 Village Of The Giants (1965)
Instinctively, you know there's something special happening
when a film opens with a half dozen teens engaging in a muddy,
rain-soaked frottage to a throbbing sensual soundtrack. And so -
in all its go-go dancing fury - begins the 1965 feature Village
of the Giants, starring Beau Bridges, Tommy Kirk and Ron
Howard.
A group of juvenile delinquents led by Fred, having crashed
their car, decide to have a mad mud dancing party instead of
getting help.
And perhaps that would have been the end of the story, were it
not for a random encounter with the invention of the town
boy-genius. Played by "little" Ronnie Howard, the kid is
known to his older brother, and to the town in general, simply as
"Genius".

Genius' invention, a malleable lump of a bright pink
play-doh-like substance appropriately called 'Goop', causes anyone
or anything that ingests it to grow 10 times bigger than its
natural state.
Genius tests out his invention on a couple of hapless ducks
that instantly grow to monstrous proportions and invade a local
disco where The Beau Brummels are playing. Everyone celebrates
good times with the dancing ducks. Much groovy shaking takes
place.
That's when the juvenile delinquents take notice that something
in this town is mighty strange. Teens being teens, they vow to get
their hands on the goop so that they can profit by it and,
assumedly, buy new wheels.
Fred and the gang manage to steal the goop after a rumble with
the town's goodie-two-shoes teenagers (who can't fight to save
their lives) and retreat to an empty movie theatre where they lay
low. In a moment of sophomoric, peer-pressuring dares, each member
of the gang decides to eat a piece of goop, resulting in one of
the movie's great scenes.
As each grows to become 30-foot teenagers, they one by one
burst out of their clothes almost revealing some nakedness. Of
course, the girls in the group have ludicrously large busts, which
were already threatening to tear apart their clothing before they
ate the goop. The imagination can take over from there . . .
If Steven Spielberg had directed this scene, he surely would
have used the same technology that brought Jurassic Park to
the screen in order to show the post-goop growth shots.
Considering that the budget for Village of the Giants
was considerably less than anything Spielberg has ever made (even
in college), director Bert I. Gordon chose the cheaper, and
arguably more charming, device of simply having the actors breathe
in heavily, creating the 'illusion' that they were getting larger.
After sewing together clothing using the theatre curtains to
create a decadently sublime pseudo-Roman ensemble, the kids (doing
what any giant teenagers would) take over the town by kidnapping
the sheriff's daughter and dancing suggestively in the main
square.
Once again, the seductive title theme, composed by Jack Nitzche,
is used over the infamous town square dancing scene, which
includes a local teenager grabbing onto the makeshift brassiere of
one of the giant gals and holding on for dear life as she go-go's
her way to cinema history.
Eventually, Genius figures out an antidote to the Goop, but
getting the teens to take a dose of their well-deserved medicine
is no easy feat, even for a pint-sized brainiac.
Though unintentionally campy in parts, Village of the Giants
survives as a lasting testament to the swinging but turbulent
60's.
Adapted from an H.G. Wells book by Gordon who, not
surprisingly, also made The Amazing Colossal Man, Giants
used gargantuan terrorising teenagers as a clear metaphor for
then-contemporary fears about out of control youth.
Juvenile delinquent stories had been a popular theme dating
back to the 1950's - Giants simply took the genre and blew it up.
Literally. The film served as a handicapped cautionary tale about
youthful excess and the dangers of the scientific and
technological advances of the day.
As a film, it might well have been forgotten were it not for
the need of large volumes of cheap movies to use as television
syndication fodder before the advent and eventual domination of
cable TV.
More recently, after years of hanging on to the edge of
obscurity, MGM finally released this time capsule of Bert I.
Gordon's genius on video, giving the opportunity to hordes of new
viewers to discover a relic of trash cinema.
Or maybe Giants is more than that, because there are a
lot of trashy movies made but few of them leave in their wake such
a lasting impression.
Maybe it was the novelty of seeing a young Beau Bridges and Ron
Howard. Maybe it was the music urging you to get your go-go on.
Maybe it was the image of that tiny teenager hanging off a pair of
grotesquely large falsies. Or an exotic cocktail of so many
ingredients that all you know at the bottom of it is that you are
deliriously drunk.
TRIVIA NOTE
The fountain that Freddy Cannon sings in front of is the same
one seen in the opening of Friends.
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