There
really isn't much to say about THE INCREDIBLE MELTING MAN, other than
to note that its main selling point was its disgusting special effects
(provided by a young Rick Baker). It pretty much borrows the basic
conceit of THE QUATERMASS XPERIMENT (1955) — an astronaut returns from a
space mission and mutates into something horrible — only minus that
film's genuine suspense and sense of impending doom and dread, and it
simply bounces from scene to scene of the titular monster becoming ever
more a pile of what looks like an ambulatory slurry of blood, vomit,
pus, semen, and Open Pit barbecue sauce. The guy goes around devouring
the flesh of random victims in a hopeless effort to stave off his
ongoing liquefying while leaving pieces of himself in his wake, all the
while pursued by an assortment of characters so bland, you wouldn't
notice if they were replaced with cardboard cutouts. There are a couple
of fun set pieces, including the melting man scaring the shit out of a
little girl while her male playmates laugh their asses off, and a bit
where a fly fisherman gets his head ripped off and his noggin goes
bobbing down the stream, but the overall piece does not add up to much
of a cinema experience.
Yeah,
the only real reason to see this is for the gooey makeup effects. In
fact, I would love to see a remake of this with a better script, more
involved direction, and practical effects with a budget that would allow
the effects team to go hog wild in their attempts at making the
audience vomit all over itself. We are long overdue for a truly visually
repellent effects showcase, and what better time for one than during a
pandemic?
Early attempts at the Fleshlight were a tragic failure.
But
with all of that said, the real reason why I included this film in this
year's roundup was its utter hilarious disappointment of an ending.
After leaving a trail of death and his own bodily components in his
wake, the melting man, his mind now long-gone, simply collapses next to a
corrugated tin shed on the grounds of a power plant, slowly slides down
to the ground, and simply dissolves into what looks like a big puddle
of vindaloo diarrhea. Once he has unceremoniously liquefied, the
facility's janitor non-chalantly scoops up the goo and deposits it into
a nearby trash can. There is then an announcement that another space
mission similar to the one that spawned the monster is about to take
place, but for all intents and purposes the story really ends with the
protagonist being disposed of like the contents of a loaded diaper.
After all of the film's (admittedly tepid) mayhem, I was expecting
something, anything, more than what they gave us, and though it was a
massive fizzled-out fart of a climax, I laughed my ass off. Sometimes an
unforgivably bad ending can be hilarious — MONSTER A GO-GO, anyone? —
and this one had me howling like a crazed harbor seal. It was the kind
of "fuck you" to the audience that reversed itself and became an
unexpected gift of sheer piss-yourself hilarity.
"I would like to thank the Academy..."
It's a passable way to waste 84 minutes on a rainy afternoon, but that ending is simply glorious. (chef's kiss)
Poster for the theatrical release.
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