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| Piranha [1978] | ![Piranha [1978]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/514KVQ5AMRL._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: Joe Dante Actors: Bradford Dillman, Heather Menzies, Kevin Mccarthy, Keenan Wynn, Dick Miller Studio: MGM Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: £12.99 Buy New: £2.98 You Save: £10.01 (77%)
New (7) from £2.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 11239
Format: Dubbed, Pal, Widescreen Languages: Dutch (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Italian (Subtitled), Polish (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Original Language), French (Dubbed), German (Dubbed), Italian (Dubbed), Spanish (Dubbed) Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over Running Time: 92 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Discs: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
EAN: 5050070007282 ASIN: B00005KFT8
Theatrical Release Date: August 3, 1978 Release Date: October 21, 2002 Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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Amazon.co.uk Review As a producer, Roger Corman has always loved to make low-budget rip-offs of hit movies, and Piranha is his typically cheeky take on Jaws--and, as so often with Corman, in many ways it's funnier and more entertaining than the original. Directed with gusto by schlock-horror specialist Joe Dante and sharply scripted by John Sayles, it replaces one huge underwater toothy monster with dozens of little ones and ups the body count by a factor of 10 or so. Two hapless teenagers, hiking in a remote mountain region, stumble on a secret US military research lab. They don't last long, but their intrusion leads to the release into the local river system of a huge shoal of super-intelligent piranha, originally specially bred for use in Vietnam. Downstream from the virulent little munchers lie a kiddies' holiday camp and a tacky new waterfront theme park. Lunch time, fellas! Sayles, with his staunch left-wing credentials, slips in some mordant political satire at the expense of the military-industrial complex, and authority figures of any kind come off pretty badly, but the satire never gets in the way of the gleeful black humour. The two leads, Bradford Dillman and Heather Menzies, are fairly pallid, but there are ripe cameos from such cult horror-movie icons as Kevin McCarthy, Dick Miller and Barbara Steele. Pino Donaggio's score impudently borrows aspects of John Williams' famous Jaws theme while never quite infringing copyright. The movie was successful enough to spawn a much-inferior sequel, Piranha II: The Spawning (1982), which marked the inauspicious directing debut of one James Cameron. On the DVD: Piranha on disc comes with just the theatrical trailer as an extra. The transfer is a respectable job, reproducing the original's full-screen ratio. --Philip Kemp
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A GOOD JAWS SPOOF November 3, 2007 Two friends go missing, and private investigator Maggie McKeown (Heather Menzies) is assigned to track them down. After searching with no luck, her trail leads her to Paul Grogan, (Bradford Dillman) a recluse living up in the mountains. He tells her that the only way people would be up there is if they were swept away to a nearby damn. They pack up and head over to the damn, which also houses a secret military base. Breaking and entering, the two discover that the supposed closed facility is still operational. After getting away from a guard, they accidentally throw a switch, draining a pool in the middle of the facility into the river. Later, they discover that the pool housed a giant swarm of mutated piranha, which the military created for use in Vietnam and kept in the facility when the war ended. Now drained into the river system, Maggie and Paul work together with their creator, Dr. Robert Hoak (Kevin McCarthy) and local hotel owner Buck Gardner (Dick Miller) to keep the voracious predators from devouring everything in their path.
The Good News: I think this is Roger Corman's best movie he ever made. Sure, he's done others that are more famous, including his Poe films from the early 60s, but few can match the sheer fun that this movie is. This is pure campy fun, and the actors know that and don't try to get too serious. The situations that they get into even further the cheese along. Seriously, how can you take a film with mutant killer piranha without a grain of salt? It has to be like that, because then it wouldn't be so much fun. Off course, it wouldn't be that way without the generous gore. It was obvious that they wanted to up the stakes of gore that "Jaws" had, and this film blows it out of the water (no pun intended) in that respect. In here, we get slowly munched limbs, a lot of very gory bite marks on faces, skin seen visibly eaten away, and an infamous scene where a piranha takes flight and latches onto a person's eyeball. At the end, there are plenty of wounds seen inflicted on survivors as well, and with tons of blood spilt in between, this will not disappoint the gore hounds out there. That ending, wow, what can I say. It has it all: plenty of action, tons of gore, deaths, survivors, and the bad guy gets what's coming to him. To have the kind of coordination and creativity to make that whole sequence a success is astonishing. It is the kind of scene that newer Hollywood action directors needed to watch because this scene gets it right. The action is shot in plain view for you to see what's going on, not that hyper-stylized jump cuts that so plague those films. You want to be able to see the action, not be confused by it, and that scene is a great example. It is a fast paced scene, but you know exactly what's going on all the time. That's the hallmark of a great director. He lets you see his set-pieces in great detail and care. This is also true of the special effects. I have to say it; the miniature piranhas are very well done. They look exactly like the pictures of piranha I've seen in pictures and on the National Geographic Channel. Back at that time, to actually make a believable animal in these kinds of films was so rare that it was embarrassing. Hardly any film from 74 to 80 had believable animals in these films, but this is one of the rare exceptions. The piranhas are believable and look evil, just like they should be.
The Bad News: About the only negative thing I can say about this movie is that the film might be a bit too "70s" for some people to handle. It has that "We're spoofing Jaws and having fun doing it" feel to it ruins several of the other films that came out at the same time, and this is one of them. Luckily, this is one of the better ones.
The Final Verdict: I really love this film, and it is one of the best of its kind of films. The spoof works for it, mainly because there isn't a lot of seriousness in it. Give it a shot if you like those kinds of films, or if you simply like to see killer sea creatures on the loose films.
Great "B" Movie March 21, 2006 "Piranha" is a cautionary tale about the perils of genetic engineering , yet it manages to inject an element of humour into it's critique as well as portraying the horror of a mass piranha attack. Make no mistake , these are fierce and very dangerous fish and "Piranha" contains some gruesome scenes. Perhaps "Piranha" is also an allegory about the Vietnam War , however I think that may be overanalysing the film a tad. The acting and dialogue isn't the greatest, but the piranhas themselves are superb. What about the flying one that took out the camp leader ! The highlight of the film for me was the sound of the piranhas on the attack; one of the most chilling sound effects I can recall in a horror film.
Fun film July 5, 2004 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
A spoof of 'Jaws' this is a highly entertaining film. It's got a good cast and great director, Joe Dante (who also made 'The Howling' and 'Gremlins 1 and 2').Not particulary scary, it has a few moments where you cringe for the characters, but the film is mostly humourous, and is meant to be. The plot is basically genetically-modified Piranhas escape from where the government was breeding them (to use in future wars!) and go on a rampage on a lake by a children's summer camp. Great fun!
"The piranhas...they're eating the guests, sir..." January 20, 2003 We all know that producer Roger Corman made "Piranha" to exploit the success of "Jaws"--just look at the poster art for Spielberg's sake. But what was intended to be a low-budget knock-off became a classic B-movie because John Sayles produced a clever script and Corman assigned Joe Dante to direct. Dante would later go on to direct "The Howling" and "Gremlins," as well as "Rock and Roll High School" and "Amazon Women on the Moon" (the man does not forget his roots). Ultimately, "Piranha" is every bit as much of a spoof as it is a ripoff, which raises it to the highest level of B-Movie grandeur. The story, such as it is in such things, has flesh-eating piranhas being released into the river of the Lost River Lake resort. Bradford Dillman, Heather Menzies, and Keenan Wynn are the most recognizable faces trying to avoid being eaten by the wee beasties, although you horror film buffs will also recognize not only Kevin "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" McCarthy but Barbara Steele, Queen of the Italian Horror Films. The DVD extras clearly reflect a grand affection for this film with commentary from Dante and producer Jon Davison, deleted footage, theatrical trailer, a "making-of" featurette for this 1978 film, material from the film's press kit, and more. When you have a classic B-Movie with A+ extras on the DVD, you have to give it five stars. Ironically, "Piranha II: The Spawning," the 1981 sequel, was the first film directed by James Cameron, who also went on to some notable successes in his later films.
Man meddles again, a great film is the result! July 31, 2000 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This will remind you of Jaws. It is funny and suspenseful and will make you want to watch it again and again. With a great cast including Dick Miller from Gremlins it has everything. Joe Dante directs and it has a great story to it. Its also not very dated and wont go out of date very quickly. Its fx for some of the dead bodies is very funny actually but also gets pretty scary and serious near the end. By the look of the End though you know there will probably be a sequal and there is. It is a class piece of film though and will have you reeling to watch it again.
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