Plots(1)

The Blob is back in this horrific tale about a vile, malignant life-form that crashes to Earth in a cozy, rural American town called Arborville. Untroubled by conscience or intellect, the Blob does only one thing – and it does it well. It eats anything and everything that moves: men, women, and children. And tonight it wants to swallow the town of Arborville. The original version of The Blob thrilled and terrified audiences back in the 1950s. Now the oozing, gooey killer is back with a whole new high-tech look. What was once only suggested now comes to life with state-of-the-art special effects in the tradition of such thrilling remakes as The Thing and The Fly. (Shout! Factory)

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Reviews (5)

J*A*S*M 

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English Beauty! An exceptionally entertaining, thoroughbred B-movie from the 80s. The Blob relies on pure cliché, basically, it has everything that B-horror should have, which would be bad for a more ambitious film, but here it almost made me moan in pleasure. The special and make-up effects are mostly excellent and there are several scenes I will remember for a long time (the cinema, the sewers, the hospital, the phone booth). My five-star rating is very subjective, of course, but it comes form the bottom of my heart. PS: If you want to be scared, get something else. ()

Isherwood 

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English I found out how hard it is to make a solid film out of this particular subject (a bunch of murderous blobs) with the original in 1958. Thirty years later, a remake was made that is still breathtaking today. From his recent work, I have Russell pegged as a decent craftsman, but this is an incredibly distinctive piece of filmmaking that has found a place for everything a proper 1980s horror B-movie should have. There’s plenty of incorrectness (the kill-list made my chin drop!), unpredictability (dead-end situations are solved with a bazooka), excellent characters (well acted), and most of all the absolutely FANTASTIC special effects! The details of the murderous attacks would still score points today. There’s no need to mention all the catchphrases, quotes, allusions and winks at more skilled viewers, which are literally wasted. ()

DaViD´82 

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English An unacknowledged King adaptation with everything; from the last name of the main character to the setting and style. Darabont is simply amazing. ()

gudaulin 

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English One of the many remakes of horror B-movies from the 1950s, which, by the way, turned out to be better in terms of film quality than the original. It is, after all, over 30 years younger and therefore more dynamic, action-packed, and naturally, more realistic. It is the 1980s, so instead of being the carriers of evil, there are not green men from space, but, as expected, covert government experiments with dangerous weapons. The result of Chuck Russell's work is a slightly, but only slightly, above-average genre film that cannot be denied tension, but a talented and experienced director could have taken it even higher. Especially on the acting side, it is uninspired, and there are also logical stumbles in the screenplay. Overall impression: 60%. ()

3DD!3 

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English Really well-made. Frank Darabont was involved in the writing of the script, so there are plenty of references to King and B-grade horror movies. There are plenty of snappy lines, many original, imaginative scenes and the deaths get better and better. Oh, and Meg during the final sequence… yum. Almost 5*. ()