Film Review
Roger Corman built his reputation on turning out popular films quickly
and on a low budget, and the film that best exemplifies his flair for
doing just this is
The Little Shop
of Horrors, the maddest and jolliest of his penny-pinching
cinema exploits. Made on a budget of around thirty thousand
dollars (which was minuscule, even for Corman) and shot in a matter of
days, the film is a miracle of shoestring economy and
inventiveness. It is now an enduring classic, widely regarded as
the funniest black comedy ever made.
The reason why Corman was able to make the film so cheaply was because
he had access to sets left over from a previous production, but he only
had two studio days into which to shoot all the sequences on these
sets. Working with screenwriter Griffith, he knocked out a
script in a week, although much of the comedy in the final product is
believed to have been improvised on the day of the shoot. The
unhinged plot about an intelligent man-eating plant is the result of
Corman's idea of making a film noir parody and Griffith's concept for a
horror spoof. One suspects that liquid refreshment (with
a high alcohol content) may have
been involved in the screenwriting process, and quite a bit of it.
All of the actors who appeared in the film had recently worked with
Corman, including a young Jack Nicholson, who puts in a brilliant cameo
as a masochistic dental patient whose idea of nirvana is to have his
teeth extracted without an anaesthetic. Stealing the focus in
this ensemble piece is Jonathan Haze, who is hilarious as the
unfortunate amateur botanist Seymour. Yes, things do get a little
silly in some places, but the ebullient performances and endless stream
of laugh-out-loud gags prevent us from realising just how daft the idea
of a talking man-eating plant is.
Whilst
The Little Shop of Horrors
did not perform spectacularly well on its first release (no one, least
of all Corman, expected that it would), its reputation has grown
massively since (not unlike the homicidal plant it
features). Today, it is one of the all-time cult classics
of American cinema. It inspired the 1982 stage musical, which
proved to be such a hit that this was itself made into a film in 1986,
but on a budget of millions rather than thousands. This is what
happens when you give into plants that shout "Feeeeed
meeeeeee!" They grow, and grow and grow - and then they eat you.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Roger Corman film:
Pit and the Pendulum (1961)
Film Synopsis
Gravis Mushnick is the mean-spirited owner of a cheap florist's shop in
Skid Row, New York. He has two assistants, the
simple-minded Audrey and the inept Seymour, but even with their
combined efforts he has difficulty attracting customers. To
impress Audrey, Seymour creates a new plant by cross-breeding a Venus
flytrap with a butterwort. Gravis is unimpressed by this sickly
hybrid, which is even more anaemic than Seymour. One evening,
Seymour accidentally cuts himself and drips some blood onto the
plant. To his amazement, the plant suddenly perks up. The
following night, Seymour is even more astonished when the plant speaks
to him, asking to be fed. Unsure what to do, Seymour goes out for
a walk, and accidentally kills a railway employee. How is he to
dispose of the body? Seymour finds the answer when, having
dragged the body back to the shop, the plant demands to be
fed. The next morning, Gravis Mushnick is astonished by how
large Seymour's plant has grown and wonders what his assistant has been
feeding it...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.