Movie Night [K-DAY]: Tremors


In the absolutely bonkers science-fiction film Pacific Rim (del Toro, 2013), the monstrous Kaiju first attacked humanity on 10th August 2013. The attack ended a few days later on August 15th but, in that time, San Francisco, Sacramento, and Oakland were completely devastated and the Kaiju War officially began. Accordingly, August 10th became known as “K-DAY” and is, for me, a fantastic excuse to talk about some giant monster movies!


Released: 19 January 1990
Director: Ron Underwood
Distributor: Universal Pictures
Budget: $10 million
Stars: Fred Ward, Kevin Bacon, Finn Carter, Bobby Jacoby, Tony Genaro, and Michael Gross

The Plot:
Tired of their dull lives, handymen Earl Bassett (Ward) and Valentine “Val” McKee (Bacon) plan to leave the small desert town of Perfection, Nevada. However, they happen upon a series of mysterious deaths and a concerned seismologist, Rhonda LeBeck (Carter), studying unnatural readings below the ground that are soon revealed to be giant, prehistoric, worm-like monsters!

The Background:
While making safety videos for the United States Navy in the mid-1980s, screenwriters Brent Maddock and S. S. Wilson came up with the random idea of “land sharks” keeping them trapped on a large boulder. Another of their friends, Ron Underwood, used his knowledge as a documentary director for National Geographic to help them develop a believable creature for what would become the script for Tremors but it wasn’t until their script for Short Circuit (Badham, 1986) proved to be a commercial success that the film became a viable concept. Although star Kevin Bacon initially belittled the project and only signed on because he was broke, he later spoke highly of his time on set, his experience with co-star Fred Ward, and his desire to revisit the franchise. The Graboids were designed by Amalgamated Dynamics, including a full-scale creature made from lightweight foam and buried in desert to give it a used look. Though originally shot as an R-rated film, the filmmakers decided to make some cuts and changes to appeal to a wider audience. Unfortunately, this didn’t actually translate to the film’s box office; Tremors barely cleared $16 million in profit, which Maddock blamed on the mediocre marketing. Critically, Tremors fared slightly better; the balance between horror and comedy was praised, as was the B-movie feel of the film, and the entertainment value of the special effects and performances. Ultimately, Tremors birthed a surprisingly long-running franchise, that was comprised of multiple direct-to-video sequels, with Michael Gross becoming the series lead, a short-lived television series, and even an aborted attempt to return Kevin Bacon to the franchise in 2017.

The Review:
Tremors immediately establishes a few very important things right from its opening scene: first, we’re following a couple of blue-collar working men who have a brotherly banter that lends the film a comedic edge, and second that we’re stuck in the middle of nowhere in a dead-end town. Perfection is a small town surrounded by mountains that’s almost entirely self-sufficient; old Walter Chang (Víctor Wong) runs the only shop in town, Doctor Jim Wallace (Conrad Bachmann) acts as the town’s medical aide, and upstart Melvin Plug (Jacoby) spends his days lazing around and winding people up. There’s only a handful of people in town and not all of their characteristics and relationships are as easily defined as mother/daughter duo Nancy and Mindy Sterngood (Charlotte Stewart and Ariana Richards). For example, it’s unclear what Nestor Cunningham (Richard Marcus) or Miguel (Genaro) do or where Melvin’s family is, but everyone there looks after each other and works to provide some kind of service, even if they’re not always immediately clear.

Begrudging handymen Val and Earl find their big escape interrupted by subterranean monsters. 

Of course, this issue doesn’t apply to Val and Earl, two disgruntled local handymen who fill up their days taking out people’s trash, putting up razor wire and fences, and doing house clearances. Although Earl is the elder of the two, more seasoned and wiser to the ways of the world (and women), he’s just as bad as his young partner; the two share a fun, relatable banter, regularly playing rock/paper/scissors to decide who gets the shit jobs and accepting beer and lunches alongside payment for their jobs. The main differences between the two are that Earl is the more grounded and pragmatic and despairs of Val’s head-in-the-clouds mentality, especially when it comes to forethought and his opinions on women. Val has a very specific set of criteria for his women, preferring picturesque bimbos with low intelligence and little personality, whereas Earl believes he needs to be more realistic in his expectations. The two make a major contribution to the town, essentially maintaining the entire upkeep, and are renowned for being “best on a horse”, but Val and Earl are deeply unsatisfied with their lot in Perfection. They’re in underpaid, mediocre jobs and believe that they can strike it big by packing up and starting over in the nearest town, Bixby. There’s a sense that they’ve been threatening to leave for some time but they’re ecstatic to finally be taking the plunge and heading to a new life, only to stumble upon the dehydrated corpse of Edgar Deems (Sunshine Parker) atop an electrical tower and find themselves forced to stay in town as more bodies are found and a serial killer is suspected. The two leap into their truck to get help from Bixby since Perfection has no way of contacting anyone outside the valley, only to find their truck briefly hung-up on an incline and dragging a strange, snake-like creature back to town!

Seismologist Rhonda helps the locals to fight off the previously unheard of prehistoric creatures.

While out in the desert, Val and Earl come across graduate student Rhonda, who’s spending a semester investigating seismographs in Perfection and the surrounding area. Initially, Val is unimpressed by Rhonda, who doesn’t meet any of the criteria on his checklist, but Earl is eager for the two to spend more time together as she’s just the sort of down-to-earth young woman Val needs in his life. Rhonda’s research proves instrumental in discovering the extent of the threat lurking beneath the soil of Perfection, but even she is horrified to stumble across the duo with the corpse of a massive, carnivorous worm-like creature (later dubbed a “Graboid” by Chang and Melvin). Although she has no idea where the creatures came from or how they’ve remained undetected until now, a cursory investigation of the corpse allows her to deduce that Graboids are blind, hunt by sound, burrow using dozens of spiked appendages, and snag their prey with their mouth tentacles. Rhonda’s seismology readings reveal that three more of the creatures are lurking in the valley and she’s both captivated and terrified when she, Val, and Earl are stranded on rocks for most of the day and an entire night after narrowing escaping a Graboid. It’s during this impromptu marooning that Val and Rhonda first start to get closer; he gives her his jacket to keep her warm, helps her pole vault to her truck so they can escape back to town, and even tends to her wounds after she’s caught up in barbed wire. Although she’s hardly an expert, she’s the closest thing the townsfolk have but they struggle to process her instructions to stay quiet and stay high up. They’re more concerned with the who, how, and why of the creatures and only take their threat seriously when Graboids start bursting up through the ground and devouring their residents.

Survivalists Burt and Heather provide the firepower needed to repel the cunning Graboids.

While their main way of surviving is to take refuge on high ground, Perfection isn’t entirely defenceless; Burt and Heather Gummer (Gross and Reba McEntire) have built a veritable impenetrable war room just outside of town, one full of firearms as small as a pistol and as large as an elephant gun, alongside their all-terrain vehicle and homemade explosives. Survivalists who believe in being prepared, they settled in Perfection due to its perfect “geographic isolation” and are armed to the teeth for any impending disaster…except for “underground, god-damn monsters” and even then, they are the town’s best shot at fending off the Graboids and helping the survivors escape town. At first, Burt and Heather are unaware of the true extent of the threat as they’re out of town for the big reveal and are too busy crafting ammo to make heads or tails of Val’s frantic warnings, unwittingly luring a Graboid to their house. Luckily, despite the creature’s size and near-impenetrable girth, it ”broke into the wrong god-damn rec room” and is eventually blasted to death by Burt and Heather’s considerable weaponry. Although they’re unable to rescue the others when the Graboids disable their vehicle, they dig in and prepare weapons and ammo to fend off the creatures when Val successfully commandeers a heavy track loader to carry the survivors to safety. While he brings all their gear with them, Burt is clearly irritated at being driven from his home and deferring to Val and Earl’s expertise regarding the Graboids. Believing they stood a better chance making a stand in town where they had all the resources they needed to survive, Burt almost comes to blows with Val when the survivors are stranded on rocks and left to face starvation and dehydration just like Edgar. Luckily, Heather and Earl are on hand to be the voice of reason in their conflict, but Burt is clearly rubbed up the wrong way; though, ultimately, it’s his armaments that allow the displaced inhabitants to finish off the Graboids.

The Nitty-Gritty:
Tremors is a fantastic mixture of comedy, drama, action, and horror; it never takes itself too seriously and is clearly happy to be nothing more than an enjoyable monster movie with a budget. Every time Val and Earl are bitching about their lot in life, competing to see who’s making breakfast or arguing about their priorities for each day, it’s juxtaposed with some horrific visuals like the remains of Old Fred (Michael Dan Wagner) being found under his hat in a field of bloody patches that used to be sheep and the duo uncovering the buried remains of the doctor’s car. Tremors does a great job of building tension throughout the film, first by employing a sweeping first-person perspective that would make Sam Raimi proud and showing the slightest bulge of dirt in place of revealing the creatures too early, and then in using noise and silence to great effect. Since the slightest sound is enough to attract the Graboids, it’s wince-inducing to see the characters creep around and whisper to each other, scramble to unplug appliances, and when Mindy innocently goes pogo-sticking through town. Even when the survivors reach high ground they’re not entirely out of danger; the Graboids are big, strong, and surprisingly intelligent and co-ordinated, testing the fragile buildings for weaknesses and easily sucking down most vehicles and toppling flimsier structures.

The Graboids are brilliantly brought to life using tension, mystery, and impressive practical effects.

Of course, as great as the character interactions and banter are in Tremors, the big selling point of the film are the creatures themselves. Initially believed to be snake-like creatures, Val and Earl are stunned to find that these appendages are simply tongue-like tentacles belonging to the beak-like mouth of a far larger, more monstrous creature that’s so far beyond their comprehension that the townsfolk believe that they’re aliens or some kind of government experiment gone wrong (a “big surprise for the Russians”). Ultimately, their true origin is of no consequence and the characters quickly focus on how to survive, fight, and escape the creatures. Massive and impossibly fast due to their spiked appendages, the Graboids easily detect and chase down their prey, sucking them through the dirt and digesting them in the blink of an eye or lashing at them with their tongues like voracious anacondas. Creative camera trickery enables the film to build a great deal of effective tension for the Graboid’s first big reveal, which perfectly sets up the ending of the movie and a fatal flaw in the Graboid’s nature: they mindlessly charge after their prey and flee from intense sounds, such as explosions, since they’re painful to them. Stinking, ravenous creatures, the Graboids are impressive practical effects brought to life by puppets, animatronics, and composite effects to make them appear large and almost alien in design. When underground, they’re all-but immune to damage and the same is true when they emerge; it takes everything Val and Earl have to wrench their truck free from one of the creature’s tongues and an incalculable number of bullets for Burt and Heather to put just one down. Although formidable and with a seemingly unsurpassed patience (they’ll wait for days for their prey to simply die if need be), the Graboids are not invulnerable; they can be killed with a great deal of effort, tracked using Rhonda’s equipment, struggle to lift heavier objects or break through solid rock, and can be briefly scared away by dynamite charges.

Stranded and faced a slow death, the survivors dispatch the final Graboid and find a new lease of life.

However, the Graboids are unnervingly intelligent; when the survivors take refuge on their rooftops, the creatures circle the structures and attempt to shake them loose, leading Val and Earl to enact a desperate plan to use the track loader to carry their friends to the safety of the surrounding mountains. At first, this seems to work and the townsfolk make slow and steady progress away from town, only for them to end up falling afoul of a Graboid trap when they dig a trench to up-end the vehicle and strand the survivors on a small crop of rocks. With tensions running high and resources running low, Burt makes an off-beat remark about preferring suicide over starvation and inspires Val to try one last trick to take out the prehistoric wildlife. By tossing rocks and stones far from their position, they attract a Graboid and trick it into swallowing on of Burt’s lit explosives, blowing it into a stinky mess of orange chunks. However, the last remaining Graboid, “Ol’ Stumpy”, proves far smarter than its kin and simply spits the dynamite back out, leaving Val, Earl, and Rhonda stuck on the desert floor and facing instant death the moment they move. Reckless to the end, Val takes a chance and makes a run for it, using himself as bait to cause the Graboid to go hurtling to its death after being inspired by Earl’s earlier tall tales of being in a stampede. In the aftermath, Val and Earl hope to gain a level of fame from their experience and Rhonda prepares to build an academic career out of the creatures and start a new life with Val, who finally gives into the mutual attraction they built over the course of the film, much to Earl’s approval.

The Summary:
Many times, you’ll hear people talk about movies being “guilty pleasures”. However, Tremors isn’t one of them; I never feel guilty about watching and enjoying this hugely entertaining horror/comedy. The film is stuffed with wit and charm, from the brotherly banter between Val and Earl to Burt and Heather’s trigger-happy abrasiveness, to even one-dimensional supporting characters finding ways to stand out with either an abundance of personality or some cheesy, quotable lines. The premise is delightfully low-budget but is delivered in a way that recalls blockbusters like Jaws (Spielberg, 1975) in the use of tension, first-person shots, and the eventual reveal of an impressive animatronic monster that devours the cast one by one. The Graboids themselves are one of the most unique creatures to grace cinema; massive, yet scarily quick, blind and yet surprisingly versatile, and with a cunning and ravenous nature that makes them both ridiculous and terrifying at the same time. The visual of characters scrambling to reach higher ground or desperately trying to stay quiet really works, as does the rumbling of the ground and structures and the mystery surrounding the creatures. I liked how the characters were always struggling to fight back; even when they have the weapons, the Graboids don’t go down easy and they’re constantly forced to think on their feet to come up with ingenious, and hilarious, ways to dispatch and outsmart the voracious sand-worms. While I have a soft spot for some of the sequels, Tremors remains the best of the franchise thanks to the dynamic between Val and Earl and the simplicity of the creatures; the idea of being trapped for days and slowly dying of dehydration or hunger only exacerbates the Graboid threat, meaning you’re damned if you stay still too long and doomed if you try to move. I definitely feel like Tremors is often unfairly forgotten about; it’s absolutely a hidden gem in the monster movie genre and deserves a lot more attention than it gets. It’s a rollicking good time with a fantastic blend of gore, action, comedy, and horror that never fails to impress me no matter how many times I watch it.   

My Rating:

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Great Stuff

Are you a fan of Tremors? Did you enjoy the dynamic between Val and Earl? What did you think to the idea of sand worms terrorising a small, isolated town? Which of the supporting cast was your favourite and did you expect Burt to take on such a key role across the franchise? Do you enjoy the Tremors films and, if so, which of the sequels is your favourite What’s your favourite kaiju movie, and how are you celebrating K-Day today? Whatever your thoughts on Tremors, kaiju, or monster movies in general, please do leave a comment below or respond to my social media and be sure to check back in for more giant monster content in the near future!

3 thoughts on “Movie Night [K-DAY]: Tremors

  1. amyrollinson1987's avatar amyrollinson1987 10/08/2024 / 13:22

    I’m a big Kaiju fan and I do enjoy watching Tremors…even though Kevin Bacon gives me the heebie jeebies!

    Like

    • Dr. K's avatar Dr. K 10/08/2024 / 15:47

      What is it about him that bothers you?

      Like

      • amyrollinson1987's avatar amyrollinson1987 10/08/2024 / 16:54

        I watched Sleepers when I was probably in my early teens and he’s creeped me out ever since.

        Like

Leave a reply to Dr. K Cancel reply