Terror From Beneath The Earth (2009)
REVIEW BY: Jeffrey Long
Company: Saint Euphoria Pictures
Runtime: 69 mins
Format: DVD
Plot: Along with the sheriff and small-town farmer Stan Johnson, Dr. Vincent Edwards and his assistant mount a rescue party into the extensive and dangerous Wisawa Caves for a couple of missing children, and they quickly come to the realization that if the caves don't get them, whatever unseen terror lurking in the shadows just might, as after years of underground atomic testing, one of the animals living within the Wisawa cave system has undergone a radical and unimaginably horrible transformation!
Review: Following on from The Monster of Phantom Lake, It Came From Another World!, and Cave Women on Mars, Terror From Beneath The Earth is the fourth movie in the long-lasting low budget Mihmiverse series of fun black and white 1950s Drive-In B-Movie tributes. After jumping into the then-Future of 1987 (from the point of view of how it may have been thought-up as being like from back in the 1950s) in Cave Women on Mars, we return back to the 'present' of the 1950s for this next mostly-stand-alone entry, though sadly lacking any returning characters save for one short cameo.
Runtime: 69 mins
Format: DVD
Plot: Along with the sheriff and small-town farmer Stan Johnson, Dr. Vincent Edwards and his assistant mount a rescue party into the extensive and dangerous Wisawa Caves for a couple of missing children, and they quickly come to the realization that if the caves don't get them, whatever unseen terror lurking in the shadows just might, as after years of underground atomic testing, one of the animals living within the Wisawa cave system has undergone a radical and unimaginably horrible transformation!
Review: Following on from The Monster of Phantom Lake, It Came From Another World!, and Cave Women on Mars, Terror From Beneath The Earth is the fourth movie in the long-lasting low budget Mihmiverse series of fun black and white 1950s Drive-In B-Movie tributes. After jumping into the then-Future of 1987 (from the point of view of how it may have been thought-up as being like from back in the 1950s) in Cave Women on Mars, we return back to the 'present' of the 1950s for this next mostly-stand-alone entry, though sadly lacking any returning characters save for one short cameo.
In this movie, Daniel Sjerven returns
from Cave Women on Mars, though obviously playing a brand new
character since this movie takes place long before that one does.
Here, he plays the grief-stricken single father of two children who
went missing while playing around in an unexplored and off-limits
underground cave system. He plays the role of worried father well
enough, from loosing his temper in the police station over their
inability to do their jobs properly, to running off on his own
without really thinking about it into the darkness of the caves when
he thinks he has a lead on his kids, to taking charge and battling
the monster of the movie when doing so means saving the lives of his
children, the guy's acting ability is never once in question.
Unfortunately, the role is really rather one-note and not nearly as
interesting or fun as his campy Bruce Campbell-esque space explorer in the
previous movie. Also joining him in returning from some of the previous movies is
Mike Cook (one half of the Canoe Cops duo), also playing a brand new
character, Dr. Vincent Edwards who, along with his female assistant,
is exploring the cave system for research and gets caught up with
helping hunt down this creature, despite his objections to do so.
Much like with the other characters in this movie, he generally plays
it pretty straight for the most part and, in all honesty, the
character here is kind of forgettable.
Which is one of my main
complaints here – most of the characters in this movie are just
bland and boring, especially when compared to the quirky folks that
dominated all three of the previous movies. That's not to say any of
the actors are specifically bad, but when it
comes to how the characters are written, unlike the other movies so
far, they're played up to be pretty straight and serious here in
comparison, and not quite so campy or quirky, which in turn, looses
some of the appeal. Sure, there are still quite a few funny bits
scattered around (the scene where Daniel Sjerven comes face to face
with the monster for the first time and just stares it down and then
tells it that it stinks is one of my favorite parts), but compared to
the previous movies this one is played more straight then I'm
used to with these. In point of fact (and I know this is a total
contradiction to what I've said in the previous reviews), but I actually
kind of, sort of, miss the character of Professor Jackson. Sure, I
find that character annoying as all hell and I was ready to tear my
hair out by the end of the first couple movies, but his unique style
of character really could have benefited this movie. I know I've
dogged on that character in all previous reviews, but I feel he's
kind of like that one ex everyone has that you can't stand and you
find so unbelievably annoying that you break up with them...only to
end up missing those very things about them when they're not around,
that you previously found annoying. Plus Josh Craig, whether playing
Professor Jackson, Captain Jackson, or someone entirely new, is
always entertaining to watch and his presence here (being the first
Mihmiverse movie without him) is sorely missed. Sure, we do get a
cameo appearance of his girlfriend (now wife) from It Came From
Another World!, now pregnant with their baby who will go on to become
Captain Jackson from Cave Women on Mars (lost yet?), and she does
namedrop Professor Jackson, but I was never really a big fan of her
character anyway, and it still feels like something is missing by not
having Josh Craig make an appearance himself.
I also wasn't a big fan of the creature
design for the mutant killer bat monster either. I know 'bad' is part
of the joke with all of these, but after the 'excellent' and
ambitious effects for Cave Women on Mars, the lack of something truly
terrifying for the mutant bat monster was a bit of a let-down.
Actually, in all honesty, I think I actually like the bucket-headed
Algae Monster and the bulging-eyed alien body-controller of the first
two movies better then this thing here. The idea of the creature is
fine, and I loved its ability to paralyze it's victims first, only to
drag them back to its bone-covered lair to eat later, but the design
of it was where I felt the ball was dropped a bit.
Now don't misunderstand me here, it may
sound like I didn't like the movie at all, and while I do honestly
feel it's the weakest of the series thus-far, there is still lots to
like for fans of the Mihmiverse. For instance, I liked the idea of
the movie quite a bit, with it having the entire thing take place in
underground cave systems (minus a couple scenes in the police
station), and I really enjoyed the actual cave system set itself. It
looked like it may have been Paper Mâché or something like that, but
it worked great and looked excellent, coming across like almost a
real cave system and not just a couple corners of somebody's
basement. It also reminded me quite a bit of sets for low budget
Egyptian tombs in classic Mummy movies, which then had me kind of
longing for a Mihmiverse Mummy movie. Perhaps as a previous adventure
of Dr. Vincent Edwards, maybe? He seems like the type that would have
gone on an Egyptian Mummy Adventure, though maybe as someone who
refuses to believe the 'mumbo jumbo' of the curse and tries to (with
difficulty) come up with scientific explanations for the wrapped dead
walking again. Just tossing around some ideas here!
The movie's strongest aspect I found
though, was that it surprisingly raised some interesting
thought-provoking questions of morality and responsibility. We
created this monster by man's own doing (admittedly, by accident and
without our knowledge via polluting the Earth with excess Atomic
testings), however is it really our place to make this new species go
extinct? Even knowing that it's killed people and could continue to
kill? I liked the questions this movie raised via it's characters and
their actions, and it ended up coming across as quite a bit deeper
then you would expect a movie like this to get, and if there was one
interesting thing that was done with the otherwise forgettable
characters of this entry, it was seeing where each of them fell in
their opinions on that. In addition, the final climax between Man and
Monster and how it was defeated was probably one of the more
thrilling climaxes in the series so far and literally had me on the
edge of my seat.
Continuing the trend put forth with the
releases of the previous three movies, this self-produced DVD is
stacked right up with tons of excellent bonus content. For this
title we have only one Blooper Reel instead of two (but it has a
really good length to it and is, just like all the others, simply
laugh-out-loud hilarious), a trailer for the movie, a featurette on
the creation and evolution of the bat monster costume, a Photo
Gallery of tons of Behind-the-Scenes photos, an introduction to the
film by Horror Host Dr. Ivan Cryptosis (making a return after being
missing from the previous movie), and the usual informative full
length Audio Commentary by Christopher R. Mihm and lead actor Daniel
Sjerven.
I wish I liked this one as much as I
did the others, especially since it's clear the people behind it put
in just as much effort as they always do (that's obvious from just
the set design work and excellent acting alone, not to mention the
work put into making the actual creature suit, even if it wasn't my
favorite of the designs), but overall Terror From Beneath The Earth
just didn't jive with me quite like the rest in the Mihmiverse have
so far. In the end, it's still well-worth checking out if you're a fan of
the series, but if you're looking for a gateway movie to break into
the Mihmiverse world, I probably wouldn't recommend this one as your
first foray.
Seeing as how most of the advertising
for this guy and his movies come from simple word of mouth from the
fans, then if you do check his stuff out and enjoy it please help get
the word out there on these movies and hopefully we can snag in a few
other fans that may not even realize these exist. You can order these
on DVD (and even BluRay for the latest couple!) over at
his official site which is filled with all sorts of other goodies
as well (including a monthly newsletter in addition to a very laid
back, yet fun and informative, podcast). Hell, there's even an
excellent deal on right now – Buy Three Movies, Get One Free, which
seeing as how there's currently eight of these titles, if you do that
twice then that is the perfect way to catch up with all of them and
in the end save some dough!
6/10 rooms in the Psych Ward
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