NOTE IMDb
4,6/10
583
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThis TV sequel to "The Savage Bees" features more rampaging insects. This time a marching band and a school bus get in the path of the bees.This TV sequel to "The Savage Bees" features more rampaging insects. This time a marching band and a school bus get in the path of the bees.This TV sequel to "The Savage Bees" features more rampaging insects. This time a marching band and a school bus get in the path of the bees.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Poindexter Yothers
- Mike
- (as Poindexter)
Tony La Torre
- Tibbles Jr.
- (as Tony Latorre)
Avis à la une
TERROR OUT OF THE SKY is the sequel to THE SAVAGE BEES.
It begins with Jeannie Devereaux having a nightmare about the first film's absurd, football field finale. Somehow, Jeannie has magically transformed from Gretchen Corbett into Tovah Feldshuh!
Meanwhile, at the National Bee Center, killer bees have mixed in with regular honeybees with tragic results.
Enter Dr. David Martin (Efrem Zimbalist Jr.). Martin arrives at the NBC just in time for an unwary hive technician to do the bee-sting bugaloo! The problem is quickly contained. Unfortunately, a shipment of killer bees has already been shipped from the lab! Thankfully, Jeannie's boyfriend, Nick Willis (played by bearded mountain, Dan Haggerty) is a pilot, and can fly David and Jeannie to the problem area.
Too late!
The bees have been entrusted to a hillbilly, who runs them around in his pickup truck! Much time is spent on useless palaver between the main characters, leading up to the little league baseball game finale. Let the swarming doom commence!
Now, as preposterous as the ending was for the first film, this makes that one seem perfectly reasonable! After recruiting some boy scouts, Jeannie makes her last stand aboard a school bus, while an annoying marching band plays their last song! Ever! As glorious as this may sound, it results in one of the most tedious driving sequences ever filmed, followed by activity inside the bus that boggles the mind!
When Martin introduces his solution to the onslaught, credulity is stretched into string cheeeze! All while Grizzly Adams looks on.
WARNING: This movie contains imbecility so rarefied it could cause deep, cranial scarring!...
It begins with Jeannie Devereaux having a nightmare about the first film's absurd, football field finale. Somehow, Jeannie has magically transformed from Gretchen Corbett into Tovah Feldshuh!
Meanwhile, at the National Bee Center, killer bees have mixed in with regular honeybees with tragic results.
Enter Dr. David Martin (Efrem Zimbalist Jr.). Martin arrives at the NBC just in time for an unwary hive technician to do the bee-sting bugaloo! The problem is quickly contained. Unfortunately, a shipment of killer bees has already been shipped from the lab! Thankfully, Jeannie's boyfriend, Nick Willis (played by bearded mountain, Dan Haggerty) is a pilot, and can fly David and Jeannie to the problem area.
Too late!
The bees have been entrusted to a hillbilly, who runs them around in his pickup truck! Much time is spent on useless palaver between the main characters, leading up to the little league baseball game finale. Let the swarming doom commence!
Now, as preposterous as the ending was for the first film, this makes that one seem perfectly reasonable! After recruiting some boy scouts, Jeannie makes her last stand aboard a school bus, while an annoying marching band plays their last song! Ever! As glorious as this may sound, it results in one of the most tedious driving sequences ever filmed, followed by activity inside the bus that boggles the mind!
When Martin introduces his solution to the onslaught, credulity is stretched into string cheeeze! All while Grizzly Adams looks on.
WARNING: This movie contains imbecility so rarefied it could cause deep, cranial scarring!...
I'm not sure if anyone noticed but the plot of Terror Out Of The Sky seems to have been lifted from the 50s science fiction classic Them. The only change is
a different insect, bees instead of ants.
Some nasty South American killer bees have escaped and scientists Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. and Tovah Feldshuh and her pilot ex-boyfriend Dan Haggerty are right on the case. In the same way the ants headed for Los Angeles to build a colony, the killer bees have decided to settle in a small New Mexico town where there is an Air Force base nearby, convenient for dealing with these winged six legged intruders.
The cast truly just goes through the motions here. I'm not sure even the kids playing the Boy Scout troop trapped on a school bus really looked all that terrified. They were more scared of their paychecks not clearing.
Some nasty South American killer bees have escaped and scientists Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. and Tovah Feldshuh and her pilot ex-boyfriend Dan Haggerty are right on the case. In the same way the ants headed for Los Angeles to build a colony, the killer bees have decided to settle in a small New Mexico town where there is an Air Force base nearby, convenient for dealing with these winged six legged intruders.
The cast truly just goes through the motions here. I'm not sure even the kids playing the Boy Scout troop trapped on a school bus really looked all that terrified. They were more scared of their paychecks not clearing.
In this sequel, there is another killer bees attack. It's a different location, and a different activity. There are 3 different deliveries of queen Bees. The deliveries have to be stopped. One was successful, but the others had suffered from delays. A college teacher and former student had worked together to prevent the chaos that had happened in New Orleans, years ago.
And the entomologist from the first film was plagued by the fear in New Orleans, had to face it when she was on the bus with boy scouts. And the lead scout was with her all the way. And the teacher had to get the bees away from the scouts and her.
Jeannie was played by two different actresses. The first one was blonde. In the sequel, it was a brunette. They are both good.
5 stars.
And the entomologist from the first film was plagued by the fear in New Orleans, had to face it when she was on the bus with boy scouts. And the lead scout was with her all the way. And the teacher had to get the bees away from the scouts and her.
Jeannie was played by two different actresses. The first one was blonde. In the sequel, it was a brunette. They are both good.
5 stars.
call me crazy,but i enjoyed this movie.it won't win any awards or anything,but it is is entertaining and well paced.the acting is okay for this type of movie.it feels like a made for TV movie,but that's not necessarily a bad thing.from watching it,i got the impression it is a sequel,since they showed some flashbacks involving one of the main characters.i found out later that it is a sequel to "the Savage Bees".but it works well on its own,although i do plan on seeing the prequel sometime.if your looking for lots of tension and suspense,you won't find too much here,although there are one or two mildly suspenseful moments.i think the appeal of this movie is the likability of the characters.also it moves at a decent pace and isn't at all boring.i give "Terror Out of the Sky" 8/10
TV movie about a bee attack in the USA.
1978 was a big year for bee attacks, we got this film and Irwin Allen's cinema released - The Swarm - all in one year! The Swarm wins hands down! If you are big on 70s TV science fiction you might find a couple of things of interest in Terror Out Of The Sky...
Firstly the director of this TV movie is actually very talented as, in 1975, he directed the two hands down best episodes of TV's Space 1999 - Breakaway and The Black Sun. However, his talents are less on display here.
Secondly, the most talkative kid on the bus is played by Ike Eisenmann who had just appeared in the short lived cult series - The Fantastic Journey (1977). I am guessing he defined his time on Terror Out Of The Sky as another fantastic journey?
TOOTS can hardly be called a classic but it might make an okay movie experience if you still want more bee attacks after watching the much bigger budget - The Swarm (1978).
1978 was a big year for bee attacks, we got this film and Irwin Allen's cinema released - The Swarm - all in one year! The Swarm wins hands down! If you are big on 70s TV science fiction you might find a couple of things of interest in Terror Out Of The Sky...
Firstly the director of this TV movie is actually very talented as, in 1975, he directed the two hands down best episodes of TV's Space 1999 - Breakaway and The Black Sun. However, his talents are less on display here.
Secondly, the most talkative kid on the bus is played by Ike Eisenmann who had just appeared in the short lived cult series - The Fantastic Journey (1977). I am guessing he defined his time on Terror Out Of The Sky as another fantastic journey?
TOOTS can hardly be called a classic but it might make an okay movie experience if you still want more bee attacks after watching the much bigger budget - The Swarm (1978).
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe man driving the flatbed truck carrying the hive of killer bees, and who gets killed by them, is actually Norman Gary, the bee wrangler/handler for this film. Gary had done the same two things in this film's predecessor, Quand les abeilles attaqueront (1976).
- GaffesThe first part of the movie takes place in Louisiana, but there are no mountains in Louisiana.
- Citations
Pathologist: Oh my God. His mouth. It's full of BEES!
- ConnexionsFeatured in Svengoolie: Terror Out of the Sky (2018)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Terror Out of the Sky
- Lieux de tournage
- Californie, États-Unis(location)
- Sociétés de production
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