Ha… ha… it… is… me… Burl. Do not be
alarmed. I am still… hu-man. I have not been… replaced by a… superior alien
consciousness. I am still your same jolly old friend… Burl. Ha… ha.
Ha ha! No, I’m just kidding around! I’m as
Burl as I’ve ever been, and I’m here to review a movie about insidious alien
takeover, The Puppet Masters! No,
it’s not a movie about pod people: the takeover method on display here involves
not pods, but slimy alien starfish that can shoot out whips and pull themselves
around the room, to slap in your face as they fly by if you’re not careful, or,
worse still, to attach themselves to your back, dig in like a giant tick, and
bond with your nervous system to achieve complete full-body puppetism!
Right off the bat I have to give this
picture some props! The takeover begins right away, and the authorities display
a level of good sense and speed of action that forestalls the usual
frustrations viewers might feel on waiting for the movie characters to catch
up to where we, the audience, have been since seeing the title flash on the
screen!
Our main characters are members of some
kind of elite CIA-adjacent science force, and the boss of them is a
characteristically crusty Donald “Billion Dollar Brain” Sutherland, resplendent
in a silver cocksman's beard! Sutherland gets to throw a little action, bopping possessees
with his silver-tipped walking stick and pulling a gun on his own son when he
suspects the lad to have been taken over!
Sutherland’s son, an agent in this
action-science agency, who of course doesn’t get along so well with his dad, is
actually the picture’s hero, alongside a lady who serves as a scientist, action
partner, and love interest! I recognized neither of the actors and have never
seen them since, but they acquit themselves tolerably well!
The picture has a welcomingly familiar supporting
cast though! You’ve got stalwarts like Keith David from Road House, Will Patton from Road
House 2, and Yaphet Kotto from Truck Turner, whose talents the filmmakers manage to mostly waste! And the
Vagrant himself, Marshall “Stand By Me”
Bell, is in it too, as an army general who catches a little backdoor parasite
action! Ha ha, he ought to be used to sporting rubbery hangers-on - he hosted
Mr. Kuato in Total Recall!
But everyone gets a chance to be possessed:
all three of our leads take an unwilling turn, and things get a little
repetitive! The picture starts spinning its wheels about halfway through, and
eventually there are a couple of climaxes and a happier ending than we find in
Sutherland’s other body snatcher picture! For many years I had the impression
that this was even more bloodless and MOR than it actually is, and in the
second half it almost lives down to that assumption!
But I will say this: the creatures are
neat! I always like it when the trick effects gang take the time to put
together an alien with some biological plausibility - these guys reminded me a
bit of the face huggers from Alien,
because as with those crustaceous delights in the Ridley Scott picture, The Puppet Masters gives us a dissection scene featuring some realistic-looking
organs and glop! Ha ha, so kudos to you, Greg Cannom and Larry Odien! But the movie is more
middling than its monsters, so I give it an even two naked shower meltdowns!