TROG (Warner Bros. 1970) Warner Home Video
A tragically bad ‘last act’ finale to an otherwise legendary
movie career, Freddie Francis’ Trog (1970) was – I think – meant to
be considered as an ‘intelligently made’ sci-fi drama about what would
happen if scientists actually discovered the missing link between primate and
man. That the picture ended the cinematic tenure of Joan Crawford on a note of absolutely
colossal bad taste was therefore regrettable; this, and the publication of
stepdaughter, Christina Crawford’s scathing biography about what life with the
grand diva was ‘actually’ like, Crawford went to her death bed in 1977, likely
knowing she had committed far too many sins to remain dead and buried after she
was gone. Only some could be considered artistically unsound. While it is perhaps prudent to reiterate that
Crawford’s private life hardly mirrored what she portrayed to the public, the
body of Crawford’s cinematic work cannot be discounted or ignored as anything
but high art, even if Trog is an abomination of that otherwise lionized
tenure in Hollywood. And, in the shadow of Mommie Dearest, we ought to
acknowledge Joan Crawford, further still, as a great artiste who,
unfortunately, did not recognize the time had come to gracefully fade into the
distant memory of screen immortality like a first lady of American movies.
All evidence to the contrary on this deeply flawed
outing. Trog keeps getting listed on Top 100 rosters of all-time awful
movies, or good ‘bad camp’ movies and midnight movies you ought not miss. That
grotesque bastardization of movies worthy of anyone’s time and efforts has thus
kept Crawford’s name synonymous with awful movies in general, despite her
illustrious career to the contrary. Trog opens with a gaggle of male
students hiking through the English countryside where they discover an ape-like
creature (Joe Cornelius in a really bad make-up job). Trog kills one of the
boys and sends the rest dispersing in fear. The survivors are rescued and
brought to a nearby research institute where they regale Dr. Brockton
(Crawford) with their harrowing experience. Brockton takes a particular
interest in Malcolm Travers’ (David Griffin) account of the confrontation,
perhaps because he is one of her students and therefore not subjected to her
more critical skepticism and assessment of the boys’ story. Indeed, with
Travers help, Brockton journeys to the moors to investigate the original
sighting.
Brockton’s research thus far has been focused on the
troglodyte – a prehistoric cave dweller and missing link in man’s evolutionary
chain of development. Travers manages to get a snapshot of Trog for Brockton
who thereafter presents the findings to the research institute in the hopes of
acquiring funding for further study. Unfortunately, the discovery is met by
violent denouncement from religious zealot, Sam Murdock (Michael Gough), who
declares Trog a monster and whips the nearby town’s folk into a frenzy to seek
out and kill this abomination before it kills someone else. Eventually lured
from his cave by all the commotion, Trog is tranquilized and taken to the
institute for study. The rest of the movie plays as a pseudo-serious attempt at
Harry and the Hendersons with Crawford performing basic tests on
Trog who is, at first, most cooperative and congenial – hardly the expected
behavior for a man-eating monster. Murdock, angry that the public’s fascination
has blossomed into curiosity for this beast, decides to break into the lab and
free the creature.
Trog kills Murdock; then, goes on an uncharacteristic
slaughter of some of the locals before abducting a child (Chloe Franks) from
her playground equipment and returning to his cave. Brockton makes chase and
eventually convinces Trog to give the child up. The police intervene and destroy
Trog in a hailstorm of bullets. So much for plot. Trog is not Crawford’s
finest hour. Indeed, as a horror movie Trog is lamentably cheap and
unconvincing – its special effects so transparent we are frequently reminded
the creature is actually just a man in a goofy monkey suit. One can only guess
what was going through Crawford’s mind when she accepted this assignment. She
was, at this point in her life, suffering from cancer. The script by Peter
Bryan, John Gilling and Aben Kandel is so poorly written it reeks of a failed
first-year film school assignment, and even that is an insult to all
those currently enrolled in such academic programs around the world. In the
last analysis, Trog is a dog of a movie; so bad, it’s just bad and ought
to have, by now, been classified as such and completely forgotten. Were that
this day would ever come!
Warner Home Video has released Trog as part of
their Cult Classics Collection. The widescreen image exhibits dated colors,
flat pasty flesh tone and very weak contrast levels. Desmond Dickenson’s
cinematography always had a C-grade ‘made for TV’ quality about it. But this
incarnation appears to be suffering from some marginal color fading. Blacks are
rarely solid or deep, exhibiting a rather ‘dull brown’ patina. Whites register
a slight bluish or yellow. Age-related artifacts are evident throughout. A hint
of edge enhancement is also detected. The audio is Dolby Digital 1.0 mono and
strident in spots. There are No extras. Not recommended.
FILM RATING (out of 5 - 5 being the best)
0
VIDEO/AUDIO
2.5
EXTRAS
0
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