a sly satire of horror
movies. Director Joe Dante, who had previously shown a gift for
humour-laced horror with films like Piranha
and The Howling, juggled the
chills and laughs with ease.
He often presented both at once, most notably the moment where
Billy's mother defends herself from a gremlin onslaught by using
kitchen tools like the blender and the microwave as weapons. In
another great bit, the Gremlins overrun a cinema showing Snow
White and end up singing along with the Seven Dwarves.
The
film also benefited from a gifted and diverse cast. Zach Galligan
made an appealing hero and Phoebe Cates blended toughness with
vulnerability as Kate. Ms. Cates also got to deliver an
unforgettable monologue, wherein she reveals the reason she
doesn't like the holiday season.
Hoyt Axton was charming as the clumsy inventor dad, and Corey
Feldman made an early appearance as one of Billy's pals. There
were also a number of funny bit parts: Dick Miller as a former
army man whose fear of Gremlins came true in the worst way, and
Polly Holliday (best known as Flo on TV sitcom Alice)
as the mean-spirited millionaire who gets a memorable comeuppance.
And then there were the Gremlins themselves. These little
creatures were marvels of film technology, truly coming alive for
the viewers thanks to effective and imaginative design. They were
created by Chris Walas, the same man who would later turn Jeff
Goldblum into The Fly.
The Gremlins' imaginative voicing came from the likes of Howie
Mandel and Michael Winslow (the sound-effects king from the Police
Academy movies). Their humorous vocal stylings kept the
Mogwai from being too cute and the Gremlins from getting too
creepy.
When it was released in 1984, Gremlins became a lighting
rod for controversy when it got a PG rating despite the intense
nature of its scary scenes. In fact, the furore over this film and
another Steven Spielberg production, Indiana
Jones and the Temple of Doom, led to the creation of the
PG-13 rating.
However,
this controversy also helped the film become a box-office smash:
it made $150 million in the US alone and just as much elsewhere in
the world.
So you shouldn't feed a Mogwai after midnight. But when exactly
does it stop being "after midnight" exactly? And what
about if you were on a plane and you passed between time zones?
And as for the stuff about not getting Mogwais wet . . . what
would happen if it was a real humid day?
The holes in Joe Dante's film are gaping to say the least, but
to the director's credit he points out the fact in the superb,
homage-heavy 1988 sequel Gremlins 2 - The New Batch.
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