Body Snatchers (1993 film)

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Body Snatchers
Directed by Abel Ferrara
Produced by Robert H. Solo
Written by Novel:
Jack Finney
Story:
Raymond Cistheri
Larry Cohen
Screenplay:
Stuart Gordon
Dennis Paoli
Nicholas St. John
Starring Gabrielle Anwar
Meg Tilly
Music by Joe Delia
Cinematography Bojan Bazelli
Editing by Anthony Redman
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) 1993
Running time 87 min.
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
Gross revenue $428,868 (domestic)
IMDb profile

Body Snatchers is a 1993 science fiction film directed by Abel Ferrara. It is a remake of the 1956 film Invasion of the Body Snatchers, which was followed by a previous remake released in 1978, as well as another remake in 2007.

The story revolves around the discovery that people are being replaced by simulations grown from plant-like pods, perfect physical duplicates who kill and dispose of their human victims. The "pod people", indistinguishable from normal people except for their utter lack of emotion, work together to secretly spread more pods in order to replace the entire human race.

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[edit] 1993 version

This remake was directed by Abel Ferrara (director of Bad Lieutenant), with the story adapted by B-movie auteur Larry Cohen (with Raymond Cistheri) and a screenplay by Re-Animator's Stuart Gordon and Dennis Paoli (along with Nicholas St. John, a frequent Ferrara collaborator). This version starred Gabrielle Anwar, Billy Wirth, Terry Kinney, Meg Tilly, R. Lee Ermey and Forest Whitaker.

This film set its nightmare vision of conformity on a military base (filmed at Craig Air Force Base near Selma, Alabama), where an agent from the Environmental Protection Agency (Kinney) has brought along his family as he checks for toxic waste. The main character is the EPA agent's daughter, Anwar's Marti Malone, a teenager already alienated from her newly remarried father and stepmother (Tilly) even before pods enter the picture.

Response to the 1993 remake was decidedly mixed. Although it was nominated for a Palme d'Or at Cannes, the film had been dumped by Warner Brothers, releasing it to only a few dozen theaters. Some critics panned the film--Richard Harrington of the Washington Post (February 18, 1994) called it "a soulless replica of Don Siegel's 1956 model and Philip Kaufman's 1978 update".[1]

Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert (February 25, 1994) gave it four stars out of four, praising it for psychological realism and social criticism:

There is a crafty connection made between the Army's code of rigid conformity, and the behavior of the Pod People, who seem like a logical extension of the same code.

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[edit] Cast

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[edit] External links