“ | That, gentlemen, is why you are here - to consider this problem and, I hope, solve it. Because unless you solve it, unless these queens are located and destroyed before they've established thriving colonies and can produce, heaven alone knows, how many more queen ants, man, as the dominant species of life on earth, will probably be extinct... | „ |
― Dr. Harold Medford to a group of govermnent officials |
Them! is a 1954 American black and white science fiction film directed by Gordon Douglas and produced by David Weisbart . It starred James Whitmore, Edmund Gwenn, Joan Weldon and James Arness. It is based on an original story treatment by George Worthing Yates which was developed into a screenplay by Ted Sherdeman and Russell Hughes for Warner Bros. Pictures Inc..
The movie tells the story about man's encounter with a nest of gigantic irradiated ants. It starts off as a simple suspense story, with the police who investigates mysterious disappearances and unexplainable deaths. The giant ants are not even seen until almost a third of the way into the film.
Plot
The film begins with New Mexico State Police Sergeant Ben Peterson (James Whitmore) and his patrol partner Ed Blackburn (Chris Drake) discovering a little girl wandering the desert near Alamogordo, mute and in a state of shock. It is also the area, where the firs atomic bomb was detonated nine years before. They retrace her steps to a trailer owned by an FBI agent named Ellinson, who was on vacation in the area with his wife and two children. The side of the trailer has been ripped open from the outside, and the parents are missing and presumed dead. The girl briefly responds when strange sounds echo out of the desert wind, but the troopers miss this.
More mysterious deaths and disappearances occur in the area. A general store owner named Gramps Johnson is found dead in his store, which had been literally torn apart. All the money is left in the register, but a barrel of sugar had been smashed open. Gramps' empty rifle has been bent in half. Peterson leaves to check on the status of the little girl, leaving Blackburn to guard Gramps' store. Not long afterward he hears a strange noise outside, pulls his weapon and goes out to investigate. Soon there is the sound of several gunshots, the strange sound gets louder and Blackburn is heard screaming in agony; he has been killed by an unknown assailant.
The police think there is a maniac killer on the loose, but Peterson's boss points out that Gramps' .30-.30 "got off 4 shots" and "Ed Blackburn was a crack shot. He could hit anything he could see. So unless your killer is armored like a battleship, there's no maniac in this case." It's up to the coroner to deliver the verdict that "Gramps Johnson could have died in any one of five ways. His neck and back were broken, his chest was crushed, his skull was fractured and here's one for Sherlock Holmes: there was enough formic acid in him to kill 20 men."
The FBI sends Agent Robert Graham (James Arness) to assist. A single strange track bigger than a mountain lion's is found in the desert near the trailer, and a plaster cast of it is made and sent to Washington, D.C. When the FBI is unable to identify the footprint, it attracts the attention of Harold (Edmund Gwenn) and Pat Medford (Joan Weldon), a father/daughter team of entomologists from the Department of Agriculture.
The elder Dr. Medford arrives on the scene with a theory, but will not disclose it until he tries an experiment on the Ellinson girl. He has her smell the contents of a vial of formic acid, which frees her from her state of near-catatonic withdrawal. She screams "Them! Them!" Medford's theory is validated when the group encounters a giant foraging ant, mutated by atomic radiation of the first atomic bomb to the size of an automobile. The ants produce loud, distinctive stridulating calls that become the iconic signature of the beasts. The lawmen empty their revolvers at the creatures, to little effect. They grab a Thompson submachine gun from the patrol car's trunk and fire it at the monster. They finally kill it by shooting off the creature's antennae, on Medford's advice that ants are helpless without them.
A U.S. Air Force unit is brought in, led by General O'Brien (Onslow Stevens), which locates the ants' nest and exterminates the inhabitants with poison gas. The younger Dr. Medford finds evidence that two young queens have hatched and flown away to establish new colonies. Trying to avoid a general panic, the government covertly investigates any reports of unusual activities or sightings of "flying saucers". One of the queens enters the hold of an ocean-going freighter loaded with sugar, which is then overrun by ants, who slaughter the crew. The vessel is subsequently sunk by a U.S. Navy cruiser. Evidence from an alcoholic in a hospital "drunk tank" (who said that he saw giant ants flying around outside his window) and from the dismembered corpse of a man last seen with his two young sons (now missing) leads the investigation to the storm drain system that empties into the Los Angeles River. Due to the significant threat to the City, the U.S. Army declares martial law and prepares for a major assault on the new nest.
During the assault, Peterson finds the two missing boys alive but trapped near the ants' nest. He calls in for backup, but realizing the boys are in imminent danger, goes in alone before it can arrive. He rescues the two boys and kills several threatening ants with his flamethrower. Peterson gets the boys to safety in the pipe through which he came. Before he can escape, Peterson is attacked from behind by another ant, and the ant grabs him in its mandibles and crushes him.
Graham arrives at the scene with reinforcements and they fight off the swarming ants. Graham rushes to Peterson. Peterson is only able to utter a few last words to Graham, confirming that the boys made it to safety, before he dies of his wounds. Graham is nearly killed himself when a cave-in temporarily cuts him off from the rest of the men; several ants charge him, but he is able to hold them off long enough for the other troops to tunnel through the debris and come to his rescue. The nest's queen and egg chamber are then destroyed with flamethrowers.
Worried that many more atomic bombs have detonated since the first detonation, the senior Dr. Medford issues a grim warning that "the atomic genie has been let out of the bottle," and further horrors may await mankind. He solemnly intones, "When man entered the atomic age, he opened the door to a new world. What we may eventually find in that new world, nobody can predict."
Cast[]
- James Whitmore as Sgt. Ben Peterson
- Edmund Gwenn as Dr. Harold Medford
- Joan Weldon as Dr. Pat Medford
- James Arness as FBI Agent Robert Graham
- Onslow Stevens as Gen. O'Brien
- Sean McClory as Maj. Kibbee
- Chris Drake as Trooper Ed Blackburn
- Sandy Descher as Ellinson girl
- Mary Ann Hokanson as Mrs. Lodge
- Don Shelton as Trooper Capt. Fred Edwards
- Fess Parker as Alan Crotty
- Olin Howlin as Jensen, the alcoholic
Death count[]
- 3 Unnamed Family members of the Ellison - Killed (offscreen) by a giant ant
- Gramp Johnson - Grabbed and thrown down stairs (offscreen) by Ants
- Edward “Ed” Blackburn - Grabbed and Eaten alive (offscreen) by Ants
- Ant - machine gunned by Sgt. Ben Peters and Robert Graham
- 18 Unnamed Human Remains - Eaten alive (offscreen) by Ants
- 2 Ants - Died of Tear gas
- Ant - Burned by Ben Peters and Shot Robert Graham
- 2 Unnamed Sailors - Possibly killed (offscreen) by Ants
- Unnamed Sailor - Eaten by Ant
- unnamed Wireless Operator - Eaten (offscreen) by Ant
- 2 Ants - Burned Alive by Ben Peterson
- Ben Peterson - Bled out when a Ant grabbed him
- Ant - Shot multiple times by Robert Graham
- 2 Ants - Blew up from a grenade by a Unnamed Us Solider
- Ant - Shot by Multiple US Soliders
- Ant - Shot by Graham and 2 unnamed Us Soldiers
- 3 Queen Ants - Burned Alive by Us Soldiers on the orders of Gen. O’Brien
Productions[]
Originally it was planned to make the movie in color and 3D, but, due to technical problems, it was scrapped and instead done in black and white.
Reception[]
The movie was successful. Since its original release, Them! has become generally regarded as one of the best science fiction films of the 1950s. One of the first of the "nuclear monster" movies, and the first "big bug" film, Them! was nominated for an Oscar for Special Effects and won a Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing.
Trivia[]
- Leonard Nimoy has a small, uncredited part as an Air Force sergeant in the communications room.
- June 19, 1954
- Jan Merlin made his debut as the crew-mate on the radio, this film launched his career as a villain.