Don't let this poster fool you, girls; the movie is not as much fun as the poster makes it out to be.
Yesterday, Baby Gojira and I watched what I thought would be a fun film. The premise was a good one. Thousands of coffee beans are being transported from Mexico to the United States, and these cute little tarantulas creep into the bags, undetected. No one suspects a thing. But if you think this is terror all the way, forget it.
While the spiders get their fair share of screen time, and lots of close-ups, that would have a Hollywood diva enraged, the action is mostly confined to the ground, and a bunch of actors whom most would not know--like Bert Remsen, who played the Mayor, but two years before, played Barbara Harris' husband in Robert Altman's 1975 masterpiece, "Nashville," or Claude Akins, who plays the kind of role Clint Eastwood have, had he not made it. But the real reason to see this film is Deborah Winters.
Oh, my God, she looks terrible in this, with that blonde boy haircut. And to think, just seven years ago, she was one of the most promising actresses of her generation. She appeared in both the CBS Playhouse live production, and then the film, of J.P. Miller's play, "The People Next Door." Yes, the same J.P. Miller who wrote "Days Of Wine And Roses.. Deborah played Maxie, the daughter who gets hooked on drugs--which, at the time was a shock to suburban communities; now, unfortunately, they are just second nature. But the scene where the parents find Maxie hiding in the closet, hands to her ears, claiming she hears mountains--this was brilliant acting, the kind rarely seen anymore, since this kind of material is not written anymore. How low we have come.
And how low Deborah had come, to do a film like this.? I was hoping she would get a Big Maxie Moment, and the filmmakers do try to give her one, when she beholds the body of her dead brother, Matthew, played by generic former 70's child star Matthew Laborteaux. The opportunity is there, but she does not take advantage of it, maybe because by the time the scene was shot, she knew this was a piece of crap. Which is why she is now Texas realtor Deborah Winters Chaney.
The film had me on the edge of my seat, wondering if Deborah would have a chance to show us what she could do. Alas, no. So, I cannot honestly recommend this. Unless you are some sick thing who has a yen for spiders, there is no reason to see this mess.
Alas, poor Deborah!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Here she is, in "The People Next Door." What promise!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!