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Attack of the Puppet People (1958)

attack of the Puppet People

Bert I. Gordon (BIG) stands out as one of the more successful grade-Z auteurs of 1950’s films, having made within a few short years a slew of monster/scifi ultra low budget films, all of which involve fantastical changes in the size of people or animals. BIG never made films as good or subversive as Roger Corman, but BIG made a lot of super-cheap films in a short time that made money, provided employment for actors, and provided material for drive-in theaters.

Most of the BIG films involve people or animals that become giants, but this one involves a mad toy-maker who shrinks people so as to fulfill some kind of weird personal fetish. There is a crisis point about 2/3 way through this film where Mad Scientist Hoyt decides he must kill his shrunken pets…there is a hint of genuine horror at this point, and I was reminded of the real-life horror the Andrea Yates case, herself guilty of infanticide and simulatanously a victim of both poor mental health and fundamentalist religion.

BIG borrows heavily here, from sources as wide-ranging as the Bride of Frankenstein to The Incredible Shrinking Man, as his visuals go. As far as BIG’s patented FX techniques go, this is one of his more refined pieces, along with War of the Collosil Beast.

Eternally geriatric John Hoyt, who was good in ‘When Worlds Collide’ and as Gene Roddenberry’s original choice for the doctor of the starship Enterprise, plays the mad villain, and does a fine job of it. Hoyt’s performance holds the film together, and despite the mad scientist schtick, he is ultimately more engaging than John Agar, to whom I have assigned the title World’s Most Unlikable Actor.

This is standard, mid-grade BIG fare, which is to say, an enjoyable waste of time for those who enjoy Drive-In era films. The story is not terribly complicated, and I think BIG padded things out so that this film would have sufficient running time for theatrical release, otherwise it could have been done as an episode of the Twilight Zone.

BIG made this film for peanuts. Ten years after its release, TV schlockmeister Irwin Allen tweaked the concept slightly, and made the series ‘Land of the Giants,’ which at the time was the most expensive TV show ever produced, and ultimately much more tiresome than this quaint artifact.