Val Kilmer and Martha MacIsaac play the lead roles in the film. Kilmer is Dr. Kruipen, a scientist studying the effects of global climate change in the Canadian high arctic, and MacIsaac takes on the role of Kruipen's daughter, Evelyn, who is estranged from her father and reluctant to share time with him. While on a research expedition, Kruipen and his team discover a mammoth that had been preserved by glaciers during the last ice-age but has now emerged due to glacial recession. Very early in the film we learn that the mammoth's flesh bares a dormant parasite which wreaks havoc on Kruipen and his team. The story jumps rather quickly to the main plot where Evelyn and a group of undergraduate students who have been selected to join Kruipen's research team are flown by Kruipen's helicopter pilot to the expedition base shelter in the arctic. Upon their arrival they are surprised to discover they can't contact Dr. Kruipen. Shortly thereafter, one of Kruipen's team arrives by ATV at the shelter, but she can't explain what has happened due a bizarre illness which appears to be getting worse.
That's pretty much the setup for the horror that ensues. I won't give too much more of the specifics away. For a full synopsis, check out the Wikipedia article:
The Thaw on Wikipedia
The movie itself is just slightly better than average for a horror film. One of the antagonists of the film, a student who is infected with the parasite, kind of destroys the plot. As a case of bad writing, the character takes control of the group with a rifle which he hangs over his shoulder which is in no way threatening (if myself or a group with at least one or two brave people were involved that kid would have been knocked out, tied up, and gagged rather quickly). There is a rather enjoyable amputation scene, but otherwise the film is fairly predictable and slow.
The parasite that is killing the characters of the film is a vertebrate organism which functions rather like a parasitic insect. The male of the species causes a sore on a host which attracts females. The female will lay eggs within the sore which pass through an egg stage before hatching and crawling into their host for nutrition. The infected hosts' bodies are eaten inside-out by the insects. This is a common strategy for life on our planet, especially amongst insects. I think the idea of such a destructive parasite laying dormant in the flesh of a mammoth is probably why I enjoyed the film. It is very possible that there are many forms of life which we have no remaining record of which may have had peculiar or unusual metabolic strategies or life cycles. Also, it's fun to speculate how a biosphere similar to ours would react to the release of an organism or community which had not been active for a time that is long enough to allow the incoming organisms to overwhelm all of the surrounding biosphere, just like an invasive species taking hold of an environment.
I would definitely recommend watching this film if you enjoy sci-fi and horror, though it's definitely not great by any means.
That's pretty much the setup for the horror that ensues. I won't give too much more of the specifics away. For a full synopsis, check out the Wikipedia article:
The Thaw on Wikipedia
The movie itself is just slightly better than average for a horror film. One of the antagonists of the film, a student who is infected with the parasite, kind of destroys the plot. As a case of bad writing, the character takes control of the group with a rifle which he hangs over his shoulder which is in no way threatening (if myself or a group with at least one or two brave people were involved that kid would have been knocked out, tied up, and gagged rather quickly). There is a rather enjoyable amputation scene, but otherwise the film is fairly predictable and slow.
The parasite that is killing the characters of the film is a vertebrate organism which functions rather like a parasitic insect. The male of the species causes a sore on a host which attracts females. The female will lay eggs within the sore which pass through an egg stage before hatching and crawling into their host for nutrition. The infected hosts' bodies are eaten inside-out by the insects. This is a common strategy for life on our planet, especially amongst insects. I think the idea of such a destructive parasite laying dormant in the flesh of a mammoth is probably why I enjoyed the film. It is very possible that there are many forms of life which we have no remaining record of which may have had peculiar or unusual metabolic strategies or life cycles. Also, it's fun to speculate how a biosphere similar to ours would react to the release of an organism or community which had not been active for a time that is long enough to allow the incoming organisms to overwhelm all of the surrounding biosphere, just like an invasive species taking hold of an environment.
I would definitely recommend watching this film if you enjoy sci-fi and horror, though it's definitely not great by any means.
Like Covid19, this movie could become reality. TERRIFYING!!!!!!
ReplyDeletei just watched it it's good. i hope humanity will never encounter such organism.
ReplyDeleteMy only quibble is that they made the parasite a vertebrate organism, which seems at odds with all of the other characteristics. Especially the speed of development. It felt especially galling during the film, because the bugs are CG anyway- give them a back story that can't be picked apart by a Bio 101 student.
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