Combine Nickolaus Jr.'s film noir camera work,
Laszlo's histrionic orchestral music, those hoppin'
rock 'n' roll songs, the dank Okefenokee setting,
and a generous scoop of Faulknerian decadence,
then stir in a cupful of the old "ordinary
creature turned into a gigantic monster by exposure
to radioactivity" sauce, and what you get
is a conceptual mix that's rich and creamy. But
it's not the conceptual mix that brings me back
to ATTACK OF THE GIANT LEECHES again and again,
nor is it the feeble, all-too-familiar plot.
It's the characters.

The characters are bodacious. Every character
is based on a recognizable stereotype, and what's
magical is that during the shooting of the movie
each member of the cast somehow succeeded in
becoming not just a run-of-the-mill example of
his or her particular stereotype but the
perfect Platonic ideal of that stereotype. The
actors and actresses deserve credit for this
accomplishment, but so do Bernard L. Kowalski
(the director), Gene Corman (the producer), and
Roger Corman (the executive producer). There
is a reason why the name Corman is one of the
most revered in the entire history of trashy
low-budget Hollywood filmmaking.

The minor characters include Lem Sawyer, a boozy
backwater trapper whose warnings no one believes
until they find him bleeding to death, unable
to speak, his face frozen in bug-eyed terror;
Sheriff Kovis, a crusty skeptic who periodically
asserts that despite the sucker wounds on
Lem's neck and chest, it must have been a gator
that killed him; and Dr. Greyson, a scientist
who initially decides that Lem's wounds were
caused by an octopus before refining his analysis
and concluding that the culprits are ordinary
leeches made gigantic by radioactivity from Cape
Canaveral. (Funny, I didn't realize that
NASA was using nuclear rockets back in 1959,
or even now, for that matter, but my grasp of
science is shaky at best, so we'll let that go
and move quickly to the major characters.)
Our hero is game warden Steve Benton, played
with bodacious stiffness, unnaturalness, and B-feature
acumen by Ken Clark. Clark looks more like
Barbie's hardened plastic boyfriend Ken than
any man I've ever seen. Near the end of
the movie, Steve shows what he's made of in a
speech to his girlfriend, Dr. Greyson's daughter
Nan. Nan thinks the best way to kill the leeches
is to detonate dynamite in the lake where they
live. Speaking slowly in a condescending,
paternalistic, aren't-you-a-silly-little-girl
tone, Ken explains to her that using dynamite
is impossible for three reasons. First, even
though the leeches have killed all the large
life forms in the lake, it's likely that tiny
life forms are still present in the water and
might be harmed by the explosive concussion.
Second, by gosh, he's paid to prevent the needless
slaughter of wildlife. And third, to use dynamite
he'd need to get authorization, and to do that
he'd have to "come up with a darn good reason." Apparently
the growing list of human fatalities is not a
darn good enough reason. Save the protozoa
and let the inbred rednecks perish! To exterminate
the leeches, Steve chooses a more ecologically
sensitive course of action than dynamite
detonation, cleverly arming himself with
a one-shot speargun and swimming solo deep underwater
in his old frogman gear.

As played by Jan Shepard, Nan is a bodaciously
bland, nondescript, generic B-feature heroine.
Nan argues in a routine fashion with Ken (yawn),
and then they kiss and make up in an equally routine
fashion (yawn). In several scenes she follows
him through the muggy, humid swamp while wearing
a dress and shoes that would be more appropriate
at a junior prom, her bouffant hairdo glistening
strangely in the darkness.
Liz Walker is my favorite character, played
with perfect bodacity by Yvette Vickers, a starlet
frequently praised by connoisseurs of the genre
as the most lusciously torrid sci-fi sex
kitten of the 1950's (even though she appeared
in only two films). Indeed, Ms Vickers steals
the opening scene of ATTACK OF THE GIANT LEECHES
when she steps through a doorway wearing a black
lace bra, leopard-skin-print panties, and a filmy
short-short negligee, leans back against the
doorjamb with a cigarette hanging loosely from
her plump lips, cocks her pelvis, fixes her husband
Dave with an icy look, and asks in a purring,
cruel, honey-and-smoke whisper, "Whadya
want now?" Dave implores her to turn down
the volume on her record player so he can converse
with his customers. Four or five leering swamp
rats, poachers, and cracker-barrel loafers exchange
lecherous winks while she humiliates her hand-wringing
husband in front of them. Watching her, these
good old boys get really steamed up, and
every time I see the scene, I get steamed up
too. Yvette Vickers is so hot she still
looks good after the leeches have drained
her.

Dave is played with bodacious abjection by Bruno
Ve Sota. (I know it looks like a typo, but cross
my heart and hope to die – that's how his name
is spelled in the credits.) After she returns
to her room, Dave refers to Liz as "that
she-cat" and promises the snickering onlookers
that one of these days he'll give her the whuppin'
she needs to get her in line, but it's obvious
from the resignation and stolidity of his facial
expression, which never changes even when he's
being belittled, ridiculed, and heaped with verbal
abuse, that Dave is a textbook case of passive-aggressive
resentment. Dave will fantasize endlessly about
teaching Liz a lesson, but he'll never act on
his fantasies. Unless he snaps. Oh oh.
Needless to say, Liz has a lover. Her superstud
side dish is Cal Moulton, a slick alpha male
played with bodacious macho arrogance by Michael
Emmett. With his sleeves rolled up to show off
the size and firmness of his biceps, Cal swaggers
and brags his way through most of the movie
but then turns into a sobbing crybaby when he
learns, deep in the swamp, that there are worse
fates than taking a shotgun blast in the face
or being pulled under by a bull gator.

Which leads us to the most important characters
of all – the giant leeches! In this case, "giant" means
man-sized, so the leeches are played – bodaciously,
of course – by Guy Buccola and Ross Sturlin.
In order to look like annelid worms, these courageous
stuntmen sacrificed their pride and donned
large black plastic trash bags with foam-rubber
pads and foam-rubber suckers glued on them. I
kid you not. These bags are the worst monster
costumes you'll ever see. Despite the mind-boggling
cheesiness of the costumes, or perhaps because
of it, the close-up of Cal screaming as
one of the leeches latches onto his head and
sucks blood from his face is so over the top
that I can't help but feel genuine nausea and
horror every time I see it.
Well, folks, that wraps this one up, but there's
always more to come. As August begins, your steadfast
reviewer is drooling with anticipation. There's
a new sci-fi horror flick coming out called OUTFOXED
that's supposed to have the scariest monsters
of all.
Part
1 | Part 2