The Blob
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Blob | |
---|---|
Directed by | Irvin Yeaworth |
Produced by | Jack H. Harris |
Written by | Story: Irving H. Millgate Screenplay: Kay Linaker Theodore Simonson |
Starring | Steve McQueen Aneta Corsaut Earl Rowe Olin Howland |
Music by | Ralph Carmichael Burt Bacharach |
Cinematography | Thomas E. Spalding |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date(s) | September 12, 1958 |
Running time | 86 min. |
Language | English |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
The Blob is an independently made American horror/science-fiction film from 1958 depicting a giant amoeba-like alien that terrorizes the small community of Downingtown, Pennsylvania. It was not until star Steve McQueen became famous with the TV series Wanted: Dead or Alive that the film became a hit at the drive-in theatres. Today, the film is recognized as one of the quintessential 1950s American sci-fi/horror films.
The film was Steve McQueen's debut performance, and also starred Aneta Corsaut. The film's tongue-in-cheek theme song, "Beware of the Blob" (recorded by studio group The Five Blobs), was written by a pre-stardom Burt Bacharach and Mack David and was a nationwide hit in the U.S..
Contents |
[edit] Synopsis
The Blob is an amorphous creature from outer space which lands on Earth encased in a meteor. Two teenagers, Steve Andrews (McQueen) and Jane Martin (Corsaut) take a car to try to find where the meteor has landed. Meanwhile, an elderly man (Howland) has heard the meteor crash near his house. He goes outside and upon finding it pokes it with a stick. The rock breaks open and he finds a small mass of jelly-like substance inside. This "blob", which is actually a living creature, crawls up the stick and attaches itself to his hand. The man runs hysterically onto the road where he is almost hit by Steve's car. Steve attempts to help the man, but he begs to be taken to the doctor. They arrive just as Doctor Hallen is about to leave the office. He takes the old man in and anesthetizes him, but finds that the mass has grown larger. Finally, it dissolves the old man completely and rolls to the floor, where it also engulfs and eats the nurse and later, the doctor himself.
Steve and Jane return to the office in time to see the Blob consuming the doctor. He phones the local police, kindly Lt. Dave and cynical Sgt. Burt, and they come to the office where they find no sign of the creature or the doctor. Dismissing Steve's story, the police return Steve and Jane to their homes and parents. Later, they sneak out and get Steve's friends out of the late-night "Spook Show" (Daughter of Horror) and try to convince them that the Blob is threatening the town. The Blob, in the meantime, has consumed a mechanic and later (off camera), the janitor in Mr. Andrew's grocery store. Steve and Jane find it here, and it chases them into the walk-in refrigerator, but for some reason it does not follow them in after starting to squeeze under the door. They then escape and set off the town's fire and air-raid alarms. The whole town gathers and demands to know what is going on. As the townspeople and police angrily confront Steve, the Blob enters the Colonial Theater, engulfs and eats the man in the projection room and then attacks the audience. As the patrons run screaming out of the theater, the truth of Steve's story is finally confirmed to everyone.
The Blob then follows Steve, Jane and her little brother into the local diner, which it engulfs. The kids, along with the owner and his wife, run into the cellar. The police try to kill the Blob by dropping a power line onto it. This fails, but sets the diner on fire instead. The people are trapped inside with no hope of escape, until Steve starts to quench the fire with a fire extinguisher. The Blob, which is trying to reach them in the cellar, recoils. Steve tells Lt. Dave that the Blob cannot stand cold, and so, taking the fire extinguishers from the local high school, they attack the monster with carbon dioxide. Soon, the Blob is frozen solid, unable to move or engulf anyone. The film closes with a scene of a military plane dropping the Blob into an Arctic landscape.
The film ends with the words "The End", which then morph into a question mark, suggesting that the Blob may return (which it does 14 years later - this time, to a Los Angeles suburb - in the sequel, Beware! The Blob).
[edit] Cast
- Steve McQueen as Steve Andrews (Billed as "Steven McQueen")
- Aneta Corsaut as Jane Martin
- Earl Rowe as Lt. Dave
- Olin Howland as Old man
- Elbert Smith as Henry Martin
- Hugh Graham as Mr. Andrews
[edit] Production
The film was originally titled "The Molten Meteor" until producers overheard screenwriter Kay Linaker refer to the movie's monster as "the blob."[1]
The Blob was directed by Irvin Yeaworth, who had directed more than 400 films for motivational, educational, and religious purposes. Yeaworth was never particularly proud of this film.[citation needed]
The Blob was filmed in and around Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. The primary shooting took place at Valley Forge Studios, and several scenes were filmed in the towns of Chester Springs, Downingtown, Phoenixville and Royersford. Including the basement of a local restaurant named Chief's. (The setting is apparently Downingtown, Pennsylvania itself as the one policeman identifies his office as "Downingtown HQ" to "East Cornwall HQ" over the radio during his chess game.) It was filmed in color and widescreen.
Steve McQueen received only $3,000 for this film; he had turned down an offer for a smaller up-front sum with 10% of the profits because he did not think the movie would make any money and he needed the money immediately to pay for food and rent; it ended up grossing $4 million.
Though legend has it that the opening novelty song was composed by a young and unknown Burt Bacharach (along with Hal David, Burt's famous songwriting partner), Bacharach had already achieved some measure of success by the time the film was released, and the lyrics to the song were composed by Hal's brother Mack David. The background score for The Blob was composed by Ralph Carmichael. Known as "The Dean of Contemporary Christian Music," it was one of just a few film scores that Carmichael wrote. Carmichael is best known for his musical associations with Billy Graham and for arranging the popular Christmas album by Nat King Cole. Both Carmichael's score and Bacharach/David's song were released in 2008 by the Monstrous Movie Music soundtrack label.
[edit] Legacy
A comedy sequel was made in 1972, entitled Beware! The Blob, directed by Larry Hagman. In 1988, a remake was made, in which the Blob is rewritten as a secret government project gone wrong. In 2006, Paramount Pictures announced a second remake will be produced by Scott Rudin; Carey Hayes and Chad Hayes, who penned the remake of House of Wax, have been hired to write the screenplay.
Since 2000, the town of Phoenixville, Pennsylvania — one of the filming locations — has held an annual "Blobfest". Activities include a re-enactment of the scene in which moviegoers run screaming from the town's Colonial Theatre, which has recently been restored.
Some books and television series have made passing homage to the film, including R. L. Stine's The Blob That Ate Everyone, and "Treehouse of Horror XVII", an episode of The Simpsons in which Homer Simpson becomes a large mass that consumes everything.
Scenes from The Blob appear in the 1978 musical Grease (also a Paramount feature).
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- The Blob (1958) at the Internet Movie Database
- Beware! The Blob (1972) at the Internet Movie Database
- The Blob (1988) at the Internet Movie Database
- Blobermouth (1990) at the Internet Movie Database The Blob (1958) redubbed with a comedy soundtrack.
- The Blob Site - Location tour, trivia, Blobfest
- The Blob - A Hollywood Gothique Retrospective
- Criterion Collection essay by Bruce Kawin
- The Colonial Theatre in Phoenixville, PA - An historic, non-profit theatre and location in The Blob
- Monstrous Movie Music, a soundtrack label that released the complete music score from The Blob in 2008
- Liner notes from the original Criterion Laserdisc
|