Swamp Thing
makes it Blu-ray debut in a Blu-ray/DVD combo pack being released by Scream
Factory (Shout! Factory) next month. Directed by Wes Craven and starring Adrienne Barbeau, this
film is not really a horror movie, but more (as Adrienne Barbeau says in an
interview in the special features) a fairytale. It tells the tale of a group of
scientists who are working on a special, secret project in the swamp,
developing “a plant with an animal’s
aggressive power for survival,” as Doctor Holland (Ray Wise) says in an
early scene. The idea is to fight world hunger.
Of course, a group of bad guys led by Arcane (Louis Jourdan) wishes to
possess it for its own selfish, nefarious purposes.
Alice Cable (Adrienne Barbeau) is the newest scientist to
arrive at the facility, and though she is there only briefly before everything
goes wrong, she and Dr. Alec Holland fall in love. This is just as Dr. Holland
finds surprising success in his work, creating a vegetable cell with an animal
nucleus. A group of bad guys in
camouflage, including Ferret (David Hess, from Wes Craven’s Last House On The Left), storm their
facility, killing almost everyone. Dr. Holland catches fire after a vile of his
serum explodes, and he runs into the swamp. Adrienne manages to hide Holland’s
final notebook with the formula before she’s captured.
Arcane is one of those arch villains, those megalomaniacs
that abound in comic books. His loving secretary tells him, “The world will bow or starve.” It’s good
to have that kind of support. But don’t worry – Swamp Thing soon rises to help
Alice Cable.
There is some good humor throughout the film. Jude, the
kid who works at the gas station, is kind of great at times. When Cable kicks
at a soda machine, Jude tells her, “Kickin’
don’t help nothing. You gotta punch it.” And you can’t help but feel for Swamp Thing. It’s tough –
his sister is dead, the girl he just met and fell for is frightened of him, his
lab is destroyed, his colleagues are all gone. Yet he still finds beauty in the
flowers.
This movie is much better than I’d remembered it being.
Though there is some ridiculous stuff, like Arcane having infiltrated the
scientists by wearing a mask that looks exactly like one of them, and the
magical healing power of the Swamp Thing. And the end is very, very silly. (And
what about the notebook with the formula? Shouldn’t they retrieve that?)
Special Features
As you would expect in a special edition like this one,
there are lots of special features. There are two separate commentary tracks.
The first is with writer/director Wes Craven. Wes Craven always does good
commentary tracks, and this one is moderated by Sean Clark, who also moderated the commentary on Deadly Blessing. Wes Craven talks about working in the swamp, making a lot of noise to scare off
snakes and alligators. He was not a comic book reader as a kid, and so not
familiar with the Swamp Thing comic book before taking on this project. He
talks a bit about having to make cuts to stay on budget. Apparently the
completion bond company was problematic. It was mostly in the third act where
cuts were made, including an underwater sequence that he had planned to shoot.
His anecdotes about the fire stunt are particularly interesting. Wes says the
stunt man tried out various chemicals next to his family’s pool when teaching
himself how to do fire stunts. (The same stuntman did the first stunt in A Nightmare On Elm Street.) Wes: “I learned a lot of things on this film. One
is you never talk to the actors or actresses about your problems as a director.
Because they don’t want to hear that. They want to feel like you’re totally in
control.”
The second commentary track is by William Munns, the makeup effects artist who created the Swamp Thing look. (This
track is also moderated, this time by Michael Felsher.) He talks about
getting his start in the business, and about teaching makeup in the seventies.
(There is a long gap in this commentary track, by the way, after he talks about
his start and before he begins talking about his experience on Swamp Thing.) He talks about the
problems with the suits. His bid for the job had stated he would need twelve
weeks, but when he got the go-ahead, they told him he had only six weeks. Then
he did a sculpt with one stunt guy, who then ended up not doing the film. It
ended up being Dick Durock, who was not the same size. Of
course, Munns has nothing but positive things to say about Dick Durock.
Interestingly, William Munns actually does some of the fight scene at the end
of the film, wearing the Arcane monster suit.
There are also several short features. The first is
“Tales From The Swamp,” and is a seventeen-minute interview with Adrienne Barbeau.
She says she loved the script, which is why she signed on, but then the budget
got cut, so the movie that was made wasn’t the movie that was intended. She
talks about doing horror films, about being identified with that genre. As I
mentioned earlier, she says she didn’t see Swamp Thing as a horror film, but
more of a fairytale. And of course she talks about the difficulties of filming
in swamps.
The second is “Hey, Jude!” This is an interview with
Reggie Batts, who played Jude in the film. He talks about getting the role, and
about his experiences with the rest of the cast. (This feature is approximately
fourteen and a half minutes.) “That Swamp Thing: A Look Back With Len Wein” is
an interview with the creator of Swamp Thing. He tells the anecdote of coming
up with the title, and talks about his feelings about the film.
The special features also include the theatrical trailer,
as well as photo galleries of posters, lobby cards and behind-the-scenes
photos.
Swamp Thing is
scheduled to be released on August 6, 2013 through Scream Factory, a division
of Shout! Factory.
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