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  • grantss4 January 2015
    Better than expected.

    Having seen the 2010 version of Piranha (and the 2012 sequel, which was even worse) I really didn't expect much from this, the 1978 original. Turns out it's not bad, and better than I expected.

    Starts very well - setting the scene, developing the plot and characters. There is a genuine feeling of intrigue and engagement. You keep thinking "How are they going to stop this?".

    From a point, however, it does degenerate into a B-grade creature feature, with action, body count and gore being the main drivers. It also feels like a bad ripoff of Jaws.

    However, for the most part it is reasonably enjoyable and worth the watch.
  • Not many movie-makers do parodies better than Joe Dante – the director who brought us The Howling (a werewolf movie parody), Gremlins (a monster movie parody), Innerspace (a Fantastic Voyage parody), The 'Burbs (a neighbours-from-hell parody) and Piranha (a Jaws parody). This 1978 comedy-horror is one of Dante's early movies, but despite that he shows an assured touch and gets generously tongue-in-cheek performances from his cast of horror veterans. While the film is never a truly great rival to the awesome Jaws, it is a fun and entertaining homage that has much going for it. Easily the strong point of this film is the gruesome make-up provided by whiz-kid Rob Bottin, but more will be said of that later.

    A couple of teenagers go missing while trekking through the woods. Private eye Maggie McKeown (Heather Menzies) goes searching for them, and discovers a burnt-out hermit Paul Grogan (Bradford Dillman) living on the mountainside who offers to help her in her hunt. McKeown and Grogan stumble upon a secluded military research centre where crazed scientist Dr. Hoak (Kevin McCarthy) is busily conducting experiments to create a strain of piranha fish able to survive in rivers and oceans, and always eager to devour anything in their way. The plan is to release these super-fish in enemy rivers, thereby making the entire river system too dangerous to use. McKeown and Grogan mistakenly release the piranhas into the local river, and realise that anyone using the river for recreation – including the bustling summer camp miles downstream – are now in desperate danger. The army is brought in, but instead of helping to solve the terrifying situation they seem more concerned with covering up the whole business. In particular, General Waxman (Bruce Gordon) has cause to keep the existence of the piranha secret, as he has invested his savings in the summer camp and doesn't want to scare away his paying customers. In a race against time, Grogan and McKeown try to release poison into the river to prevent the piranhas from devouring everyone in sight and proceeding to the ocean…..

    Piranha is fast-moving, gory fun. It's nice to see Dillman in a heroic leading role after so many years of playing the supporting bad guy in numerous films. Menzies is fine as his partner-in-adventure, and there are great supporting roles for horror legends like Barbara Steele (as a military scientist), Dick Miller (as a cowboy entertainer) and Keenan Wynn (as Grogan's doomed buddy who lives at the riverside). As I said earlier, Rob Bottin provides some bloody make up effects that make some of the half-eaten victims look pretty yucky. The gently mocking script is by John Sayles, and is full of humorous references to earlier books and films along the same theme. The finale in which the holiday-makers fall foul of the piranha fish is packed with blood and guts, and should definitely appeal to gore-hounds. Even though the film keeps its tongue in its cheek, there are still some dumb moments along the way that mar credibility even on this level. For instance, Grogan spends much of the closing scenes underwater being attacked by the piranha…. earlier in the film we were made to believe that the piranha devoured their victims in literally a few seconds, but they seem to make ludicrously hard work of attacking Grogan while he's in the water (in fact, he surfaces after several minutes in the firing line with just a few bites, which seems somewhat fortuitous!!) Piranha is enjoyable, though, and should be well received by genre addicts.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Even in the late 70's studios were trying to cash in on the "Jaws" phenomenon and to this date they are still doing it. This is a Roger Corman produced film and he never saw a genre that he didn't exploit. Story is about an insurance investigator named Maggie McKeown (Heather Menzies) who is trying to locate two lost campers and she runs into an alcoholic hermit in the woods named Paul Grogan (Bradford Dillman) and she persuades him to give her a ride to a supposedly closed military facility. They look around and Maggie finds the campers gear certifying that they were there. They start to drain the pool to see if they drowned and they're attacked by a man who says not to let the water drain. They knock him unconscious and take him back to Paul's cabin. They tie him up and with the use of a raft they head downstream to the authorities. While on the raft they find out that his name is Dr. Robert Hoak (Kevin McCarthy) and he has been working for the government undercover and has developed a mutant species of piranha and that they let them out of the pool and into the river! The military comes in and they try to keep Maggie and Paul quiet but they escape and try to stop the piranha from heading downriver and into the ocean. The piranha chew up several people and even little kids swimming at camp. A local businessman named Buck Gardner (Dick Miller) is opening a resort on the river and even though he knows about the piranha he doesn't delay the grand opening. This was the directorial debut of Joe Dante and even though this was made on a shoestring budget his talent is very evident. Yes, the film is silly but the special effects are not that bad and the script was written by John Sayles. The only flaw (For me that is) is that Dillman and Menzies spend way to much time on that raft. The film does slow down a notch but luckily it's not for that long. There is one truly scary scene and it's where the piranha attack the little kids at camp. The kids really get chomped on and the scene where a pretty counselor is killed is very effective and well made. The opening scene in the film is a direct "Jaws" rip-off where the two campers go swimming at night and are eaten. Menzies is then seen playing a "Jaws" video game. Like all Corman films this has many recognizable faces in the cast like Keenan Wynn, Barbara Steele, Paul Bartel, Belinda Balaski, Richard Deacon and Sayles himself plays the Army guard that is fooled when Dillman and Menzies escape. Definitely a film that you don't take seriously but this is pretty well made and a must for fans of Corman and horror films.
  • In the wake of "Jaws" came countless man vs. nature flicks with everything from bees to grizzly bears to frogs coming out to get man back for his crimes against the ecology (and don't forget "Night of the Lepus" in which huge bunny rabbits munched on hapless victims!) This film is considered one of the best imitators, primarily because of its tongue-in-cheek approach and it's deliberately campy writing and casting. Menzies is a hotshot missing persons expert who goes in search of two young hikers who have disappeared. She enlists the aid of hermit-like Dillman who lives near an abandoned government testing facility where the hikers were last suspected to have been. When they come upon a murky tank and believe the bodies could be at the bottom, Menzies releases the contents, unwittingly unleashing a school of vicious, genetically-altered piranha onto an unsuspecting river full of camp kids and park revelers. From there, it's a race against the clock to get to Dillman's young daughter who is about to enter a camp relay race in the water downstream. The film is deliberately peppered with actors who've made their mark in either horror or suspense films and it makes no pretenses about its lack of originality (though it does manage to come up with some despite itself!) Dillman (sporting an atrocious come-and-go Southern accent) and Menzies have a surprisingly decent rapport with each other with a few amusing scenes tossed in amongst all the panic. McCarthy pops up as a terrified scientist who knows his plans have gone awry. Wynn has a cameo as a gruff, but likable neighbor of Dillman's. Steele plays an ominous scientist in cahoots with Army colonel Gordon to keep the whole situation under wraps. Bartel is the persnickety camp counselor and Miller is the smarmy amusement park owner, both of whom disbelieve that there's any danger. Despite it's minuscule budget and rather homemade effects, the film does generate a bit of eye-opening gore and more than a little discomfort as these tiny fish nibble away at anything in the water. If "Jaws" caused people to avoid the ocean, this film could make people think twice about cloudy rivers and lakes! The murkiness of the water only adds to the horror of it all as the bikini-clad tourists and innertube-wielding kids can't begin to see what's coming. It's just a sting, then a nibble, then blood everywhere! Some of the effects are tacky and amusing, but there's a certain level of true fear as well. If one likes this genre to begin with, it will probably be a pleasure to watch. Others may be less enthralled.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    POSSIBLE SPOILERS AHEAD!

    Joe Dante has been a very consistent director over the years, save maybe for one or two bumps in the road (most probably due to studio and Producer interférences), and his unique style of mixing humor with action and horror goes all the way back to his first official feature-length debut.

    "Piranha" is one of those post-"JAWS" films done to cash in on the success of an underwater threat in the form of a fish. Much like the aforementionned Speilberg masterpiece, Dante's offering put the little toothy critters on everyone's everyday radar, and have since become part of popular culture as a fish to keep an eye out for.

    Yes, the film is low-budget, and that means that some of the practical effects may seem a bit cheap and cheezy at times, but Dante and his crew have managed to craft a very respectable film which oddly enough features almost no slow moments except when the scene(s) demands it.

    Acting-wise, pretty much everyone is decent to highly competent, save for a couple of moments where maybe additional takes should have been shot, but that's low-budget film-making for you.

    All-in-all this is a very enjoyable film, if you put yourself in the right frame of mind and realize that this is a late 70s production, and films of the era had a certain "flavor" and "style" which people are early as the mid-80s found rather boring and "dépassé". But for what it's worth, "Piranha" does have it's charm and it's own fair share of moments, and good characterizations by the actors who, for the most part, look like they are having a lot of fun with the material they are being given. Don't expect a lot of drama, as the overall mood remains for the most part "fun" and "light-hearted", and very Dante-esque (if you are familiar with his unique style). Special props of course to Dick Miller having a larger-than-usual role in this one (he is usually cast as a once-scene-only character in most flicks).

    Note: I was dupped and unfortunately bought a full frame (4x3) version of the DVD, Something which is incomprehensible when showcasing it as a "collector's edition" from the post-Y2K era, but the film is good enough for me to hunt down a widecreeen copy of it.

    Oh and can someone explain what were those stop-motion creatures in those blink-and-you-miss moments during our protagonists' investigation of the secret experiement lab? It seemed like a set-up for Something to happen at a later moment in the film, but these were never references to by anyone...?
  • boblipton31 July 2021
    Scientists developed a variety of piranha which can live in fresh and salt water. Then the government project closed down, and they poisoned the water. But the fish survived, and eat Keenan Wynn.

    It's a dumb-sounding idea for a film, one of the many movies that came out after the success of JAWS. Surprisingly, it's a funny spoof of the movie, from the posters based on the mega-hit's poster, to director Joe Dante having two-legged reptiles running around, to a silly pastiche of the beach scene. Writer John Sayles was so disgusted that he thought about giving up on film, returning to novels Instead, he took his earnings and made RETURN OF THE SECAUCUS SEVEN, and Steven Spielberg thought it was so funny, you talked Universal out of a lawsuit and hired Dante.
  • Piranha is cheesy 70s/80s creature films at their very best! It has everything - evil military generals, obligatory lake celebrations, scientific experimentation gone wrong, horrible dialogue, low-budget effects, and more. It's clear as you watch the film that Piranha was heavily influenced by Jaws, with the city ignoring the warnings of the dangerous underwater creature, the very similar movie poster, and much more. Steven Spielberg has even named it his favorite Jaws rip-off movie. This low-budget gem was a zeitgeist of creature horror cinema of the decade that didn't allow bad effects, poor acting, or no money to stop them from making their movies. The remakes in the 2000's just used this movie as an excuse to show a lot of nudity, and while there is a little nudity in Piranha (1978), it is much briefer than its predecessors. Pirahna (1978) focuses on letting the army of hungry fish gnaw on its helpless victims. This goofy little creature flick launched the career of director Joe Dante, who later collaborated with Steven Spielberg himself to make Gremlins - a real creature masterpiece! Piranha is no Gremlins, but it sure is a fun start to Dante's creepy creature-filled career.
  • Pretty good parody of Steven Spielberg's JAWS from Joe Dante that is quite self aware. Right to the point that in the first scene after the credits have rolled one of the main characters Maggie McKeown played by Heather Menzies-Ulrich is playing a video game of JAWS. It knows exactly what it is and who they are ripping off. Better than perhaps any other film ripping off by the man-eating shark classic and better than any of its sequels. Made through Roger Corman and his company New World Pictures and made a killing at the box office...no pun intended.

    McKewon is sent to investigate as two people have gone missing. She is out of her element and needs a guide or someone who knows the area. In steps the surly, booze tipping Paul Grogan (really great and unsung performance by Bradford Dillman). They go off together and come to an old fish hatchery. There is a giant pool there so they decide to drain the pool to search for the missing couple. They find a crazy and wild Dr. Robert Hoak (Kevin McCarthy in as usual a great performance that to me is just an extension of his performance in INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS) who lets them know of piranha that he had been conducting experiments on that have escaped and are now swimming their way to the end of the river which is the ocean.

    Nice mixture of humour and horror from screenwriter John Sayles (who also has a cameo) and since it is Joe Dante directing it I think they got the perfect director with the right abilities and sense of humour to make the picture.

    Loaded with a very good cast also including Keenan Wynn, Dick Miller, Barbara Steele and Paul Bartel. The music also is great coming from Italian composer Pino Donaggio. Although the main theme is taken from CARRIE if I am not mistaken, which he also worked on. So, not his best work due to that fact, but its Donaggio so you are going to get way better music than most.

    Followed by a terrible sequel and 2 remakes. I know one person that really enjoyed this film had to be Steven Spielberg as both he and Dante worked together on THE TWILIGHT ZONE and GREMLINS.

    So, if you like humour mixed in with your horror or consider yourself a horror movie buff you have to see this movie as it should be worth your time.
  • buckmann-19 January 2011
    1/10
    Awful
    Warning: Spoilers
    Awful

    Probably the worst B movie (TV Animal Planet) i saw last 12 month. Despite the fact that it maintains some suspense, the acting is miserable, and the story is full of nonsense. To mention some: 1. The Pool must have an outlet diameter of several inches to allow draining human skeletons 2. I couldn't understand why Mengers attacks with her pole and doesn't cry to stop the drainage proceedings. So many security devices and no filter grid on the outlet! 3. The rescue trial of Dr Mengers is useless, silly, and done just to kill the character. 4. Why, the hell, the army wishes salt water piranhas in enemy rivers? By the way, I know Amazonic piranhas, I'd fished several. They NEVER attack after sunset. 6. A working flooded circuit breaker on the dam! Oh, please! 7. What kind of poison was stored in the dam, for what, and why so selective, that nothing happens to Paul?

    My vote 1/10
  • With all the films that are released on video that try to ride the coat tales of other popular entries in film, people forget that early on there really was only one man who did that. That man was Roger Corman, a producer who worked at creating cheap films that entertained viewers no matter what the material. Then there's Joe Dante, a director who hasn't worked with many theatrical released films, but the ones he has made have faithful followings. Dante is another filmmaker that enjoys taking ideas from popular films and turning it on its head. The thing is, Dante at least does it with a non-subtlety attitude and style. Seriously, looking at the poster alone tells you that Dante and Corman were borrowing the concept from Steven Spielberg's Jaws (1975).

    For the most part, the film is watchable but there are various elements that don't work. One of those elements is John Sayles' writing. It works well at building tension in how the story plays out, but the dialog and back-story to why the piranhas are in a local resort feel flimsy. Turns out, a school of piranhas were genetically enhanced to help win the Vietnam war. So in other words radio activity is the problem. It's understood that this comes from a time where it was prevalent but now it no longer is plausible. Using radioactivity as a plot device for a sea creature is no longer usable. It has been exploited since the early 50s era films. Not many of the actors that take part feel like they are that of something new either.

    Bradford Dillman as a divorced drunk father of one daughter is possibly the most interesting of the bunch. And this guy was the only one to ask to have his character have more depth. So you can imagine what the rest of the characters are like. Next is Heather Menzies-Urich who plays a missing persons detective, who also looks to find the truth behind the piranha epidemic. She also becomes Dillman's love interest - without little explanation. Okayyyy,...see what I mean on character depth? Some of the dialog is silly to hear at times too. Unfortunately, these things are big parts to the film that weigh it down because they are essential to telling a good story. Thankfully, there are a enough good parts to help make it somewhat enjoyable. For example, Dick Miller has a role. And who doesn't like Dick Miller?

    For one, the practical effects are quite convincing to say the least. Phil Tippett's ability to make the piranhas themselves, the gore and blood look authentic is important. I mean, even if the cast isn't the most convincing, the plot device should at least. I do question one scene however. There's a scene where stop motion animation is used and it looked great but it never served a purpose. What was the point? Kudos to using the technique but thumbs down for not giving it meaning. Jaime Anderson's cinematography is good specifically for the underwater scenes. Surely that wasn't the easiest thing to do. The editing by Joe Dante and Mark Goldblatt was competently done too. Specifically for keeping the illusion of the Piranhas looking like actual fish and not puppets. Lastly, Pino Donaggio's music was OK. It wasn't great but at least had a theme specifically for the piranhas. That at least is recognizable. It's watchable but not all that exciting at times.

    It has good practical effects and a borrowed concept from Jaws (1975) that only can be considered flattering. However, its story and majority of its characters aren't all that different from other characters in other films.
  • Meredith-74 November 2003
    I was really looking forward to seeing this film, I had heard so much about it & John Sayles of Alligator fame had penned the script so how bad could it be? Actually it was really terrible. Possibly this is one of those films that has not stood the test of time. The opening is O.K, and there are some nice creature effects, but the acting is so bad and some of the sub plots so corny that there is no doubt that you are watching a Roger Corman production - and a bad one at that. Only watch it if you really have a burning desire to see it - otherwise stay away.
  • RELEASED IN 1978 and directed by Joe Dante, "Piranha" chronicles events when genetically-enhanced piranha are accidently released into a river system in central Texas, which threaten kids & counselors at a Summer Camp and vacationers at a lake resort. A spirited skip tracer (Heather Menzies) and a backwoods drunkard (Bradford Dillman) team-up to save the swimmers. Kevin McCarthy and Barbara Steele play military scientists who experimented with the escaped piranha.

    While "Piranha" is sort of a "Jaws" (1975) knockoff, it's different enough to not be a rip-off: The story takes place in a river system deep in the mainland and not the ocean; the 'monster' consists of teams of little vicious fish rather than a huge Great White Shark; the beach sequences involve quaint campground-like beaches rather than major ocean beaches; unlike "Jaws," there's a focus on alluring young women, although "Jaws 2" (1978) delivered the goods in this area as well; there's more of a sense of adventure and even suspense; and the tone mixes-in amusing elements with the horrific mayhem.

    As inferred, the picture is highlighted by several quality females with curvy Belinda Balaski (from "The Howling") and cutie Melody Thomas Scott (from The Young and the Restless) featured in prominent roles. Moreover, voluptuous Janie Squire has some worthy screen time in the prologue. There are superb women in the periphery as well. Interestingly, the 2010 quasi-remake, "Piranha 3D," took the sleaze route with loads of nudity, but the women are ironically hotter here, not to mention the film's all-around more entertaining.

    THE MOVIE IS LEAN and filler-free at 93 minutes and was shot along a river near San Marcos in the heart of Texas, Northeast of San Antonio. WRITERS: John Sayles and Richard Robinson.

    GRADE: A-
  • Yes, in most cases; fish don't eat people, people eat fish; but the auteur of that quote clearly forgot about man eating fish, such as piranha; and that reflects even worse on his brain power when you consider that, at the time of speaking, he was actually in a film called "Piranha", which also happens to be about man eating fish! Lots of 'em! It's little delights like the one just mentioned that make Piranha what is - the script doesn't take itself seriously, and that blends with the shameless ripping off of many a creature feature, and both of those in turn provide the audience with a very camp movie experience indeed. Creature features have a long history of being camp, and Joe Dante's film will no doubt be a highlight for fans of the classic movies in this field. Joe Dante has made a lot of cheap, but good films, and while The Howling remains the best of his oeuvre and the 'best director' awards certainly won't be winging his way soon, he's an underrated talent in the horror film industry and Piranha is certainly one of his better films.

    Joe Dante has put a good cast together for this movie, which equally weighs out the camp and action sequences in the movie in the same proportions that the movie itself gives out. Bradford Dillman takes the lead role, and while he clearly knows that he's appearing in a camp and very much 'B' standard horror; he still gives it his all and makes for a fine protagonist. The highlights among the ensemble are Barbara Steele, a regular in horror films, with performances in the likes of 'The Pit and the Pendulum' and 'Black Sunday', and Dick Miller; a cult star that Dante would go on to use regularly, but found his cult stardom in the Corman classic 'A Bucket of Blood'. The pace of the film is good, and while the script shows some holes, the plot usually lasts out. It gets a bit hectic towards the end and Dante would have been better served with less carnage and more tension to give the movie a better finale. The effects are pretty much non-existent, as the movie just uses cuts of fish swimming and a bit of fake blood for most of it's shocks. Still, this is a very fun movie and one that people who enjoy a good time will enjoy.
  • Often mistaken for a parody, "Piranha" is actually a full-blooded (and extremely bloody) "Jaws" rip-off, with only a handful of humorous lines. While it can't even approach the level of "Jaws", it's a lot better than the three fairly terrible "Jaws" sequels, and provides decent entertainment...if you don't mind the heavy doses of blood
  • The 1978 Roger Corman produced picture Piranha was about…well, piranha. Killer fish escape a government research lab and kill hapless vacationers, fishermen, and scientists. The film could have been real hokey if not for writer John Sayles and director Joe Dante. The two of them would become very successful in Hollywood with the release of The Howling. The cast is full of familiar faces such as Kevin McCarthy, Paul Bartel, Dante regulars Robert Picardo and Dick Miller, and Barbra Steele. The effects are cheesy but that's part of the fun. I believe that they made the best movie about menacing fish that they could. It has just the right mix of comedy and terror and it's entertaining. The Jaws video game was a nice touch too.

    "They're eating the guests, sir."
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Maybe it's because I saw this one when I was young and I didn't bother with Jaws. I probably saw Jaws way too late because I really didn't care much for it but I really am glad it was the inspiration for this movie. What is scarier than one man-eating big fish, well a lot of flesh-eating little fish who can cause a lot more mayhem among people who like to have fun time in the water. Yes these fish are some really ugly pieces of nature being able to survive in cold and salt water which a normal piranha cannot live in. I actually liked the whole back story for why the fish were grown and turned into a mutated species by scientists. Fish as weapons in wars it could sure be effective as the victims did experience. I liked the combination of Heather Menzies as detective Maggie McKeown and Bradford Dillman as Paul Grogan who are eventually the ones saving the day. Kudos also to Shannon Collins as Paul's daughter Suzie. She played the role of fearful but eventually brave kid really well.
  • This Roger Corman classic is an entertaining movie to watch.

    Government sponsored program to breed piranhas that can survive cold water to be used against the North Vietnamese was doing fine in an isolated lab up in the mountains until one girl throws her boyfriend into the pond that's infested with these things. Another girl comes along looking for them, and guess what ? She drains the pond looking for their dead bodies, but in the process unleashing the piranhas into the river stream down below.

    The mayhem that follows is pretty believable, and there's lot of entertaining scenes that follows. Acting is good, story is good, it's a good sci-fi movie classic that's still entertaining after 30 years.

    It's a classic that recent "Piranha 3D" (2010) is almost a verbatim copy of this story, substituting the government lab with a mesozoic excavation ground, and kids camp with college spring break.

    This is a quality movie with no cheese, and is recommended for viewing.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I suppose if I were a genre buff, I might have liked PIRANHA better. As it is, I started out liking it OK, then over the course of the movie found myself liking it less and less, then actively disliking it more and more. By the end, I was really sorry I had shelled out ten bucks for the DVD. At this point, I don't even know if I'll bother to go back and check out the commentary track.

    Joe Dante is a reasonably talented director, John Sayles's screenplay mostly (*mostly*) avoids the aggressive stupidity of the average genre B-film, and most of the male actors are old pros (Paul Bartel is terrible; to be fair, I think that for some reason I don't understand, he's actually trying to be terrible). The women, of course, were hired for their looks, and they do fine on that basis.

    Still, it doesn't work, for several reasons:

    It doesn't come close to transcending the genre clichés. Gee, evil military men, shortsighted gummint scientists, stupid cops, greedy businessmen, and a pompous and annoying authority figure. Ho-hum. Look: if you do exactly what other movies do, in exactly the way they do it, your movie isn't transcending the clichés. It's clichéd.

    One exception to the above is that Bartel's annoying authority figure is not, as genre convention would dictate, a self-serving coward. Indeed, in one scene he is actually permitted to display considerable physical courage in saving other people's lives. So never let it be said I'm unwilling to give credit where credit is due.

    Worse, the piranhas kill in patently impossible ways. One character bleeds to death after the piranhas eat the foot which he dangles in the water. The next victim dies when the piranhas pull him out of a boat by his hand. The problem with all this is that when the victim felt the first nip, he would yank his hand or foot out of the water, and piranhas (even evil mutant warmongering gummint piranhas) are just not big enough to stop it. This isn't a matter of choice. If you've ever accidentally touched a hot stovetop burner, you'll know what I mean. Your hand jumps away from the burner by itself; no act of will is involved. It's pure reflex. It might be possible to *intentionally* place your hand on a burner and leave it there while it sears your flesh off your bones, but if you're not expecting the pain, you'll pull away.

    So we are forced to watch characters make *literally* superhuman efforts to let the piranhas eat them. It just looks stupid, no matter what the intentions of the filmmakers were. After this, it becomes impossible to take the film seriously on any level. If they wanted to do this kind of thing, they should have played it for laughs--on the other hand, given the level of the "comic relief" in this film (hey, Cletus, those pants hit that cop in the face, hyuk, hyuk), maybe that wouldn't have been such a good idea.

    [POSSIBLE SPOILER ALERT]

    Then, the film's first big setpiece mass attack includes (toward the beginning) a piece of business so stupid that one laughs--derisively--just at the wrong moment. And it ends--in spite of the presence of at least a dozen people in the water--with only one fatality (because the rest of the potential piranha snacks were children, and the filmmakers didn't have the guts to waste a kid). In other words, these superfish can pull a grown man off a boat, but they can't manage to chomp a few small children who are already immersed in the water. What a world, what a world.

    Of course, in the climactic attack, the piranhas are able with very little trouble to pull full-grown adults off of air mattresses and innertubes, which makes their failure in the preceding attack look just a little bit silly.

    And of course there's the basic problem with 99% of horror flicks: horror isn't terror. I fail to understand how anyone can claim to be frightened by gouts of red liquid which they know isn't blood (you'd think this would be a source of embarrassment, rather than pride). In order to be truly frightening, a movie must present realistic and believable characters who we actually care about, and place them in danger. The body count isn't the point. JAWS is a perfect example of what I mean. Even the few minor victims (Chrissie Watkins, Alex Kintner, Ben Gardner and the unnamed guy in the rowboat [not to mention Pippet the dog]) are perfectly delineated in their brief appearances; they seem like real people. Their deaths serve to establish the shark's menace, so that when our three main characters (whom we have come to like and respect) go out on the *Orca*, we genuinely fear for their safety.

    Here, we have obviously fake people getting bitten by obviously fake piranhas and squirting out obviously fake blood. Ooh, how scary. Even if you're willing to suspend your disbelief enough to find it creepy and horrifying (I wasn't), it just isn't frightening.

    PIRANHA gets far more respect than it deserves.

    4/10.
  • One of the better Jaws knockoffs of the late '70's. A scientifically mutated school of piranha were accidentally released into a nearby river resort with devastating consequences. The army and aquatic scientists are called to help, but they are no help. Steven Spielberg himself enjoyed the film which prevented a lawsuit against the film.

    Filmed in the Texas hill country, specifically, the Aquarena springs in San Marcos. This is a fun film. Dick Miller is great. One of Barry Brown's final films. Ralph the swimming pig makes a cameo. The pig was an actual mascot of Aquarena. I got to see up close the '67 Plymouth Fury police car from this movie. Go check it out.
  • SnoopyStyle21 February 2021
    Two teens are killed in an abandoned army research station by something in a pool. Skiptracer Maggie McKeown is sent to find the missing teens. She comes upon woodsman Paul Grogan who guides her to the station. Maggie mindlessly turns on a lever and gets attacked by Dr. Robert Hoak (Kevin McCarthy). Hoak has been doing experiments from the Vietnam era and the lever has released a new species of piranha into the nearby river threatening a children's summer camp.

    This is one campy B-movie. Some of it is non-sense. The group is paddling down a river like Huck Finn. People are doing stupid things against self interest for no good reason. It's an early movie from director Joe Dante. It's great to have horror veteran Kevin McCarthy as the mad scientist. It's camp but there are issues even with that consideration. I don't think having little kids being eaten by piranhas is good cinema. It's probably a mistake to use kids that young. The fish sounds are rather silly. This is not a movie to be taken seriously and it does some B-horror fun.
  • Piranha (1978) is a movie I recently rewatched for the first time in a long time on Tubi. The storyline follows a small town with a fresh water river that accidentally gets infested by genetically engineered piranha. Those that swim in the river are about to get a surprise.

    This movie is directed by Joe Dante (The Howling) and stars Bradford Dillman (The Enforcer), Heather Menzies-Urich (The Sound of Music), Kevin McCarthy (Invasion of the Bodysnatchers), Dick Miller (Gremlins) and Melody Thomas Scott (The Fury).

    The storyline and character behaviors in this are pretty far out there. Seeing Maggie run through the water treatment plant randomly pulling levers always makes my head hurt. The kill scenes are more fun than good. It's just a lot of rustling and bubbles in the water near people swimming. The cast does do a pretty solid job with what they have to work with and I will say I enjoyed the "nice distraction" scene.

    Overall this is a very average addition to the genre. I would score a 5.5-6/10 and only recommend it to horror enthusiasts.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    First time I have watched this original version. The film has had numerous sequels and 3D incarnations over the years.

    It was made in 1978 and it has aged in parts from print quality to fashions and appalling special effects compared to CGI.

    The film is a Jaws rip off in several scenes. From the Jaws arcade game. Water skier. An arrogant water park owner wearing a white suit who is the spitting image of the Amity mayor in Jaws.

    A watchable 90 or so minutes but far from classic! The acting is very 1970s Australian soap opera territory.
  • Debut film of B horror director Joe Dante is this fun, exciting Jaws spoof that's the best of its kind!

    A school of deadly, mutant piranha is released from a government laboratory and it's up to an alcoholic man and his detective love-interest to warn folks down stream!

    A fast-paced, campy, and humorous ride all the way, Piranha is a genuinely entertaining B film that recalls not only Jaws but many of the classic monster flicks of the 50's. The screenplay by John Sayles has lots of good suspense and a witty kind of humor. Dante's direction is nicely done, keeping the energetic mood of the film high. The special FX aren't half bad, especially considering the limited budget. In fact the movie packs some truly gory images. Pino Donaggio's music score is beautifully well done.

    Stars Bradford Dillman and Heather Menzies are quite good, making for some amusing and unlikely heroes. The supporting cast is good as well and has a number of veteran actors - Kevin McCarthy, Keenan Wynn, Dick Miller, and Barbara Steele.

    Over all, Piranha is a good old-fashioned horror delight for genre fans. See it!

    **** out of ****
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Of course in real life, piranha aren't actually the murdering swarms we originally viewed them as. People in the Amazon swim with them just about every day and almost never get bit. These fish are scavengers that clean up the dead and dying that are in the waters. Look into River Monsters if you don't believe me. I always hate that stupid blonde girl who open the tank without knowing if the pipelines were authorized for use. Believe it or not, there has been no case of a Piranha killing a human in scientific history, nvm, in 2013 piranhas ate a 6 year old girl after the boat she was in with her grandmother and 4 other children capsized in a storm In 1997 On Christmas Eve , Piranhas attacker 70 swimmers. FACT: Universal Pictures wanted to sue to stop the release of this film. But Steven Spielberg liked it so much, he talked the heads of Universal out of it. In fact, Spielberg liked it so much, him and Joe Dante became good friends, and Steven asked him to direct Gremlins and an episode of Amazing Stories. This movie is delightfully stupid. A bit campy and ridiculous and admittedly a bit of a ripoff of Jaws. At the beginning of the movie when the young couple go skinny dipping in the test pond that houses the piranha, who the hell could ever be so foolish...who in the hell jumps into a pool when they clearly don't have the slightest idea what it's actually used for...I hate myself for saying this but in my opinion the movie is so dumb and unrealistic! Hilarious at the start. I mean who on earth would swim in a tank of water without any knowledge of the fact it could be poisonous or anything.... But I guess it's just a movie. Could anyone really hold their breath for that long though at the end of this movie?!! What happened to the little dinosaur fella at the beginning he was so cute?? Yeah. I'll just scream my head off while leaving my feet dangling in the water for the fish to eat all the flesh away!!
  • Piranha is a film more self-aware than most of the post-Scream crap to come out of Hollywood. The film knows it follows a formula. In an early scene, we meet the protagonist Maggie playing a Jaws arcade game -- acknowledging the film it shamelessly rips off. It knows it packs a clichés punch with its characters as well as showing off that trademark Roger Corman cost-saving devices. It knows it carries an obligatory anti-war message as a product of the 1970s. And Piranha brings with it an appropriate sense of humor towards its material.

    So watching the film, I found myself despising the formula it follows; however, I couldn't help but appreciate how the film never takes itself too seriously. Good thing too, because the other protagonist, Paul, represents one of my greatest character pet peeves -- the self-serving social reject SoB who gets talked into tagging along who eventually evolves into something sympathetic. I can barely stomach that character type in this goofy ride, I don't think I could endure another character like that in a straight movie. Thank you Joe Dante.

    Most films will toss out a painfully contrived excuse to get the adventurous Maggie and the hermit-wanna-be Paul to run through the plot together even though no amount of logic or reason could possibly yield that result, but not Piranha. Oh no. It doesn't even bother with an excuse, it just defies logic and common sense to put the two together and doesn't ask questions. Thank you John Sayles.

    Of course, I still hated Paul, but that's okay. With any luck he'll wind up Piranha bait.

    Keenan Wynn plays a colorful old man who lives out in the same neck of the woods as the Paul character, and he confirms the viewer's suspicion that Piranha opts for less realistic characters in favor of silly caricatures. This prepares the viewer for the big balding camp activities administrator, Earl, who encourages little kids to overcome their fears by essentially calling them sissies for having said fears. Also the evil Colonel Waxman who is evil solely because he represents the US Government around the same era in history as the Vietnam War. And let's not forget the cocky highway patrol trooper who informs the main characters, "Don't try nothing 'cause I got my gun right here in my left hand." What I find most amusing about Piranha is the fact that the "good guys" (Maggie and Paul) are the two characters most deserving of a crucifixion over the events in the film. These characters waltz into an abandoned Government test facility and start pushing buttons without asking any questions, or even attempting to go through the right channels, or find out anything about this once top-secret and highly classified test facility. They metaphorically walk into a antique shop blindfolded while swinging a baseball bat, and it's the store owner's fault for leaving stuff out. But they said they're "reawwy, reawwy, sowwy, and it'll nevah happen again." Is it any wonder that no one believes their word about the river that bypasses the dam? I mean, most sane people hesitate to take directions from a guy who just ran full speed face first into a brick a wall.

    Piranha's story, in essence, describes two characters who screw up, and spend the rest of the film trying to fix it while the narratives desperately tries to lay blame on its villain of the day. In a straight horror flick, this would no doubt irritate me; however, in this caricature jamboree of clichés … it feels right. Especially with Dick Miller playing the "corrupt" businessman and owner of the aquatic park, and Barbara Steele playing a scientist associated with the project that generated the killer piranha -- both characters in league with the evil Colonel Waxman, thus villains by default. And, honestly, you can't go wrong with Keenan Wynn, Dick Miller, and Barbara Steele in a film like this.

    What about the stars of this film? The piranha's themselves? There's a certain charm to the hyperactive fish going into epileptic convulsions while their teeth shred away at human flesh and, of course, the foggy silhouettes that stiffly pass by the camera like glorified cardboard cutouts. In other words: fun low budget creature effects whose flaws only enhance the viewing experience.

    Unfortunately, the mayhem the Piranhas cause generally falls short to the point of, dare I say, boredom. The fish begin to bite, and the scene degenerates into a mass of extras kicking, screaming, splashing, intercut with convulsing piranhas feasting. The chaos in frame drags on with no arc, no climaxes, barely any visible progress. At best, every now and again, Joe Dante offers hints of a mass exodus from the water at such a casual pace that it's difficult to believe these people's lives are at stake.

    Having said that, I must confess that I respect and appreciate one of the climaxes where Joe Dante not only places a child's summer camp in danger, but also follows through by having the piranha actually attack the kids. An apparent Hollywood taboo despite the fact we're talking fiction -- where's the suspense of children in danger when the viewer knows a mainstream studio won't dare go there? Sad that this parody has more balls than some of its serious horror film brethren.

    That self-awareness and sense of humor separates Piranha from the pack, and saves it from the same bashing that other creature features would receive. However, it does not grant Piranha total immunity. While littered with flaws, Piranha is not afraid to acknowledge what it is, it's not afraid to go against Hollywood taboos, and it's not afraid to mock itself. And hey, you get a dose of Roger Corman, Joe Dante, Mark Goldblatt, Dick Miller, Keenan Wynn, and Barbara Steele all in the same package. If that's not worth the price of a rental, some popcorn, and a few laughs, I dunno what is.
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