ballyhoo: "one thing wrong ... It's Alive" |
20th century history seemed to destabilize, with new
technologies, mass migrations, and a range of time-limited phenomena from
rock n’ roll to genocide. Industrialization, effectively, made us test subjects. The fluctuations called for nervous
parody.
Larry
Cohen, the late exploitation auteur, typically used high-concept as a stalking
horse, building a provocative film around some scary-funny threat (e.g., revived Aztec god Q, addictive dessert The Stuff). Recalling the shock of a baby’s tantrum, Cohen invented a movie-monster for the cocooning, post-Vietnam U.S.:
homicidal infants. Cradled in a Bernard
Herrmann score, the blunt-headed metaphor remains morbidly funny (for some of
us) half-a-century later.
The
first and best of a trilogy, It’s Alive (1973) is the singular fertility narrative of Frank and Lorene Davis (the first-names evoke horror
history). Suburban and white, they’re
habituated to television, prescription pills and cow’s milk — a motif, as when
the Carnation man becomes prey — and live in California, where trends start. Americans believe in “progress," and the new parents seem fairly indifferent to causes. The smartly satiric horror film ends dropping-the-mic: “Another one’s been born in Seattle.”
toughest job in the world ... |
While
acknowledging the comic angle, It’s Alive
centers on John P. Ryan’s titanic performance as Frank Davis, as he's betrayed by friends
and fate. Still, he can’t erase
his issue. His Job-like travails deliver
twin themes for the franchise: Americans have become fatalistic; the parent-child bond is nearly unbreakable.
The themes mutually reinforce, e.g., repeated speculation the mutants have superior resistance to pollution, similar to the children in These Are the Damned.
The series is less interested in
the babies than in society’s reactions. As
in Night of the Living Dead, most
characters are comically quick-to-adjust. As writer-director of the trilogy, Cohen favors canted-angle shots of figures darting here and there:
the “normal” characters are as flighty and reflexive as the babies. If the sequels are less nimble than the
original, and repetitive, that might also be the point.
It Lives Again
(1978) posits a hidden colony, for humane study.
Despite help from new dad Frederic Forrest, the rogue pediatricians are themselves
too geriatric to manage their charges. Meantime,
the genetic shuffling seems to multiply, e.g., a birthday party where tykes
crawl under low branches, and the birthday-girl looks like a boy. The location is a memorably cinematic
hillside, symbol of the scramble for supremacy.
The babies are unnerving (models designed by Rick Baker), but the filmmakers never
solved movement. Granted, the babies do more in the third film, but in the commentaries, Cohen cites Val Lewton, in saying both sequels showed too much. Tone was a challenge, too: the premise is inherently
funny, but Cohen wanted monster movies, first, so each suspenseful scene has to be (a little) funny, and vice versa. He masters tone for the first two, but the third unravels, perhaps from
anxiety over the series' misanthropic overtones.
In the larkish It’s Alive III: Island of the
Alive (1986), a new regime gives the babies an island to themselves. Of course, these are babies, and the reparation is folly (compare A Clockwork Orange). This time, the tragic dad is Steven Jarvis
(Michael Moriarty, pre-Law and Order), a struggling actor with an antic sense of
humor. He takes to grandly introducing himself as “father of the monster.”
Disillusioned with community — the movie begins in church, courtroom and '80s comedy club — Jarvis signs on for an expedition to the baby-island (Hawaii locations). It’s
Alive III becomes a stoner comedy, as Jarvis loses any interest in
the social contract: imagine Apocalypse
Now if Willard (Martin Sheen) and the photojournalist (Dennis Hopper) were one person.
It’s Alive III
isn’t the inspired lunacy of Cohen and Moriarty’s Q, but has its charms, as the latter sings sea shanties,
threatens to defect, and muses on the babies’ telepathic
potential. The story defaults to an ending from midcentury space-invasions: an everyday element as deus ex machina. Still, the viewer is free to imagine a next
generation with stronger resistance.
Nature gave "Larry's kids" a biting chance, whether or not in response to our behavior. Pollution, abortion, and medication usage are only a few of the troubling associations. Easier to miss: clawed and fanged babies are kin to Wolverine, Freddy Krueger, Ninja Turtles foe Shredder, and now, "baby sharks." Like superheroes as a class, such forearmed characters may allude to narcissism, which seems increasingly common, even adaptive. (If Americans dislike narcissists, why elect them president?)
Larry Cohen died in March, aged 82. In assembling an impressive (if spotty) body of work, he had the disarming knack for seeming less subversive than he was. He's been deceptively influential, witness the Cohenesque likes of Gremlins, They Live, The Addiction, even Velvet Buzzsaw. He also pioneered movie franchising, in devising Return of the Magnificent Seven, Hell Up in Harlem (sequel to his Black Caesar), and the Maniac Cop series.
Like those films, the It's Alive trilogy helped validate small-budget, self-referential sequels, like the “dead” series of George Romero and Sam Raimi. In having scientists study the mutants, the sequels are comparable to Children of the Damned, Day of the Dead and Terminator Salvation. Finally, as in various franchises, notably the contemporaneous Planet of the Apes cycle, we're shown key engagements in what may be a global revolution.
Nature gave "Larry's kids" a biting chance, whether or not in response to our behavior. Pollution, abortion, and medication usage are only a few of the troubling associations. Easier to miss: clawed and fanged babies are kin to Wolverine, Freddy Krueger, Ninja Turtles foe Shredder, and now, "baby sharks." Like superheroes as a class, such forearmed characters may allude to narcissism, which seems increasingly common, even adaptive. (If Americans dislike narcissists, why elect them president?)
Larry Cohen died in March, aged 82. In assembling an impressive (if spotty) body of work, he had the disarming knack for seeming less subversive than he was. He's been deceptively influential, witness the Cohenesque likes of Gremlins, They Live, The Addiction, even Velvet Buzzsaw. He also pioneered movie franchising, in devising Return of the Magnificent Seven, Hell Up in Harlem (sequel to his Black Caesar), and the Maniac Cop series.
Like those films, the It's Alive trilogy helped validate small-budget, self-referential sequels, like the “dead” series of George Romero and Sam Raimi. In having scientists study the mutants, the sequels are comparable to Children of the Damned, Day of the Dead and Terminator Salvation. Finally, as in various franchises, notably the contemporaneous Planet of the Apes cycle, we're shown key engagements in what may be a global revolution.
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