Village of the Giants


1h 20m 1965
Village of the Giants

Brief Synopsis

Delinquent teens ingest a substance and grow to 30 feet tall, then proceed to take over a small town.

Film Details

Genre
Horror/Science-Fiction
Adaptation
Comedy
Fantasy
Release Date
Jan 1965
Premiere Information
Boston opening: 20 Oct 1965
Production Company
Berkeley Productions; Embassy Pictures
Distribution Company
Embassy Pictures
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Food of the Gods by H. G. Wells (London, 1904).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 20m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color

Synopsis

Four teenaged couples arrive in a town after their car is wrecked in an avalanche. Young lovers Mike and Nancy are interrupted by Nancy's younger brother, Genius, an amateur scientist who announces he has discovered a food-like substance which causes those who eat it to grow to enormous size. Hearing about the substance, the eight teenagers steal some, try it out, and grow into giants. They take over the town, holding the sheriff's daughter hostage; but Genius discovers a vapor which acts as an antidote, and the invaders are chased from town after they return to normal size.

Film Details

Genre
Horror/Science-Fiction
Adaptation
Comedy
Fantasy
Release Date
Jan 1965
Premiere Information
Boston opening: 20 Oct 1965
Production Company
Berkeley Productions; Embassy Pictures
Distribution Company
Embassy Pictures
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Food of the Gods by H. G. Wells (London, 1904).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 20m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color

Articles

Village of The Giants - Village of the Giants


H.G. Wells might have been surprised, shocked or even outraged had he lived to see what Hollywood filmmakers did to his story The Food of the Gods, a fanciful tale about a high-potency formula that drastically alters the growth rate of plants and animals. More than 60 years after it was written, B-movie maven Bert I. Gordon came along and turned Wells' visionary tale into a demented teenage musical fantasy entitled Village of the Giants (1965).

If nothing else, the film deserves some kind of cult status for the cast alone. Little Ronnie Howard (taking a break from The Andy Griffith Show) plays a pint-sized junior inventor, Tommy Kirk (a former Disney child star reduced to leads in exploitation films like Blood of Ghastly Horror) is the bewildered hero, and Beau Bridges is cast as the leader of the rowdy teenage gang (including Johnny Crawford, choreographer-dancer Toni Basil, and Tim Rooney) who grow to tremendous heights and gleefully trash their small town.

Think about it. Giant juvenile delinquents on the rampage - drinking, partying, dancing - and there's nothing their parents or the police can do to stop them. Director Gordon milks the latter situation for all it's worth, sticking in several groovy musical interludes to keep the teenagers hopping. You've got "Little Bitty Corrine" sung by Freddie Cannon, "Nothing Can Stand in My Way" performed by Mike Clifford, and "When It Comes to Your Love" by The Beau Brummels. But the real showstopper actually occurs right after the title sequence. A bunch of screaming teenagers emerge from a wrecked car and proceed to have a mud orgy in the pouring rain while the electric strains of "Woman" (also by The Beau Brummels) pulsate from the screen. A totally awesome moment.

Bert I. Gordon must have had some kind of obsession with Wells' original story because he filmed it again in 1976 under its proper title, The Food of the Gods. This version was a little more faithful to the original concept but it also had lots of typically perverse touches that only a misunderstood genius like Gordon could have concocted. Like the scene where a pregnant Pamela Franklin goes into labor while giant rats try to gnaw through her bedroom wall. Or the scene where Marjoe Gortner almost gets pecked to death by a giant chicken.

If you look closely at Bert I. Gordon's filmography, something becomes readily apparent. The director is all about the scale of things. How else to explain a career that includes King Dinosaur (1955), War of the Colossal Beast (1958), Attack of the Puppet People (1958), Empire of the Ants (1977), and The Cyclops (1957). Actually, his fans are glad he had a one-track mind. Otherwise, we wouldn't have guilty pleasures to enjoy like Village of the Giants.
Producer: Bert I. Gordon
Director: Bert I. Gordon
Screenplay: Alan Caillou (writer); Bert I. Gordon (story); H.G. Wells (novel)
Cinematography: Paul Vogel
Art Direction: Franz Bachelin
Music: Jack Nitzsche
Film Editing: John Bushelman
Cast: Tommy Kirk (Mike), Johnny Crawford (Horsey), Beau Bridges (Fred), Ronny Howard (Genius), Joy Harmon (Merrie), Bob Random (Rick), Tisha Sterling (Jean), Charla Doherty (Nancy), Tim Rooney (Pete), Kevin O'Neil (Harry).
C-81m.

by Jeff Stafford
Village Of The Giants - Village Of The Giants

Village of The Giants - Village of the Giants

H.G. Wells might have been surprised, shocked or even outraged had he lived to see what Hollywood filmmakers did to his story The Food of the Gods, a fanciful tale about a high-potency formula that drastically alters the growth rate of plants and animals. More than 60 years after it was written, B-movie maven Bert I. Gordon came along and turned Wells' visionary tale into a demented teenage musical fantasy entitled Village of the Giants (1965). If nothing else, the film deserves some kind of cult status for the cast alone. Little Ronnie Howard (taking a break from The Andy Griffith Show) plays a pint-sized junior inventor, Tommy Kirk (a former Disney child star reduced to leads in exploitation films like Blood of Ghastly Horror) is the bewildered hero, and Beau Bridges is cast as the leader of the rowdy teenage gang (including Johnny Crawford, choreographer-dancer Toni Basil, and Tim Rooney) who grow to tremendous heights and gleefully trash their small town. Think about it. Giant juvenile delinquents on the rampage - drinking, partying, dancing - and there's nothing their parents or the police can do to stop them. Director Gordon milks the latter situation for all it's worth, sticking in several groovy musical interludes to keep the teenagers hopping. You've got "Little Bitty Corrine" sung by Freddie Cannon, "Nothing Can Stand in My Way" performed by Mike Clifford, and "When It Comes to Your Love" by The Beau Brummels. But the real showstopper actually occurs right after the title sequence. A bunch of screaming teenagers emerge from a wrecked car and proceed to have a mud orgy in the pouring rain while the electric strains of "Woman" (also by The Beau Brummels) pulsate from the screen. A totally awesome moment. Bert I. Gordon must have had some kind of obsession with Wells' original story because he filmed it again in 1976 under its proper title, The Food of the Gods. This version was a little more faithful to the original concept but it also had lots of typically perverse touches that only a misunderstood genius like Gordon could have concocted. Like the scene where a pregnant Pamela Franklin goes into labor while giant rats try to gnaw through her bedroom wall. Or the scene where Marjoe Gortner almost gets pecked to death by a giant chicken. If you look closely at Bert I. Gordon's filmography, something becomes readily apparent. The director is all about the scale of things. How else to explain a career that includes King Dinosaur (1955), War of the Colossal Beast (1958), Attack of the Puppet People (1958), Empire of the Ants (1977), and The Cyclops (1957). Actually, his fans are glad he had a one-track mind. Otherwise, we wouldn't have guilty pleasures to enjoy like Village of the Giants. Producer: Bert I. Gordon Director: Bert I. Gordon Screenplay: Alan Caillou (writer); Bert I. Gordon (story); H.G. Wells (novel) Cinematography: Paul Vogel Art Direction: Franz Bachelin Music: Jack Nitzsche Film Editing: John Bushelman Cast: Tommy Kirk (Mike), Johnny Crawford (Horsey), Beau Bridges (Fred), Ronny Howard (Genius), Joy Harmon (Merrie), Bob Random (Rick), Tisha Sterling (Jean), Charla Doherty (Nancy), Tim Rooney (Pete), Kevin O'Neil (Harry). C-81m. by Jeff Stafford

Quotes

I was big enough already!
- Merrie

Trivia

In one scene one of the giants reads an issue of "Famous Monsters of Filmland" with another Bert I. Gordon film, _War of the Collosal Beast (1958)_ , in the cover.

Exteriors were shot on the same lot as the TV series "Bewitched" (1964) and "I Dream of Jeannie" (1965)

Notes

Filmed in "Perceptovision."

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1965

Re-released in United States on Video March 9, 1994

Perceptovision

Released in United States 1965

Re-released in United States on Video March 9, 1994