Las hormigas del desierto forman de repente una inteligencia colectiva e inician una guerra contra los habitantes. Depende de dos científicos y una chica sin hogar que rescatan de las hormig... Leer todoLas hormigas del desierto forman de repente una inteligencia colectiva e inician una guerra contra los habitantes. Depende de dos científicos y una chica sin hogar que rescatan de las hormigas para destruirlas.Las hormigas del desierto forman de repente una inteligencia colectiva e inician una guerra contra los habitantes. Depende de dos científicos y una chica sin hogar que rescatan de las hormigas para destruirlas.
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Opiniones destacadas
What makes the film cool are the ants themselves. Personally I think that this should be considered a milestone in film-making, when insects are the stars! In addition to the ants, the camera-work is absolutely spectacular. There are these really amazing close-ups of the ants and they are nothing but a joy to behold. The human world is shot beautifully as well. There are some great shots of the country and the dirt road that are among some of the most breathtaking I have seen.
As a B-movie, fans will be satisfied. It's definitely a very entertaining film and it has it's fair share of fun cheese ball moments. It's a very entertaining film, it's a very beautiful film, and it is among one of the coolest and most satisfying films I have ever seen! I highly recommend this forgotten classic!!
I had the good fortune to watch this on a really large flat screen TV, and the amazing insect photography (major kudos to the editor who managed to integrate it so completely into the story!) and dissonant synthesizer laden sound track come through nicely with good viewing equipment - they add the proper utterly alien and inhuman feel to the movie and turn something pretty good into something really creep and spooky.
Although the characters are admittedly pretty flat, that's undoubtedly on purpose. "Phase IV" is all about the subjection of the human characters to the overwhelming power of a hive mind where "personality" is besides the point. Even so, Nigel Davenport brings the good stuff to his role as the biologist trying to contain the ants, and you both know everything you need to know and everything you'll ever know about in the first five minutes...without ever knowing him at all.
An ambiguous and otherworldly/mystical ending might not sit well with a lot of viewers who like their science fiction movies to wrap things up by the end. And, OK, the goofy little montage at the end with the mathematician and the gamin doesn't really match the quality of the hallucinatory insect footage that preceded it.
Still, Saul Bass knew how to present an otherworldly, truly alien experience, but he was probably just too far ahead of his time.
A classic of sorts.
The story is fairly simple: some undefined cosmic event occurs and augments ant evolution. This particular desert colony ascends to an intelligent collective consciousness making the ants capable of communication and great terror. The colony, per its aggressive expansion, drives out the local human population. A scientific lab is established with our main scientist protagonists. The proceedings eventually lead to a division between the two scientists and some inevitable chaos.
The brilliance of this film is the visual component. The cinematography by Dick Bush (not kidding) is in line with the best of the 70s. Furthermore, there are also a lot of interestingly beautiful shots of the colony and ant behavior. Straight away at the start of the film we are presented some truly striking images of the ant intelligence movement for several minutes – no dialog, no humans, just cinematic language.
In short one could say, If you're the type of person annoyed by a Space Odyssey or even Blade Runner, then you're the type of person that shouldn't watch Phase IV. However, if you're a total film buff and/or sci-fi nerd I highly recommend you seek out this hard to find, underrated, masterpiece – you will not regret it.
Review from Beguiled: http://brianbeguiled.blogspot.com/
Phase IV managed to change my mind on that and made ants a legitimately terrifying credible enemy.
It tells the story of a pair of scientists who set up a lab in the middle of the desert where ants seem to have taken over. Right beside a failed desert development they underestimate the intelligence of their diminutive foes.
The first thing that struck me was how good it all looked, the movie is years ahead of its time in both cinematography and practical effects. The ant sequences are truly remarkable and not rushed as you tend to expect them to be for the mid 70's. They take their time, intricately crafting the ants world, telling their silent story and solidifying their credibility as threats to mankind.
I went in expecting some hammy mess, what I got was an elusive diamond in the rough and I'm very very impressed.
Well acted, visually stunning and paced perfectly Phase IV is a great sci-fi piece that didn't deserve to go under the radar the way it did.
Fantastic stuff.
The Good:
Well ahead of its time
Looks great
Ant footage is very impressive
Strong cast
The Bad:
The nagging concern of possible animal cruelty
Silly ant noises
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaAccording to actor Michael Murphy, director Saul Bass was very worried about British actress Lynne Frederick being able to sound suitably American for the film, since her character was supposed to be from Arizona. Bass made her run her lines over and over while he listened for any hint of a British accent.
- ErroresThe ant-queens seen are actually a species of wasps. This choice has been most probably made as to not seriously disturb several ant-states. However, ant-queens shed their wings when going into pregnancy and developing the huge white abdomen.
- Citas
Dr. Ernest D. Hubbs: You did your major work applying game theory to the language of killer whales.
James R. Lesko: Well, it seemed cheaper than applying it to roulette
Dr. Ernest D. Hubbs: Did you actually *succeed* in making positive contact with the whales?
James R. Lesko: Only with the emotionally disturbed.
Dr. Ernest D. Hubbs: How were you able to determine that?
James R. Lesko: We talked!
- Créditos curiososThe title is not revealed until the end credits. It is divided into segments "Phase I," Phase II," and "Phase III," and only at the very end when Phase IV is reached is the title ever given.
- Versiones alternativasThe French TV release is cut, the close-up on the scientist being devoured by ants is missing.
- ConexionesFeatured in Mystery Science Theater 3000: Phase IV (1989)
Selecciones populares
- How long is Phase IV?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 289