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Howard the Duck

Posted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 12:23 am
by Redstar
Having just watched this movie for the first time I can sincerely say that it is not the "worst movie ever made," nor is it anywhere near that level of lack of quality. When determining a film's quality I look at two things: its acting and its cinematography. Howard the Duck has a star-studded cast that performs well and humorously despite the provided material while the film itself is shot with technique.

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The film's only real problem is the writing, which never feels as strong or epic as the premise of the utter annihilation of our world at the hands of an extra-dimensional alien should merit. The entire story is just very small-scale with no set-up or even proper foreshadowing of the eventual antagonist, so until 20 minutes before the end you're just left wondering why you're still there.

However, there are certainly moments throughout the film that have substance in their time. Tim Robbins as goofball Phil Blumburtt has more chemistry with Howard than even love-interest Beverly Switzler (Lea Thompson). He just steals the show with more zeal and heart than one would expect for such a project.

Jeffrey Jones also does well as Dr. Walter Jenning, though his talk of an evil growing inside him and his eventual descent into alien corruption is only made all the more frightening if you're familiar with his real-life career-ending actions. Sometimes it's impossible to ignore the actor to appreciate their character.

Considering the premise, it's a shame that the film's greatest failure was its inability to really sell the Howard character. You truly have to wonder how a project helmed by both George Lucas and ILM could have so utterly mishandled the duck suit. By all means it should have been better executed, or at the least much more emotive.

However, the rest of the film's effects are actually pretty good. Jenning's aforementioned alien corruption was a creepy and realistic example of pure '80s makeup effects while the Dark Overlord's true form was stunning stop-motion work hearkening back to Ray Harryhausen's best.

The film currently holds a 3.8 out of 5 on Amazon with 287 reviews (33 more than Super Mario Bros.) and, fascinatingly, a special edition DVD release featuring four archival featurettes as well as two new ones that respectively look back at its production and cult status. For a film that flopped as hard as it did it's still managed to succeed in the end with a new generation of children and nostalgic parents.


Re: Howard the Duck

Posted: Wed Jun 06, 2012 3:02 pm
by Redstar
I hate to double-post, but it seems the film's 25th anniversary was last year and there's actually a push for a Blu-Ray re-release from who else but Joe Quesada of Marvel? They've put together a funny video personally appealing George Lucas (Howard the Duck's producer) to begin work on a re-release of some kind.