The Deadly Mantis (The Giant Mantis)(The Incredible Praying Mantis

The Deadly Mantis (The Giant Mantis)(The Incredible Praying Mantis

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An affront to the grace and dignity of giant bug movies.

Seismic activity in the southern hemisphere triggers vibrations at the arctic icecap, releasing a giganticmantis religiosathat was frozen in the ice some 15 million years earlier. Pissed off and hungry, the enormous insect migrates south, taking out arctic radar stations, airplanes and even Eskimos along the way. As silly as this all sounds, its really not half bad. Classic cold war sci-fi with just a touch of romance thrown in for good measure.

The military use smoke and chemical bombs (maybe they contained Raid) to kill it, as the film mercifully ends.

If you dont believe the Incredible Truth movie when they say the ice caps are melting, maybe this movie will make you think twice? Who wants a giant praying Mantis running around? This movie is silly, but its got cool special effects and the storys not bad.

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The Deadly Mantis (The Giant Mantis)(The Incredible Praying Mantis)

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Better pray, a killer praying mantis is out to get ya! During the first few minutes of The Deadly Mantis, it appears like its going to be an instructional video, or a history lesson. The story and …read morethe scenario soon changes when a huge insect called a praying mantis, thaws and is set on the loose to try and take over the world that is now inhabited by human beings. The Deadly Mantis is one of the many creature features from the decade of the 50s. In this one, an overgrown praying mantis begins its journey in the cold arctic region of the North Pole. Unlike many insects, the praying mantis is a flesh eater, instead of a plant eater. This compelling fact will probably make most people shiver, especially after finding out where the monster is headed. The praying mantis in the movie has spectacular special effects for the time (1957). Youll see the mantis tower above buildings, fly over vast oceans, and more. Even better than the special effects is the movie itself. The Deadly Mantis is suspenseful, its well made, and its all the more interesting with the idea of a common insect taking over the life of humans. There are also other redeeming qualities such as seeing pilots shoot at it with several missiles, the various other military maneuvers, and more. If you like other classic horror movies that feature a creature that tries to take over, I recommend getting The Deadly Mantis. Its one of the best films that features an insect, without a doubt. NOTE: That was my Amazon review from the year 2002.

This is the one in which the villain is a huge, carnivorous praying mantis. After the titular insect has attacked several people in a remote Arctic region, Col. Joe Parkham (Craig Stevens) swings into action. Parkham and his associates, Dr. Ned Jackson (William Hopper) and Neds assistant Margie Blake (Alix Talton), track the predatory mantis as it heads southward to Washington DC (how did it get past customs?) The green monstrosity meets its Waterloo in Manhattan Tunnel, where it is bombarded with poison gas (a little Raid or Black Flag might have come in handy). Some of the Arctic scenes in The Deadly Mantis were clumsily culled from the 1933 drama SOS Iceberg and a handful of Air Force training films.

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The Deadly Mantis (The Giant Mantis)(The Incredible Praying Mantis)

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Yep so 1957 was most definitely the year of the big bug thriller movie, talk about over kill! After the huge success of Them! in 1954 the genre was alive and kicking followed closely by the excellent Tarantula in 1955. Since that explosion of insectoid goodness, studios at the time were systematically going through every known bug they could to make a horror sci-fi. Any bug that could be transformed into a huge slimy, fanged beastie was slapped up on the screen. This third movie from the era (I think third?), as you can clearly tell, is all about the exploits of a giant Praying Mantis, cos they look scary right! A volcano erupts (as they frequently do in these films) which in turn causes the Polar region to shift and break apart, which in turn releases a giant Mantis that had been trapped in the ice for millions of years. Cue the Mantis running around and eating lots of stereotypical military types until it can be trapped and killed with extreme, yet polite, prejudice. Now, far be it for me to take the piss too much, but…holy tentacles this was a fun flick! Yes thats right, you thought I was gonna shit all over it didnt you, well hold on. OK so the plot is ridiculous and virtually a carbon copy of every other big bug movie ever made. A natural disaster releases the monster bug or its the result of some kind of experiment, either or. From there on its the simple process of watching a predictable trio of, a good looking bloke, an attractive female and an old intelligent scientist type, discussing tactics to destroy the bug whilst others get eaten. Then eventually they manage to succeed but not before many innocent faceless people have perished, everyones a winner. The film initially starts out like a documentary for schools or some kind of news reel. It goes on for for at least 5/6 minutes about the military and how they are building this base in northern Canada with all these early warning barriers that cross the entire country. Its all your typical Cold war malarkey, in case the Ruskies attack via the Poles. But this intro goes on and on, I started to wonder if I had the right thing playing. Anyway the big question is of course how the hell did a giant Mantis get trapped in ice (or whatever it was before it was ice), at the Poles (where ever it was before it was the Poles), and manage to survive for millions of years. Although, I guess a bigger question would be, how the hell did a Mantis get to be giant in the first place. The main attraction of this movie is of course the giant Mantis and the way the effects team created it. Overall its a bloody good rubber bug puppet and model combination, it actually looks like a genuinely real Mantis of epic proportions with all the correct details and shape. More importantly it looks quite scary and intimidating, it does actually lend some genuine scary atmosphere to the proceedings when it lurks in the background. A lot of that is down to the correct shape of the insect with its long, thin, pointy, jagged, sharp looking legs, the eerie sound it makes, and those two big silver emotionless eyes. The short sequences of the bug flying are also well realised, the only downside with this, and much like all giant bug movies, the bug roars like a flippin dinosaur, or Godzilla. The best sequence on show has to be the quick scene where the Mantis climbs up the Washington Monument, that actually looks really good all things considered. The movie takes on a very King Kong-esque approach as the Mantis eventually makes it way to New York, after fighting off some jet fighters along the way (ahem! copyright). To avoid a complete rip-off the big bug ends up crawling into the Manhattan Tunnel to recover, this in fact leads to a sequence where a group of blokes go in after the bug all dressed up in biohazard type suits. This one scene actually reminded me of many modern sci-fi movies. A group of characters all suited up in special outfits, creeping down a dark space with flashlights, all culminating in the heroic final group pose shot when they find the creature. This whole sequence was probably the slickest in the movie and gave it some real gravitas. Alas the ending lets everything down with such a weak cliched display of male chauvinism as the male lead virtually bullies the female into kissing him…right next to the huge dead bug. Its like they just killed it, and that turned them on (or him), sadistic tendencies. As always plenty of good and bad to be found, the small Eskimo village sequence is probably the daftest and most amusing. And I still cant work out how no one thinks to shoot this thing in the eyes, it has two huge silver eyes, shoot those surely, pretty sure that would stop it straight away. Anyway despite the odd little expected flaws this is still a solid bug flick and easily one of the best in my opinion.

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A Fantastic Woman (Una mujer fantstica)

Fun entry into the giant bug movies of the 1950s

One of Universal-International cheapie 50s bug movies. Bring on the DDT.

Having already been through ants, grasshoppers and spiders, the giant bug movie was clearly running the risk of making the entire sci-fi subgenre unbelievable.

Very 50s sci-fi with giant insect on the climb, and typically fun overall.

HorrorMystery & SuspenseScience Fiction & FantasyRomance


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