The Being
(1983)
Dir. and
written by Jackie
Kong
Starring Bill Osco, Martin Landau, Marianne
Gordon, José Ferrer, Dorothy Malone
Ah, finally, something genuinely exotic: a horror movie set
in Idaho! That may not seem exotic to some, but I don’t know much about Idaho. This
is partially my own ignorance, but I protest that I am not exclusively
at fault here; the culture doesn’t provide a casual viewer of media with much
information about Idaho. Certainly I have learned less about Idaho (a state
which Wikipedia informs me is home to over 1,700,000 people and a 64 billion
dollar economy) through general culture osmosis than I have about the fucking
Kardashians, a topic which I will go far out of my way to avoid.* Pretty
much the only thing I know is that Idaho produces potatoes. I thought it was
that state that keeps electing that crazy racist guy, but it turns out that’s Iowa.**
Sorry Idaho, I never should have doubted you or believed I knew two things
about you. A relevant anecdote: one time I was in the
Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington DC, and saw an enormous piece entitled
Electronic Superhighway: Continental US, Alaska, Hawaii by artist Nam
June Paik. It’s basically a giant map of the United States, with each state
highlighted in neon and filled with TV screens that depict videos associated
with that state. You know, there’s footage from THE WIZARD OF OZ in Kansas,
stock car racing in Indiana, lobsters in Maine. There’s usually a couple clips
for each one, highlighting the rich tapestry of Americana which gives each
place its unique character. Except Idaho. That one’s just fucking footage of
potatoes.
Consequently, I was excited to get this gritty,
man-on-the-streets tour of Idaho, specifically Pottsville Idaho, which does
appear to be a real place. Unfortunately, either Idaho really
is exactly as stuck on potatoes as I’d lazily stereotyped it, or THE BEING doesn’t
know much more about it than I do, because the movie leans pretty heavily on
potatoes, too. About the only thing it adds to my working knowledge of the state
is the minor fact that it’s plagued with pesky radioactive monsters. Which I guess is good to know, but still. It’s
basically a JAWS setup, where the responsible local sheriff (Bill Osco, billed
alternately as “Rexx Coltrane” and “Johnny Commander” – more about him later) begins
to suspect there is a land-shark type monster menacing the local populace, possibly
probably certainly due to the huge quantity of toxic waste that’s been
squirreled away around town, despite the assurances of slick city guy Garcon
Jones (Academy-award winner Martin Landau, NORTH BY NORTHWEST, THE GREATEST
STORY EVER TOLD; also, A TOWN CALLED BASTARD, TRIAL BY TERROR, ALONE IN THE
DARK) that radioactive waste is totally safe and only a bunch of superstitious
sissies would complain about having it dumped into their water source. At one
point he drinks a glass of tap water on camera to prove it’s safe, like that
one time Obama did the same thing in Flint Michigan during one of the
cringiest lowlights of his whole presidency. But sheriff Lutz knows better. He
knows that the only responsible thing to do is to close the potato fields. Wouldn’t
you know it, though, the town’s greedy Mayor (Academy-award winner José Ferrer,
CYRANO DE BERGERAC, LAWRENCE OF ARABIA; also, DRACULA’S DOG and THE SWARM) is
all, “I’m only trying to say that Pottsville, Idaho is a potato town. We need
potato dollars. If people can’t get potatoes here, they’ll be glad to get
potatoes from the fields in Idaho Falls, Nampa, or Merdian,” and, “Look, we
depend on the potato people here for our very lives, and if you close those
potato fields, we’re finished.” Fuckin bean-counters, man.
Alas, while Jones is, to all appearances, apparently correct
about the safety and perhaps even benefits of ingesting small amounts of
radioactive waste (I mean, nobody seems sick or complains about a skyrocketing
cancer rate, like you might expect them to) he did overlook the dangerous
possibility of that darn radiation mutating the local potatoes into pissed off claw-handed
cyclopean dinosaurs. Or at least, I had assumed it was potatoes. There is a
character named Marge Smith (Academy award-winner Dorothy Malone, WRITTEN IN
THE WIND; that’s right, this movie has three Oscar winners in the cast, two
of them with award already in hand!) who has this weird subplot where she’s
looking for her missing son, and multiple online sources suggest this son is,
in fact, the mutant! If that’s true, boy, I did not pick that up from the movie
at all. I just assumed her whole story was totally pointless and arbitrary, which
would be totally in line with the movie’s overall quality.
Yes, to no one’s surprise, really, THE BEING is terrible. It
starts out with a promising beheading, but what follows, unfortunately, is a
whole, whole lot of nothing, mostly consisting of various probably-improvised
little domestic vignettes about the intolerable townsfolk, with very, very
little actual mutant anywhere on-screen. I mean, there’s this whole thing with
the mayor’s uptight wife (Golden Globe winner and five-time Emmy nominee Ruth
Ann Buzzi, Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In) running an anti-pornography
campaign, and it just goes nowhere at all and I can’t imagine why it’s in the
movie. The performances are mostly broad enough that it seems like maybe
they’re going for laughs, but shouldn’t there be some, you know, jokes in
there, then?
The BEING in question -assuming the title refers to the
monster; I guess it could just as easily refer to any of the human
characters—likes to hide in confusing places, like the trunk of cars, and then
cover its crime scenes in inexplicable mutant slime. Which is fine as far as it
goes; the movie doesn’t really 100% commit to the idea that it’s sort of a
T-2000 style liquid monster that can assume solid form when it wants, but you
could read that as an explanation for why it can turn up such inexplicable
places. Uncertain about that, the movie also suggests, hey, maybe it can
tunnel? And you can damn well bet it’s one of those monsters that is really
into tossing people around with its big rubber hands. One thing it does not like to do,
regrettably, is appear on camera. There’s a high enough body count here, but
just shots of its claw-like hands slowly approaching victims, or monster-vision
sequences of people screaming into the camera, are not gonna cut it in a
creature feature. This is especially inexplicable because when we finally get a
look at it at the very end, it’s a delightful critter, with a big grin full of
pointy teeth and one intense, wiggly eyeball right on the front of his big
dinosaur nose. Note to director Jackie Kong: this ain’t a fuckin’ Val Lewton
production where the real terror comes from our own imagination. We came for a
goddam BEING, don’t hold out on us til the very end of the movie, by which time
we’re already too annoyed at having our time wasted to enjoy the experience.
The filmmaking is pretty incompetent, with your expected
shots that linger an awkward second after everyone is done talking, storylines
that wander off into an amnesic stupor and peter out, scenes lit or mic’d so
poorly that even in a pretty crisp DVD copy they’re unintelligible. In that
respect, anyway, the movie at least mirrors its protagonist, because despite
being correct about closing the potato fields, ol’ Sheriff Lutz is one of the
most spectacularly incompetent heroes I’ve ever seen in a movie. He completely
fails to convince the mayor to do anything, runs away in terror every time he
gets near the creature, and even forgets that he’s been narrating the movie
after a single scene. Most egregiously, at one point he demands that Laurie
(Academy-Award watcher*** Marianne Gordon, long-time Hee Haw cast
member, “Girl Drinking Pepsi at party” in THE LEGEND OF BLOOD MOUNTAIN; also
ROSEMARY’S BABY and then-wife of Kenny Rogers!), a local waitresses,**** wait
for him after her shift at the diner is over at 7 PM, because he’s worried
about her getting home safe, what with the monster attacks and all (not that
he’s so far shown any ability to protect anyone). But somehow he manages to
spectacularly fail even at the simple task of escorting a pretty blonde from
her workplace to her home! Instead, he falls asleep (presumably before 7 PM!) and
has a weird dream about getting stuck with Martin Landau in an out-of-control
airplane!*****
But wait, there’s more! When he’s awoken by a desperate phone
call from the very Martin Landau he just dreamed about, who now claims to have
vital, time-sensitive information about the monster, he suddenly remembers his
little walking date, and instead of just calling the diner and telling her
something important came up and she should just take a cab, he cruises out to
the diner where he said he’d pick her up, and finds that she’s just leaving. “Why
the hell didn’t you wait for me?” he says, accusingly. “I waited till 11:45, I
thought you’d forgotten!” she says, apologetically, despite the fact that she
waited for four and a half fucking hours. “I didn’t forget,” he says, sternly.
“I got hung up!” By naptime. If Martin Landau hadn’t awoken sleeping beauty with
that time-sensitive phone call, the poor girl would probably still be waiting
there at sunrise. And oh yeah, about that phone call: also not as big a
priority as you might think. Rather than dropping her off at home and hurrying over
to address this pressing danger, Mr. Lutz instead embarks on a lengthy
adventure with Laurie which includes waiting for the mayor to drive out to a
diner where he claims to have caught a mutant (which doesn’t turn out to be
there, making his whole “close the potato fields” argument even weaker), and
then locking Laurie --the only person so in the movie so far to have done
anything proactive about the mutant situation-- in a prison cell “for her protection”
(i.e. so she won’t come to the big finale and show him up). Only then does he
remember that Martin Landau called in him a panic with vital information, which
by this point must be hours ago.
In the big finale, after getting his ass handed to him by the
BEING, he tries to escape by climbing a rope up to the ceiling. But then it’s
too hard and he just falls back down. Jesus Christ, Lutz, you can’t even run
away like a coward successfully.
Despite his flashy dual nom de guerres, Osco provides
Lutz with very little in the way of personality (let alone charisma), possibly
because his previous experience with cinema seems to have been almost entirely
in the porn industry. He was apparently involved in some capacity (his IMDB says
“producer – uncredited,” which would fit, since it looks like the whole cast
and crew went uncredited) with the X-rated MONA THE VIRGIN NYMPH in 1970 (apparently
only the second sexually expli.. --why mince words, we mean porno—film to
receive a general theatrical release in the US, after Warhol’s BLUE MOVIE). He
followed that up with 15 films in the next five years, including the venerable
FLESH GORDON and ALICE IN WONDERLAND: AN X-RATED MUSICAL FANTASY. This
apparently made him sufficiently rich to hand Jackie Kong (NIGHT PATROL), his then-wife
--a recent college graduate with no professional film experience of any kind--
a check for a couple million dollars to direct a movie starring multiple
Oscar-winners.****** Needless to say, this did not prove to be a very
artistically productive arrangement; Osco’s acting and Kong’s directing are
about equivalently dire, though, so I guess I get the attraction. Kong’s
writing and directing does make THE BEING a rare schlocky horror flick from the
80’s which was directed by a woman, though. Not that you’d know that just from
watching. Despite starring the director’s husband, there’s no “female gaze” to
speak of (with the little bit of nudity going exclusively to women), and there’s
plenty of blatant sexism, including poor Laurie getting shut out of the climax “for
her protection,” and a lengthy subplot about how much of a intolerable harpy
the mayor’s wife is. In fact, there’s so much sexism that I even wondered if it
might be intentional parody, but something tells me that kind of subtlety is
outside THE BEING’s wheelhouse. The only thing that struck me as a possible
intentional joke for the ladies is that the creature ends up being a literal
one-eyed-monster!
The movie features a rare Easter setting and was reportedly
originally going to be called “EASTER SUNDAY” – always a good idea to name your
movie after a holiday and hope it catches on as a seasonal classic. That didn’t
pan out for whatever reason, and the holiday setting contributes nothing except
a scene where kids on an Easter-egg hunt are unknowingly menaced by THE BEING.
Still, the movie does have a theme of redemption: for one thing, mean ol’ Mr. Jones
turns out to be a real nice guy after realizing, apparently for the first time,
that radioactive waste really might be dangerous to just leave sitting
around in rusty barrels in Idaho. More importantly, though, the film concludes
with an AMERICAN GRAFFITI style epilogue chronicling the subsequent fates of
the characters in white text. I mention it only because even if anyone had
grown so attached to these characters that they longed to know what they got up
to later on in life, this would still be the lamest and most random possible version.
“Virginia Lane was never found,” it tells us, which makes sense because we know
she was eaten by a monster. "Marge Smith was last seen looking for [her
missing son] in Modesto, California," which, sure, why not? The saddest is
Laurie, whose entire subsequent life is summarized as “now waitressing in
Akron, Ohio.”
Oh well, at least she got out of Idaho.
* There’s MY OWN PRIAVTE IDAHO, I guess. But doesn’t that
take place mostly in Oregon? And then I think they go to Italy, too? If there’s
any actual Idaho in there, I only vaguely remember it, and think it may be
metaphorical or something.
** A state best known for that verse in Afroman’s immortal jam
Colt 45 that goes, “Fucked this hooker in Iowa / I fucked her on credit,
so I-owe-huh”
*** Probably.
**** Some websites refer to her as his girlfriend, though he
seems more like some sort of controlling stalker than someone she knows and
loves.
***** This sequence is elaborate enough that I assume it was originally mean to be, you
know, part of the actual plot instead of just a meaningless dream we get to
enjoy for the first and only time in the movie. My guess is that it was meant
to be the climax, and then the end got rewritten without a plane ride after
they’d already shot some of it, and they didn’t want to waste the footage and
just stuck it in somewhere and called it a dream.
****** Or so they claim; if this movie actually cost 4.5
million bucks as reported, they must have build the entire town of Pottsville,
Idaho, from scratch. That makes me wonder if the entire movie is just an
elaborate tax shelter which mistakenly happened to hire Martin Landau and Jose
Ferrer and then things got out of hand.
I do want to point out that they did this running-just-in-front-of-a-train bit for real, and it looks dangerous as fuck. |
CHAINSAWNUKAH
2019 CHECKLIST!
For Richer or Horror
TAGLINE
|
The Ultimate Terror
Has Taken Form. Sadly, it’s a form we’ll
only see for about 10 seconds.
|
TITLE ACCURACY
|
I mean, it has both
human beings and some sort of mutant-being in it, so sure. But that would
also be an accurate title for anything from PATTON to GROUNDHOG DAY.
|
LITERARY ADAPTATION?
|
No
|
SEQUEL?
|
None
|
REMAKE?
|
None.
|
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
|
USA
|
HORROR SUB-GENRE
|
Creature
Feature
|
SLUMMING A-LISTER?
|
Martin Landau, who went
through a period around this time where I think his agent must have had big
gambling debts or something. José Ferrerwas not at the pinnacle of his
career, but you’d still think he could have done better than this. Dorothy
Malone, alas, probably could not have done better by this point; her next
feature film was a Spanish horror flick called REST IN PIECES. But! She ended
her career on a high note with BASIC INSTINCT in 1992!
|
BELOVED HORROR ICON?
|
None. Well, does
Martin Landau count?
|
NUDITY?
|
A tiny bit, I believe
|
SEXUAL ASSAULT?
|
No
|
WHEN ANIMALS ATTACK!
|
No
|
GHOST/ ZOMBIE /
HAUNTED BUILDING?
|
None
|
POSSESSION?
|
None
|
CREEPY DOLLS?
|
None
|
EVIL CULT?
|
None
|
MADNESS?
|
None
|
TRANSMOGRIFICATION?
|
No
|
VOYEURISM?
|
Quite a bit of
monster-vision.
|
MORAL OF THE STORY
|
Potatoes and
radioactive waste are a dangerous combination.
|
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