Watchers (film)
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Watchers | |
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Directed by | Jon Hess |
Screenplay by | Bill Freed Damian Lee |
Based on | Watchers by Dean Koontz |
Produced by | Damian Lee David Mitchell |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Richard Leiterman |
Edited by | Bill Freda Carolle Alain Rick Fields |
Music by | Joel Goldsmith |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures (United States) Alliance Releasing (Canada)[2] |
Release date |
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Running time | 87 minutes |
Countries | Canada United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $940,173[3] |
Watchers is a 1988 science fiction horror film directed by Jon Hess and starring Corey Haim, Michael Ironside, Barbara Williams, and Lala Sloatman. It is loosely based on the 1987 novel Watchers by Dean R. Koontz.
Plot
[edit]An explosion occurs in a classified research laboratory, causing an intense fire. A mutated monster known as the OXCOM (Outside Experimental Combat Mammal) escapes and chases a golden retriever from the same lab, through the surrounding woods. The dog outruns it and the OXCOM hides in a barn. In the barn, Travis Cornell is with his girlfriend Tracey. Thinking it is her father, Travis leaves. Tracey discovers the beast and screams, summoning her father who is attacked. Meanwhile, Travis finds the dog in the back of his car and a military/police force is sweeping the area for the escapees. Travis starts to realize the dog is extraordinary and decides to keep it. Meanwhile, an NSO agent named Johnson is dispatched by the corporation to retrieve the animals.
The next morning, Travis's mother informs him that there has been an accident and that Tracey is in the hospital. Travis and his mother rush to the hospital, but Agent Johnson and his partner will not allow them to see her. Travis pushes past them into Tracey's room, only to find it completely empty. The men claim that she has been transferred to a better location. Travis is puzzled as to why the men were armed. At home, Travis' mother is displeased about the dog. She allows him to keep it when Travis shows the level of intelligence that the dog possesses. While bathing the dog, Travis sees GH3 tattooed on its ear, and concludes it is a research dog, which would explain its superior intellect.
Agent Johnson stops by Travis' house to ask questions and the dog hides. The dog tracks Travis down at school, where he types 'D ANG ER N S O' on a computer. Travis is given detention for bringing a pet to school. Meanwhile, three of Travis's friends are murdered by the OXCOM in the woods. The OXCOM then traces the dog to the school, where two staff members are killed. One is able to call the police. The now-suspicious sheriff and a policewoman arrive, and she is also killed. When the sheriff confronts Agent Johnson, he is forced to tell the sheriff the truth regarding the killer but asks that they move to a quieter location away from the press. He explains that it was a scientific project gone wrong and that the OXCOM is chasing the dog, which targets and kills anything it comes across or that has been in contact with the dog. He then abruptly murders the sheriff.
A family friend who is fixing the washing machine mentions that a man stopped by earlier asking if they owned a dog. Travis, realizing the NSO is after them, sneaks out of the house. His mother stops him before he can drive away, telling him that they are in it together. Back inside, they find their friend dead. They run upstairs with the dog, locking the bedroom door. The beast begins to break it down. The mother climbs onto the adjacent rooftop while Travis grabs a hunting gun. He tells her to start the truck and jumps out the window followed by the dog who is knocked down by the OXCOM. He fires, then picks up the injured dog, and the three drive to a veterinarian. Noticing the code on the dog's ear, the vet calls the authorities. Travis catches on and they leave the vet's office before the NSO agents can arrive. The next morning after the agents track them to the motel where they are staying, the mother creates a diversion, allowing Travis and the dog to escape the NSO agents. Travis takes the dog to his father's old cabin in the woods. His mother insists the NSO agents let her visit Tracey. Although Johnson claims the NSO is protecting her while she recovers, Travis's mother realizes that the sedated Tracey is unharmed and her room has no medical equipment and that the NSO is holding her as a prisoner.
The agents take the women to the cabin to use as hostages, but Travis throws a homemade Molotov cocktail at the NSO agents, allowing the two women to run into the cabin. Agent Johnson fires at them, but he is stopped by his partner who balks at murdering a woman and two kids. Johnson then reveals that he is the corporation's third experiment, a genetically engineered assassin with no conscience, and kills his partner. In a tussle with Johnson, Travis is stabbed in the leg with his own knife. The dog jumps through the window and onto Johnson, allowing Travis to stab him through the neck. Johnson, unfazed by the stab wound, claims that they will die anyway before being shot to death by Mrs Cornell. Armed with homemade weapons, the team readies themselves for the beast. When it arrives, Travis shoots at it and it throws the dog into the truck windshield. Travis follows it into the woods, where he finds it injured and sobbing. At first, he cannot bring himself to kill it. It then attacks him and he is forced to finish it off. Travis, his mother, Tracey and the dog regroup and leave in the beat-up truck as the farmhouse burns down.
Release
[edit]The film was given a limited release in the United States by Universal Pictures in December 1988.[citation needed] It grossed $940,173 at the U.S. box office.[citation needed] It was released on VHS and LaserDisc by International Video Entertainment in 1989.[citation needed]
Artisan Entertainment released the film as a double feature with Watchers 2 on DVD in 2003. The DVD was presented in full frame with no bonus features and is now out of print.[4]
Production
[edit]At the time, Watchers was the most expensive U.S. production to take advantage of Canadian Tax Shelter laws.[1]
Reception
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2017) |
Critical reception for Watchers has been mostly negative. Film critic Leonard Maltin awarded the film one and a half out of a possible four stars, calling it "awful" and criticized the film's monster as being "ludicrous".[5]
Sequels
[edit]Despite there being no sequel novels by Koontz, producer Roger Corman has released three sequels - Watchers II, Watchers 3 and Watchers Reborn.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Brunet, Robin (1989). "Watchers". Cinefantastique. Fourth Castle Micromedia. Retrieved July 21, 2023.
- ^ "Watchers (1988)". Library and Archives Canada. 12 May 2015. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
- ^ Watchers at Box Office Mojo
- ^ "Watchers / Watchers II (Double Feature)". dvdempire.com. Retrieved 2011-03-31.
- ^ Leonard Maltin (29 September 2015). Turner Classic Movies Presents Leonard Maltin's Classic Movie Guide: From the Silent Era Through 1965: Third Edition. Penguin Publishing Group. p. 1532. ISBN 978-0-698-19729-9.
External links
[edit]- EOFFTV credits, plot summary
- Watchers at IMDb
- Watchers at Rotten Tomatoes
- Watchers at the TCM Movie Database
- Watchers at AllMovie
- 1988 films
- 1988 horror films
- 1988 independent films
- 1980s science fiction horror films
- American science fiction horror films
- Canadian science fiction horror films
- Carolco Pictures films
- English-language Canadian films
- Films scored by Joel Goldsmith
- Films about dogs
- Films based on American novels
- Films based on horror novels
- Films shot in Vancouver
- 1980s monster movies
- Films based on works by Dean Koontz
- American monster movies
- Films produced by Damian Lee
- Watchers (film series)
- Films with screenplays by Damian Lee
- 1980s English-language films
- 1980s American films
- 1980s Canadian films
- 1988 science fiction films
- English-language science fiction horror films
- English-language independent films