The
Puppet Masters (1994)
Rated R
Starring: Donald Sutherland, Eric Thal,
and Julie Warner
Rating:

out
of

|
After what looks like a UFO lands in small field in Iowa, strange things
begin to happen in a nearby town. A group from a secret government agency,
led by Andrew Nivens (Donald Sutherland), moves in to investigate the
scene. Nivens' son, Sam (Eric Thal), who is also in the agency, joins
Mary Sefton (Julie Warner), a NASA scientist who specializes in trying
to figure out what alien species would look like, in examining the scene
of the landing. Immediately, they find the townsfolk acting strangely
but, before they can come up with an effective battle plan, they find
that an alien presence has infected one of their members and is about
to infect a lot more of them.
I'd
heard a lot of good things about this movie and, being as it was Halloween
night, I figured I'd finally sit down and watch it. Donald Sutherland
is always entertaining and it took me almost the entire movie to remember
where I'd seen Julie Warner before. (Turns out it was in Doc Hollywood with
Michael J. Fox.) I must say that while it starts out being quite good,
The Puppet
Masters fizzles towards the end.
As it turns out, Donald Sutherland
is entertaining here as the "great
agent/lousy father" character. Eric Thal, who played Samson in the
1996 TV movie, Samson & Delilah, isn't that great as his son, but
he serves his purpose. Julie Warner's Mary isn't given much to do, except
for the inevitable sequences where she requires rescuing. She's the movie's
only woman, so I guess the script just had to put her in danger. Other
actors of great talent, like Yaphet Kotto (Alien), Richard Belzer (TV's
Homicide), and Keith David (There's Something About Mary) wander in, provide
some good moments and either disappear or fade into the background.
The best thing about The
Puppet Masters is the concept behind the aliens,
which is slowly revealed as the film moves along. The methods they use
to collect their victims and communicate with each other are unique and
very cool. Unfortunately, I can't get into much detail because I'd spoil
the movie for those that do want to see it.
This film is a strange blend
of War of the Worlds and Invasion of the Body Snatchers (which, in its
1978 remake, also featured Donald Sutherland.)
The screenplay was based on a novel by Robert Heinlein, which unfortunately
I didn't read. I will venture a guess and say that this movie's script
resembles the original only slightly. (The additional three writing credits
under Heinlein's name lends credence to my theory as well, I'm sure.)
Still, it has that old "Is this movie about aliens or communism?" feel
to it, which more than likely was in the original book. I could be wrong.
Why did I give the movie three stars? Well, it starts off with a promising
cast, a great setup and a wonderful idea, only to drop the ball and degenerate
into a second-rate film with a lot of predictable moments and a rather
weak ending. It becomes a bad film rather than being a completely bad
film from the start. If the script hadn't petered out two-thirds of the
way through, The Puppet Masters might have been a classic science fiction/horror
film. Trivia: Will
Patton, who plays Graves, is featured in Remember the Titans as Coach
Bill Yoast. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |