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Them!

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For the films of the same name, see Them (2006 film) or Them (film).
Them!
Original film poster
Directed byGordon Douglas
Written byTed Sherdeman
Russell Hughes
George Worthing Yates (story)
Produced byDavid Weisbart
StarringJames Whitmore
Edmund Gwenn
Joan Weldon
James Arness
Onslow Stevens
Sean McClory
Chris Drake
CinematographySidney Hickox
Edited byThomas Reilly
Music byBronislau Kaper
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
1954
Running time
94 min.
LanguageEnglish

Them! is a 1954 black and white science fiction film about man's encounter with a nest of radiation-giganticized ants. It is based on an original story treatment by George Worthing Yates, was developed into a screenplay by Ted Sherdeman and Russell Hughes for Warner Bros. Pictures Inc., which was produced by David Weisbart and directed by Gordon Douglas for the company. It starred James Whitmore, Edmund Gwenn, Joan Weldon and James Arness.

One of the first of the "nuclear monster" movies, and the first "big bug" film, Them! was the biggest moneymaker for Warner's in the year of its release.

Plot

File:Them01.jpg
Lobby card -Them!

The film begins with New Mexico State Police Sergeant Ben Peterson (Whitmore) investigating the disappearance of a vacationing FBI agent and his wife, the Ellisons, after discovery of their little girl wandering the desert near Alamogordo, New Mexico, mute and in a state of shock. The FBI sends in Ellison's fellow agent Robert Graham (Arness) to assist. The Ellison trailer is found pulled asunder by some great force, with strange, unfamiliar tracks all around the wreckage. The tracks bring the case to the attention of Dept. of Agriculture scientists Doctors Harold and Pat Medford (Gwenn and Weldon), a father/daughter team of entomologists who are brought in after the FBI fails to identify the strange tracks. The elder Doctor Medford arrives on the scene with a theory, but will not disclose it until he tries an experiment on the Ellison girl, having her smell the contents of a vial of formic acid, which frees her from her state of near-catatonic withdrawal, screaming "Them! Them!" Returning to the desert site where the wreckage was discovered with Peterson, Graham and his daughter, Medford has his theory dramatically given its final proof when the group encounters a patrol of foraging ants, mutated by atomic radiation to the size of automobiles.Peterson and Graham kill one of the ants with gunfire from their sidearms and the patrol car tommygun.

A company of the US Army is then brought in, led by General O'Brien (Stevens), which locates the ants' nest and exterminates the inhabitants with poison gas, but not before its discovered that two young queens hatched and flew away to establish new nests forcing the pentagon to monitor news and police reports for unusual,strange and weird activities(such as sightings of flying saucers) in the area the two queens are thought to have flown to try and locate their nests.One ends up inside the hold on board an ocean-going freighter, which is overrun by the ants, then sunk by the US Navy cruiser USS Milwaukee which responds to its distress call.only two crewmen of the ship are able to be rescued by the Milwaukee, which is then kept at sea in order to keep news of the mutant ants secret to prevent a panic. The other sets up her nest in the Los Angeles storm sewer system, forcing the Army to declare martial law and launch a major assault. Peterson rescues two young boys trapped by the ants in a sewer tunnel, at the cost of his own life. The nest's queen and egg chamber are destroyed with flamethrowers, but the senior Dr. Medford issues a grim warning that the atomic genie has been let out of the bottle, and further horrors may await mankind.

Cast

Actor Role
James Whitmore Sgt. Ben Peterson
Edmund Gwenn Dr. Harold Medford
Joan Weldon Dr. Pat Medford
James Arness FBI Agent Robert Graham
Onslow Stevens Gen. O'Brien
Sean McClory Maj. Kibbee
Chris Draker Ed Blackburn
Sandy Descher Ellinson girl
Mary Ann Hokanson Mrs. Lodge
Don Shelton Trooper Captain Fred Edwards
Fess Parker Alan Crotty
Olin Howlin Jensen, the drunk
Leonard Nimoy Army Sergeant at command headquarters (one short scene)

Other actors who appear in small parts include John Beradino, Willis Bouchey, Booth Colman, Richard Deacon, Lawrence Dobkin, Ann Doran, Douglas Spencer, Dub Taylor, and Harry Wilson.

When casting his planned Davy Crockett episode of the Disneyland television show, Walt Disney viewed the film to see James Arness who had been recommended for the role. However, Disney was impressed by a brief scene of Fess Parker insisting that he saw the giant flying ants despite being held in an institution. Disney realized he had found his Crockett.[1]

Production

Opening Color title from Them! Note background is b/w, only the letters and punctuation have color

When Them began production in early 1954, it was originally conceived to be in 3-D and WarnerColor. During pre-production, tests were to be shot in color and 3-D. A color tests were shot, but when it was time to shoot the other test, WB's "All Media" 3-D camera rig malfunctioned and no tests were shot. The next day, a memo was sent out that the color and 3-D aspects of the film were to be scrapped, and that black and white and widescreen would be the preferred format. Because of the preparation of certain shots, however, many of the camera set-ups for 3-D still remain, such as the opening titles and flame-throwers that are shot at the camera.[citation needed]

Although WB was dissatisfied with the color results, the opening titles, however, were printed in color against a black and white background to give the opening of the film a "punch." This effect was achieved by an Eastman Color section spliced into each print.[citation needed] The VHS release in 1985, the subsequent laserdisc, and the current DVD release have the lettering of the main title colorized on the otherwise black-and-white background.

Cultural Legacy

Joe Dante's 1993 movie Matinee, starring John Goodman, parodies both Them! and the lifestyle of horror movie director William Castle. Elaborate and deliberately hokey special effects are shown. Another parody is an unfinished episode of Invader Zim called "Those!".

Them's distinctive, shrill giant ant sound effect would be used in the 2006 film The Ant Bully.

The film was the inspiration for 'We are THEM!' (2005), by visual artist Mark Hatter. The project used miniature stage sets, creating a satire of an ant-sized world, claiming to "Educate and Improve" the common black garden ant.

The film inspired a Misfits song of the same name which appeared on their Famous Monsters album.

Them! has inspired a number of games:

References

  1. ^ "Uncle John's 4-ply Bathroom Reader." New York: St. Martin's Press, 2003.

External links

Template:Americanfilms1950s