| The SF, Horror and Fantasy Film Review |
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
| Science-Fiction |
|
|
| Horror |
|
|
| Fantasy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
HOWARD THE DUCK
aka
HOWARD ... A NEW BREED OF HERO
Rating:
USA. 1986.
Director Willard Huyck, Screenplay Willard Huyck & Gloria Katz, Based on the Comic Created by Steve Gerber, Producer Gloria Katz, Photography Richard H. Kline, Music John Barry & Sylvester Levay, Music Supervisor Thomas Dolby, Visual Effects Industrial Light and Magic (Supervisor Micheal J. McAlister), Special Effects Supervisor Bob MacDonald Jr, Creature Design Phil Tippet, Duck Design Nikki Rodis-Jamero, Makeup Tom Burman & Bari Dreiband-Burman, Production Design Peter Jamison. Production Company Lucasfilm/Universal.
Cast:
Lea Thompson (Beverly Switzler), Jeffrey Jones (Dr Walter Jennings), Tim Robbins (Phil Blumburtt), Peter Baird, Ed Gale, Jordan Prentice, Tim Rose, Steve Sleap, Lisa Sturz, Mary Wells & Chip Zhen (Howard)
Plot: On a planet where ducks have evolved a parallel culture to our own, a duck named Howard is plucked out of his apartment, whisked through space to Earth and deposited in a back alley in Cleveland. He arrives just in time to save Beverly Switzler, lead singer of the all-girl group The Cherry Bombs, from thugs using his quack fu. Beverly offers Howard a place to stay. She takes him to scientist friend Phil Blumburtt who determines that Howard was accidentally brought to Earth during the experimental use of a laser spectroscope. But in attempting to send Howard back, something goes wrong and the project head Dr Walter Jennings becomes possessed by one of the Dark Overlords, a being of immense power, that then sets out to destroy the Earth.
Howard the Duck was one of Marvel Comics most amusing creations. First appearing in Man-Thing comics in 1973, Howard proved such a delight that he spawned his own comic-book in 1976. Howard was a duck with an aggressive temperament and a sarcastic motor-mouth and each of Steve Gerbers strips was a satirical masterpiece as the improbable character of a bad-tempered talking duck took on all manner of threats in perfect deadpan, including Bessie the Hellcow and the Gingerbread Man. Howard even ran a campaign for President in 1976 and the strips popularity was such that he received a number of write-in votes in the actual real world campaign. The comic-book was however killed off in 1979 by a lawsuit from Disney who claimed because of the similarity to Donald Duck and after Marvel removed Steve Gerber from creative control of the strip (although he returned several years later).
But then in 1986 this then-sizeable $27 million film adaptation of Howard the Duck was mounted by George Lucas. Lucas was riding on the successes of Star Wars (1977) and sequels and the Indiana Jones films. He turned the film over to his good friends, husband and wife team Willard Huyck and Gloria Katz, who had written American Graffiti (1973) and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984) for him, as well as directed the little-seen but acclaimed horror film Messiah of Evil (1974).
The result should have been hilarious. With the name of George Lucas attached, the film had great promise. Alas Howard the Duck went tail-feathers up in a godawful way with audiences and critics alike. Most decided that the most appropriate fowl Howard was was in fact a turkey in fact for a number of years afterwards Howard the Duck became an industry term for a film that was a total bomb. In the film, Howard is a watered-down shadow of his two-dimensional self, criminally missing in any of his sarcastic temperament and snappy one-liners. The design of the duck just looks awful it looks no different from one of the extras in Donald Duck costumes that walk around Disneyland. If the film had been made a decade later and Howard conducted as a CGI character, the films success might have been another story altogether. The scenes of the Dark Lord monster rampaging are some of Industrial Light and Magics less convincing work.
The second half of the film is a sprawling indulgence that seem to to be wanting to turn the film into another Ghostbusters (1984). But Willard Huyck lets the film spin out of control into slapstick awfulness with endless scenes of Tim Robbins crashing a microlite through traffic. At least in these scenes, Jeffrey Jones emerges through the chaos to give an inspiredly lunatic performance. Although from Tim Robbins embarrassing performance as a geeky scientist nerd, you would never have guessed you were seeing a future Golden Globe and Academy Award-winning actor and director.
There are occasional clever moments. The opening, which pans up what looks like a New York skyline to unexpectedly reveal two full moons, and then through Howards apartment, taking in posters for Breeders of the Lost Egg and Splashdance and copies of Playduck and Rolling Egg, seemed quite clever when one first saw the film in 1987, but upon re-viewing seemed more sappy than anything else. Lea Thompson gives the film its few moments of sparkle theres a charming scene with she mock-seducing a scared Howard. But even she vanishes beneath the noise and incredible silliness of the rest of the film.
Gloria Katz and Willard Huyck have failed to work in the industry again. Their sole subsequent screen credit has been as writers of George Lucass one big other flop, The Radioland Murders (1994).
Copyright Richard Scheib 1990
|