Attack of the Giant Leeches
Attack of the Giant Leeches is an independently made, 1959 black-and-white science fiction-horror film, produced by Gene Corman and directed by Bernard L. Kowalski. It stars Ken Clark, Yvette Vickers, Bruno VeSota and Jan Shepard. The screenplay was written by Leo Gordon. The film was released on October 1, 1959 by American International Pictures on a double bill with A Bucket of Blood. In 1960 in some areas, Leeches played on a double bill with the 1960 Roger Corman film House of Usher.
Attack of the Giant Leeches was one of a spate of "creature features" produced during the 1950s in response to Cold War fears; a character in the film speculates that the leeches have been mutated to giant size by atomic radiation from nearby Cape Canaveral.
Plot
In the Florida Everglades, a group of gigantic, intelligent leeches live secretly beneath the depths of a deep swamp. Following the violent death of a local fisherman near the swamp, game warden Steve Benton sets out to investigate the cause, despite local authorities blaming the incident on an alligator.Only a few days after, two more locals, Liz Walker and Cal Moulton go missing near the swamp, while having an affair behind the back of her husband, who is wrongly blamed for their deaths. Search parties are formed throughout the surrounding area looking for the bodies but none are found, and two more men go missing.
Steve, with the aid of his girlfriend, Nan Grayson, and her father, Doc Grayson, discover the gruesome truth, the giant leeches are not only the cause of the disappearances, but are also feeding on their victims, slowly draining them of blood. Steve and his friend Mike, both divers from the war, dive to the bottom of the swamp. They find the cave’s underwater entrance, but are attacked by the leeches. With the use of spearguns and knives, they manage to kill one, but are forced to retreat before they can save a single victim, all of which are found dead.
The creatures are finally destroyed when Steve, Mike and several state troopers blow up the underwater cavern using dynamite. The bodies of the killed leeches rise lifeless to the surface of the water, but in the film's closing moments, one of the leeches can be seen, still alive and swimming away.
Cast
- Ken Clark as Steve Benton
- Yvette Vickers as Liz Walker
- Jan Shepard as Nan Greyson
- Michael Emmet as Cal Moulton
- Tyler McVey as Doc Greyson
- Bruno VeSota as Dave Walker
- Gene Roth as Sheriff Kovis
- Dan White as Porky Reed
- George Cisar as Lem Sawyer
- Joseph Hamilton as Old Sam Peters
- Walter Kelley as Mike
- Guy Buccola as Giant Leech
- Ross Sturlin as Giant Leech
Production
The movie was one of a trilogy of films Bernard Kowalski made for the Corman brothers.The film was shot over eight days, including outdoor sequences at the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden. During filming, Gene Corman came down with pneumonia and wound up in the hospital.
Actress Yvette Vickers had appeared as the Playmate centerfold in the July 1959 issue of Playboy magazine, several months prior to the film's release.
Producers Roger and Gene Corman begged special effects artist Paul Blaisdell to create the leech costumes for the film, but Blaisdell said the effects budget was so minute, it wouldn't have even covered the cost of the materials he would need to make the creature suits. The costumes were eventually designed by actor Ed Nelson and Gene Corman's wife, each contributing ideas. Some reference sources say the monster suits were constructed from black raincoats that were stitched together, while others say black plastic garbage bags were used.
Attack of the Giant Leeches is now in the public domain; its copyright was never renewed.
Critical reception
Attack of the Giant Leeches holds a 70% approval rating on review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 10 reviews; the average rating is 5.06/10. Film critic Leonard Maltin awarded the film 1.5 out of 4 stars, calling it a "ludicrous hybrid of white trash and monster genres".Other retrospective reviews either regret the lack of scenes showing the monsters or find them "ridiculous-looking".
A review of the film in AllMovie described it as "uneven at best but the swamp locations, filmed at Pasadena's Arboretum of Tarzan fame, are certainly picturesque and the cave sequence, photographed, according to co-star Yvette Vickers, at the old Charlie Chaplin Studios, at least somewhat creepy," adding that the leeches are "stunt divers wearing what appears to be small ponchos with tentacles." Also writing for AllMovie, critic Cavett Binion described the film as an "hysterical drive-in favorite pits a community of swamp-dwelling yokels against the silliest-looking monsters since the shag-rug aliens of The Creeping Terror", but added that it is "hard to be too critical of this early film from Kowalski, since executive producer Roger Corman allocated a budget for this production that would hardly cover the catering bill on a major studio film -- even in 1960!"
Remake
A remake of the film, directed by Brett Kelly and written by Jeff O'Brien, was released on July 7, 2008.A stage adaptation of the original was performed at The Village Theatre in Atlanta, Georgia in February 2020.