Attack of the Puppet People/Village of the Giants (1958)
Facts
| Directed by | Bert I. Gordon |
| Cast | John Agar, John Hoyt, June Kenney, Michael Mark, Jack Kosslyn and Glenn Langan |
| Theatrical Release | March 31, 1958 |
| DVD Release | February 15, 2005 |
| Running Time | 160 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 027616911094 |
| Buy this item | $9.98 at Amazon.com As of Sep 5 14:46 EDT (details) 1 DVD, TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 29 new from $3.47, 7 used from $3.50 |
About Attack of the Puppet People/Village of the Giants
Attack of the Puppet PeopleAn "amazing triumph of special effects" (Hollywood Citizen-News) this twisted tale about a deranged maniac who creates a device that shrinks people to foot-high figurines is big on terror! Tired of being toyed with the puppets launch an attack and suddenly their captor finds he'd better stop playing and start praying because these miniature moppets are hellbent on revenge!Running Time 79 MinVillage of the GiantsA small town runs into big problems when teenagers hit a growth spurt turn into gallivanting Goliaths lead an anti-elder rebellion and terrify anyone under seven feet tall! Featuring Hollywood teen stars Tommy Kirk Johnny Crawford Ronny Howard and Beau Bridges this "fantastic and amusing tale" (Boxoffice) with "stand-out special effects" (Variety) delivers gargantuan sexy entertainment loaded with rock 'n' roll.Running Time 71 MinSystem Requirements: Running Time 150 MinFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: SCI-FI/FANTASY Rating: NR UPC: 027616911094 Manufacturer No: 1006969 Product Description
Website Links
- Movie Review Query Engine - Directory of movie reviews.
- IMDb - Features plot summaries, reviews, cast lists, and theatre schedules.
- Art.com - Search for Attack of the Puppet People/Village of the Giants posters.
Similar Movies
User Reviews
Average user review:| Grade "C" B Movies |
The film follows a gang of groovy teens in 1965, that are after a super-growth formula invented by a whiz kid with a chemistry set played by Ron Howard. Once they get the formula, they become giants and take over the town, and make the square "over 30" adults follow their rules.
There's not meant to be suspense, like when giant ducks show up at a gogo club, the clubgoers just see them as groovy, dancing ducks. Instead, the movie plays for guffaws, like when the camera zooms in on a giant women as she picks up a regular sized man and holds him at her cleavage.
The film does capture the music, dancing and fashions of the time, somewhat like the beach party movies, but these are the bad teens with more suggestive moves. The guffaws are also sometimes funny. However, the dancing scenes are way too long. And while the giantism jokes capture the mid-sixties obsession with bikini's and are laughable for showing what was once was so risque, is now tame, after awhile, the one note jokes run dry.
So, although some promise, the film never fully delivers. If interested, it's worth renting first to see if it's the type of movie you would want to see more than once. For me, I vote "no".
"Attack of the Puppet People" takes itself more seriously and therefore had a chance for good, unintentional laughs. However, it's just a bad movie. This reverses the "Village of the Giants" by centering around a scientist that makes people small instead of tall. Again, the one note plays out rather quickly.
Both movies are strictly for diehard B-movie fans. If you are a "once in awhile" B movie fan, such as me, there are better B movies out there to hold your interest while waiting for the laughs. January 7, 2008
| Get it for Village of the Giants |
| Size matters |
In Attack of the Puppet People, June Kenny plays a new secretary for a kindly old dollmaker who somehow has created a shrinking machine. He is sort of like a psychotically delusional Mr. Rogers who seems really nice but hates having people leave him, to the point where he shrinks them to doll-size and puts them into suspended animation. Despite the title, the "puppet people" don't do any real attacking; instead, they are merely intent on getting restored to their proper sizes. With low budget actors and effects, this film is far from great but does have its moments.
Village of the Giants, however, features some big name actors in early roles, most notably Ronny (Ron) Howard and Beau Bridges. Veering away from the more "serious" films, this movie is more comedy that horror. Howard is a preadolescent genius who accidentally creates a growth formula, which is stolen and ingested by Bridges and his friends. After becoming giants, they become the ultimate teen rebels and try to enforce laws against adults. The effects may be poor, but the movie itself is an amiable bit of a fluff, more interested in showing teenage girls jiggle to nice but forgettable tunes than with any sort of coherent plot.
I've always had an affection for Village of the Giants since seeing it as a small kid (and not since). Like some of the sillier Disney films (particularly the early Kurt Russell sci-fi comedies), they don't get better as you get older. They may be deeply flawed movies, but I still enjoyed them for what they were, so I am giving them a low four stars; it may be more than they truly merit, but with these sorts of movies, fun always trumps quality.
November 25, 2006
More reviews at Amazon.com ...





