Meet the Applegates

Meet the Applegates
Directed by Michael Lehmann
Produced by Denise Di Novi
Written by Michael Lehmann
Redbeard Simmons
Starring Ed Begley, Jr.
Stockard Channing
Dabney Coleman
Music by David Newman
Cinematography Mitch Dubin
Edited by Norman Hollyn
Distributed by New World Pictures
Release dates
February 1, 1991
Running time
90 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $5 million
Box office $485,772

Meet the Applegates is a 1989 American black comedy film directed by Michael Lehmann. It was filmed in 1989, but not released until 1991. It takes a dark, satirical look at the end of the world, nuclear holocausts, alienism and terrorism. It was filmed in Oshkosh and Neenah, Wisconsin. It has gained a cult following.

Plot

The film starts off in a forest with a family being attacked by a family of huge Brazilian Cocorada. It then moves to a typical-looking family moving into a well-off suburban Ohio neighborhood. They are the bugs that were seen earlier, after they took on human form and met every "normality" standard from the magazine Family Bazaar. They moved to the suburbs after the husband, Richard, got a job at a nuclear power plant; he works there to one day cause an explosion that would rid the world of humans and let bugs be. But after a while they drift from its normalities the son, Johnny, a straight-laced A student, begins listening to heavy metal and becomes a junkie; Richard and his wife, Jane, drift away from each other, he having an affair at work and she becoming attached to her credit card; lastly the daughter, Sally, becomes a pregnant lesbian after being raped by a jock from the high school.

They each show their true bug form at least once in the film—Johnny does while smoking marijuana with his metalhead buddies, Sally while being raped by the jock, Richard at the very last battle and Jane. As they drift away from normality (and nearly been found out by the neighbors) their aunt, Bea, is sent to help. She becomes a nuisance and they decide she should be taken care of. Richard decides to not blow up the plant, and kills Bea instead. At the end of the movie they return to their lives in Brazil, and are visited by the townspeople that grew to love them, although the plant did not blow up, enough radiation was released to remove the hair from much of the town's population.

Cast

Reception

The film was met with mixed reception.[2][3][4]

References

External links