GOOEY |
I loved 1997, I was a weird, awkward middle-schooler obsessed with movies, horror, and for some weird reason, Mira Sorvino. I don't know what it was about her, but I'm sure we all remember our movies crushes, and this was probably one of my biggest ones at that age.
This brings me to "Mimic" a relatively generic 1997 monster flick, but again, it holds a special place in my heart because it starred the lovely Mira Sorvino (imagine a 14 year old Matt reviewing this film).
In New York, a disease called Strickers is decimating the child population in the city, think of it as a cross between polio and the plague. Dr. Susan Tyler discovers the cause stems from cockroaches living in the cities sewers so she develops a new breed of bug; the Judas bug that will infiltrate the roach population and wipe them out from the inside out all while dying off themselves within a few months. All goes well and Strickers is all but wiped out and the city's children are safe.
A few years later, a priest is attacked and killed by an unknown entity. CDC officials become involved and soon learn that the Judas breed might not only still be available but might also involved into something else that might be walking among the people of New York.
Overall, I think "Mimic" is a fun monster film with some great practical effects, but also some very lackluster mid-90s CG. The supporting cast, including Jeremy Northam, Charles S. Dutton, and Josh Brolin put in good performances, including Brolin, and his death scenes, which is one of the highlights of the film for him.
Other things that bothered me are the inclusion of child actors in this film. There are three, all annoying, but at least two of them meet relatively gory endings, which I stand up and applaud.
This is an early offering from Guillermo del Toro, who most will know from both "Hellboy" films and "Pacific Rim" but a lot of people forget that he cut his teeth in Hollywood on horror films like "Mimic" and the almost-forgotten vampire flick "Cronos." I would love to see del Toro go back to his horror roots in future films, and not just something like "Crimson Peak."
If "Mimic" doesn't bug you, maybe some of these other films from 1997 will:
Alien Resurrection
Anaconda
Event Horizon
I Know What You Did Last Summer
Scream 2
Uncle Sam
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