Animals That Need to Have Horror Movies Made About ThemIf you've ever gotten a duck mad, you'll know what we're talking about over here.
Universal Pictures
A movie called Rogue was dumped into theaters a few weeks ago on just a handful of screens and with virtually no advertising. Predictably, nobody saw it. This is a shame, because the movie was about a GIANT CROCODILE THAT EATS PEOPLE! So was last year's Primeval, which nobody saw either. Movies about man-eating oversize animals have been a fixture since the days of King Kong. Some, like Jaws, have been great; others, like Night of the Lepus (giant rabbits!), not so much. In the 1950s it was popular to make cheap movies where basically all you did was enlarge an animal (usually through nuclear testing or radiation) and assume that audiences would be terrified of it. At various times we've seen giant ants, grasshoppers, rats, spiders, snakes, lizards, and even chickens. The physical ramifications of enlarged animals are usually ignored in these films, which is just one of many reasons to be disillusioned by the Hollywood lie factory. University of Chicago science professor Michael C. LaBarbera wrote a fascinating (and reasonably understandable) paper on this a few years ago, called "The Biology of B-Movie Monsters." He notes, for example, that an ape the size of King Kong would not be able to leap and gambol about the way he does, as his bones would snap. (Think about it: You don't see elephants prancing around merrily.) In fact, most of these giant animals would barely be able to move because of their weight. OK, so maybe that takes the fun out of it. Science is kind of a killjoy. I am strongly in favor of ignoring science, both in movies and in my personal life, and so I got to thinking about the giant-animal movies. Crocodiles and spiders are old standbys. We've seen our share of big sharks, too, both in the Jaws films and the numerous low-budget rip-offs. These are fine, but why not branch out? Pay attention, Hollywood! There are many other animals still waiting for their chance in the spotlight! Bulls Sloths Squirrels Chipmunks Goats Ducks * * * * * Eric D. Snider (website) doesn't like spiders, either, but they've already been amply covered. Most Popular Stories
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