Beware! The Blob (1972)
| Director | : | Larry Hagman |
| Screenplay | : | Anthony Harris Jack Woods |
| Effects | : | Tim Baar Conrad Rothmann Doug Beswick Jim Aupperle |
| Production Co. | : | Jack H. Harris Enterprises |
| Bobby Hartford | : | Robert Walker Jr. |
| Lisa Clark | : | Gwynne Gilford |
| Edward Fazio | : | Richard Stahl |
| Sheriff Jones | : | Richard Webb |
I haven't seen a good review of this movie, and I really don't know why. Perhaps my own nostalgia for the first Blob movie has clouded my objectivity, but I think that Beware! The Blob (AKA Son of Blob) is a fun and entertaining little B-movie that doesn't get any respect and it is surely more maligned than it deserves.
Chester, an engineer and world class beer fan, has just returned from Antarctica, where he has unearthed a strange frozen specimen that he wants to have analyzed. He brings a small piece of his find home and stows it away in the family fridge for safe keeping. Unfortunately, his wife finds the mysterious canister and sets it out on the counter. In very short order, the specimen, a fragment of the original blob, thaws and begins to devour everything in its path. A fly and a cute little kitten are the first to go and the man and his wife follow soon. Stopping by to pick up a birthday gift for her boyfriend, Lisa arrives just in time to see Chester being devoured in his easy chair. Horrified, she tries desperately to convince her friends and eventually the police of the terrible danger that they are in. In true B-movie tradition, nobody believes her until it is almost too late. The monster, growing larger with every meal begins to work its way through the small town.
I don't know why this movie has been panned by critics and fans alike. It, along with the 1958 original prevail are personal faves of mine. This movie does tend to lean a bit toward the whimsical side. Yet, it this abundance of camp and tongue-in-cheek performances that make Beware! The Blob so darn much fun.
The Blob movies, like most horror films, have always been a product of their time. The 1958 original, although a bit hokey now, was full of early Cold War tension. I doubt if there was any intentional allegory in The Blob, but it is easy to see why movie audiences concerned on some level about a possible communist threat were so captivated by the spate of "Invaders from Space" movies. The fear of living in a rapidly changing world that might, at the press of a button, be obliterated in a nuclear holocaust was also responsible for the "big bug" and "science gone wrong" movies that were very popular at the time. By the time the late 80s rolled around, audience had become jaded, far less willing to believe that a quick call to the National Guard would be enough to take care of any monster problems. In fact, they were more likely to believe that the government just might be responsible for the monster. That is why, in the 1988 remake, the Blob is no longer an invading alien, but rather a germ warfare experiment gone very, very wrong.
I rambled my way through all of that, to say this. Beware! The Blob, directed by Larry ("I Dream of Genie", "Dallas") Hagman is also a reflection of its time. It is a light-hearted movie that isn't afraid to laugh at itself. With Dick Van Patten as super-perky scout master and other amusing characters like hippies and wine-os, this movie isn't out to make any kind of statement. It simply is supposed to be a good time. Much like the 70s themselves, it wasn't trying to say anything profound; it just was what it was. Heck, even the Blob itself has gone almost psychedelic. It was a deep sinister red in the original and in this movie, it is almost florescent.
Perhaps I'm reading to much into this, and I'm sure you'll agree that I'm most surely writing to much into it. Beware! The Blob is a great B-movie, a whole lot of fun, and a must for flesh-eating goo fans. So don't listen to those nay sayers at the Internet Movie Database and give it a shot. Remember, there is always room for ever-growing, cat eating jell-o from space.
P.S. Just before Chester becomes blob food, he is trying to adjust the picture on his TV. Note that the station he is watching is showing the original Blob. Also, have you ever wondered what ever become of our gelatinous friend. Well, wonder now more. Here is a neat little article I found that I think all blob-oids will enjoy. http://www.horror-wood.com/blob.htm.






