Skeeter (film)

Skeeter
Directed by Clark Brandon
Produced by James Glenn Dudelson
John Lambert
Kelly Andrea Rubin
Don Edmonds (executive producer)
Sanford Hampton (associate producer)
Written by Clark Brandon (writer)
Lanny Horn (writer)
Joseph Luis Rubin (original screenplay)
Starring Jim Youngs
Tracy Griffith
Music by David Lawrence
Edited by Ed Hansen
Production
company
August Entertainment, K.A.R. Films, New Line Cinema, Team Players Productions
Distributed by August Entertainment, Columbia TriStar Home Video, New Line Cinema
Release dates
1993
Running time
95 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Skeeter is a 1993 horror film starring Jim Youngs, and Tracy Griffith, directed by Clark Brandon.[1] The film was released in 1993, with the first video premiere being on April 6, 1994.[2]

Background

The film stars Jim Youngs as Roy Boone and Tracy Griffith as Sarah Crosby. Others in the film included Charles Napier as Ernie Buckle, Jay Robinson as Drake, William Sanderson as Gordon Perry, Michael J. Pollard as Hopper, Eloy Casados as Hank Tucker and John Putch as Hamilton.

The film was filmed around Santa Clarita, California, United States.[3]

The film was released on DVD as a stand-alone in the United States by Image Entertainment. It was also released in 2007 on DVD as the first film in the triple feature alongside the 1982 low-budget British science fiction horror movie Xtro and its 1990 horror/science fiction sequel Xtro II: The Second Encounter.[4]

The film's main tagline reads "Earth is the final breeding ground."[5] The other tagline of the film reads "An environmental disaster with a name."[6]

Plot

Drake is a corrupt and greedy developer who is illegally dumping toxic waste into the mines around the small town of Clear Sky, causing mosquitoes to mutate into giant beasts that kill and attack anything including humans. A lawman of the town sheriff, Roy Boone, and his reunited love Sarah Crosby must put a stop to both the pollution and the bugs. The body counts keep rising which causes the locals to feel that they have to move out of the city. Crosby and environmental inspector Gordon Perry try to find the origin of the waste however certain people try to prevent them for doing so due to Drake's evil deeds which involves some hitmen.[7][8]

Cast

Reception

Allmovie gave the film two and a half stars out of five and wrote "Part of the same "third wave" of eco-kill horror films which spawned the superior Ticks, Aberration, and Spiders, this giant mosquito film is similarly hamstrung by too much plot about environmental crime and not enough scares." The site summed up the film "The concept of giant blood-sucking insects certainly has the potential to give viewers the screaming meemies, but time and again the potential is undercut by pious environmental speeches and pointless subplots more suitable to a frontier Western than a horror film. The best films in the eco-kill subgenre use nature's revenge as subtext, but Brandon pushes it full-tilt into the foreground and the result is a real bore."[7]

Billboard Magazine reviewed the film in March 1994 as part of the "Marquee Values" section, created as a guide to the lesser-known rental-priced films of the time. The unfavorable review summed the film up "While taking baby steps toward humor, this mightily confused fright flick should have gone for "Tremors"-like laughs and upped its special effects budget. (It might also have taken an interest in its obligatory evil-land-devel-oper subplot and dropped the romantic subplot that stops the movie dead. It should draw out the SF mavens, who probably will remain indifferent to the film's periodic skeeter-cam shots."[9]

Both Emanuel Levy and Rob Vaux of Flipside Movie Emporium gave the film two out of five stars, whilst Scott Weinberg of eFilmCritic.com gave the film three out of five stars.[10] The TV Guide (Triangle Publications) gave the film one out of five stars.[11]

References

External links

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