Anaconda (1997 film)


Anaconda is a 1997 action adventure horror film directed by Luis Llosa and written by Chris Broodryk. The film stars Jennifer Lopez, Ice Cube, Jon Voight, Eric Stoltz, Jonathan Hyde, and Owen Wilson. An international co-production between the United States and Brazil, the film focuses on a documentary film crew in the Amazon rainforest that is led by a snake hunter who is hunting down a giant, legendary green anaconda.
The film received generally mixed reviews, but was a box office success, and has become a 1990s cult classic. It is the first installment in the Anaconda film series.

Plot

On the Amazon River, a poacher hides from an unknown creature in his boat. When it breaks through the boat and corners him, he commits suicide with his Colt Police Positive revolver.
A film crew is searching for the Shirishamas, a long-lost indigenous Amazonian tribe. The group consists of director Terri Flores, cameraman and childhood friend Danny Rich, production manager Denise Kalberg, Denise's boyfriend and sound engineer Gary Dixon, narrator Warren Westridge, anthropologist Professor Steven Cale, and boat skipper Mateo.
The group encounters stranded Paraguayan snake hunter Paul Serone, who claims he can help find the Shirishamas. Most of the crew are uncomfortable around Serone, and Cale clashes with him several times about Shirishama lore. Eventually, Cale is stung by a wasp, and an allergic reaction swells up his throat and leaves him unconscious. Serone performs an emergency cricothyrotomy, saving Cale's life. Soon after, with Gary's help, Serone takes over the boat, revealing his true goal: finding and capturing a giant green anaconda he had been tracking.
Danny, Mateo, and Serone search the wreckage of the poacher's boat. An old newspaper photograph reveals that Mateo, Serone, and the poacher hunted together, including snakes. Leaving the poacher's ship, Mateo falls into the water, where the giant male anaconda, measuring, ambushes and kills him, while the other two return to their boat, unaware of Mateo's fate. Serone manipulates Gary into helping him ensnare the creature, enticing him with the promise of a $1 million prize. That night, he uses a dead monkey as bait to catch the creature, which proceeds to emerge and attack the crew. He attempts to capture the snake, but it coils around Gary, crushing him. Terri tries to shoot the anaconda, but Serone intervenes, allowing the creature to devour Gary, devastating Denise. The crew overpowers Serone and ties him up as punishment.
The next day, the boat becomes jammed near a waterfall. Terri, Danny, and Westridge enter the water to winch it loose. Denise attempts to kill Serone to avenge Gary's death, but he overpowers and strangles her with his legs, then dumps her corpse into the river. When the creature returns, Westridge distracts it for Terri and Danny to retreat. Serone breaks free during the attack and assaults Danny. The snake mounts a tree branch and attacks Westridge, unintentionally uprooting the tree, which kills Westridge in the subsequent fall. The snake attacks Danny, but Terri kills it by repeatedly shooting it in the head with a Winchester Model 70 rifle. An enraged Serone boards the boat, attacks Terri, and attempts to kill Danny. Cale, having been awakened by the chaos, stabs Serone with a tranquilizer dart, and Danny knocks Serone into the river.
Further down the river, the survivors discover an abandoned outpost, which Terri and Danny search to find more fuel. Serone catches up to them and ties up Terri and Danny, drenching them with animal blood to bait a second, much larger female queen anaconda, measuring. As it slowly suffocates them, Serone tries to catch it in a net. The snake breaks free and attacks him, eventually swallowing him whole, while Terri and Danny escape their bonds. Terri flees into a building, finding a nest full of newborn anacondas, and is chased up a smokestack. Danny uses a pickaxe to pin the snake's tail to the ground, then ignites a fire below the smokestack, setting the snake ablaze; the resulting explosion sends the burning anaconda flying out of the building and into the water. As Terri and Danny recuperate on a nearby dock, the creature suddenly resurfaces, but Danny stabs its head with an axe.
Afterward, the pair reunites with Cale, who is recovering on the boat. While floating downriver, the trio finds the Shirishama tribe and begins filming their documentary.

Cast

Music

Randy Edelman composed and conducted the film's soundtrack, released by Edel America Records.

Reception

Box office

The film opened at No. 1 with $16.6 million in its first weekend and remained at the top spot in its following week. In total, Anaconda went on to gross $136.8 million worldwide.

Critical response

Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B−" on an A+ to F scale.
Film critic Leonard Maltin awarded the film 2 out of 4 stars, criticizing the film's "hokey" special effects and "expositionless" script but complimented the film's use of Brazilian locale and Voight's campy performance. Roger Ebert awarded the film out of 4 stars and called it a "slick, scary, funny Creature Feature, beautifully photographed and splendidly acted in high adventure style".
Despite the initial negative reception, Anaconda has since become a cult classic, often viewed as being so-bad-it's-good. The film is listed in Golden Raspberry Award founder John Wilson's book The Official Razzie Movie Guide as one of The 100 Most Enjoyably Bad Movies Ever Made.

Accolades

The film was nominated for six Razzie Awards in 1998 including Worst Picture, Worst Actor, Worst Director, Worst Screenplay, Worst New Star and Worst Screen Couple. It was also nominated for two Saturn Awards including Best Actress and Best Horror Film. It won two Stinkers Awards including Worst Supporting Actor and Worst Fake Accent for Jon Voight.

Legacy

The broadcast of the movie during primetime viewing on South African television station e.tv has become a national running gag, with the station airing the movie several times every year since the mid-2000s.

Franchise

Sequels

A sequel, Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid, was released to theaters in 2004. Two more films followed with a direct-to-video release: Anaconda 3: Offspring and Anacondas: Trail of Blood.

Crossover

Lake Placid vs. Anaconda is a crossover film with the Lake Placid film series. It was released in 2015.
Even though no characters from the first film appear in the sequels, the events of the first film are referenced by the character Cole Burris in the second film, when he says he knows a man and another man that took a crew down to the Amazon, where they were attacked by snakes; in Lake Placid vs. Anaconda, character Will "Tully" Tull describes the same incident of the snakes in the Amazon to Reba, without explicitly mentioning the characters.

Remake

On March 1, 2024, a Chinese-produced remake was released.

Reboot

In January 2020, Sony Pictures announced a reboot is in development and screenwriter Evan Daugherty was hired to write the reboot film. In 2023, Tom Gormican was announced to direct the film. In August 2024, Variety reported that Jack Black and Paul Rudd were in early talks to star in the film, which was said to focus on a group of friends who seek to remake the original 1997 film. Gormican would also co-write with Kevin Etten. Brad Fuller and Andrew Form would produce through their Fully Formed Entertainment company. Daniela Melchior joined the cast a month later. It was released in December 2025 to mixed reviews.