The Fly 1958/Return of the Fly 1959 2000 Horror Movie Review
Horror movies Review
The plot device is so damned great that it simply had to be revisited: a scientist invents a device that transmits matter by disintegrating it in one chamber and reintegrating it in another. When he attempts to transmit his own body, he accidentally allows a fly into the chamber, and the resulting man-insect hybrid runs rampant across the Canadian countryside. Philippe, the son of that ill-fated scientist, is told the family history by a benevolent uncle (an oddly prim Vincent Price); possessed with the scientific will-to-know, he becomes determined to re-create his father’s experiments. The legendarily silly costuming of the original Fly returns, and with it, the perplexing logic of transmogrification—it becomes difficult to decipher which of the man-insect hybrids we’re meant to understand as possessing Phillipe’s agency. The film is hampered by the lack of a strong female lead, and by performances by all principals that are disappointingly modern in their clear motivation and restraint. Almost normal—even by modern standards—Return of the Fly represents an interesting bridging piece between the arty, abstract, symbolist sci-fi aesthetic of the early ‘50s and the naturalist, highly mimetic, realist style that quickly came to dominate the genre. —Miles Bethany






