There have been "killer ant" movies before - Them!, The Naked Jungle, and Empire of the Ants
come to mind but Phase IV, released in 1974 (and finally available on DVD in a no-frills edition
from Legend Films), may be the first and only "killer ant" art film. With its abstract, almost experimental
approach to narrative and character development, it's a much closer cousin to something like...say, Last Year
at Marienbad than Them! While it was marketed as a science fiction film and clearly belongs in that genre,
the film was both puzzling and disappointing to a certain sector of that audience that expected a killer ant
movie to deliver thrills, chills and a satisfying ending. Yet, once you accept the fact that Phase
IV is not a conventional sci-fi film and will not conform to the genre conventions that you expect, you
may find it absolutely chilling and brilliant.
Designed and directed by Saul Bass, one of the most innovative and influential graphic designers of the 20th
century, Phase IV remains Bass's only feature film, even though he worked on more than fifty of them.
His striking title sequence designs for such films as 1954's Carmen Jones (his first), Bonjour Tristesse,
Vertigo, Exodus, The Man With the Golden Arm and Walk on the Wild Side (famous for its prowling black cat)
still seem incredibly fresh and modern in their sleek, deceptively simple execution which captures the
absolute essence of the film in question.
Like his masterful title sequences for other films, Phase IV has a stunning one and we would expect
no less. The remarkable close-up and detailed ant footage may remind you of the 1971 documentary The
Hellstrom Chronicle and that's because Ken Middleham was the insect cinematographer on both films. And
like The Hellstrom Chronicle, Phase IV takes that documentary's premise that insects will
win the battle for global dominance, not mankind and dramatizes it in a way that seems completely
plausible at times.
After an opening sequence, complete with voice over narration, that demonstrates the complexity and
sophistication of an insect species many regard as an insignificant pest, we learn that some disturbance in
deep space has attracted the attention and concern of scientists everywhere. Shortly thereafter, a British
biologist, Dr. Hobbs (Nigel Davenport), begins to notice strange behavior in the ant world, particularly in
the way they stop attacking rival colonies. Instead the ants unite to overcome and destroy their natural
predators.
In a desolate section of the American Southwest (though allegedly filmed in Africa) where there is a great
deal of ant activity, Hobbs sets up shop to study the ants in a fortress-like, sphere-shaped laboratory and
is joined by James Lesko (Michael Murphy), his assistant, who is skilled in mathematics and cryptology.
Evacuation orders are issued to the few residents in the area and testing begins with Hobbs decimating seven
ant-created towers which, to my eye, look like natural architectural wonders and something Antonio Gaudi
would have appreciated. The reaction to this is swift and the ants invade a nearby farm, attacking a family
that refused to leave. The four members manage to escape in a truck but soon find themselves stranded near
the scientists' compound. As they stagger toward the laboratory, fighting off ants, they are suddenly
enveloped in a shower of chemical poison coming from the facility's defensive sprayers. The only survivor is
a teenage girl named Kendra (Lynne Frederick) who managed to take shelter in a storage cellar. Hobbs, who is
clearly irritated at this new development, and James, have no choice but to take her in until they can
arrange for her transfer out of there in a helicopter air lift. Meanwhile, Hobbs increases the intensity of
his tests which result in more ant deaths, but the little buggers prove to be not only incredibly resilient
but possibly superior in intellect to the scientists. It also becomes increasingly apparent that the
besieged trio are the real experiment and the film's resolution, mirroring the cosmic mysticism of Kubrick's
2001: A Space Odyssey, suggests a new world order....one that might not include homo sapiens.
When Phase IV opened theatrically, the reception was more negative than positive in terms of both
reviews and ticket sales. The Variety reviewer picked it apart: "This one didn't get the bugs worked out
before release....the terror is supposedly in the notion that ants are suddenly getting smarter and better
organized, ready to take on all comers...One problem with a pic of this type is that it's hard to understand
the ants just by watching them swarm over each other in the thousands...moreover, you can't tell what the
humans are doing either. Despite endless conversation and dial twirling, Davenport and Murphy never focus
the story in any dramatic direction. Joining them as an ant attack refugee, Lynne Frederick only adds to the
confusion...Cinematically, the ants are never very menacing. Pic opens with an interminable segment inside an
anthill. But photography is poor quality, looking like outtakes rejected by National Geographic. Boring
exposition tells how menacing the ants will be if they ever get really organized for evil, but that's the
high point for expectations. During the rest of the film they mainly show up in lab one by one." Sometimes
you have to wonder if the reviewer saw the same film you did!
Somewhat more favorable and representative of the majority opinion are these excerpts from a review by A.H.
Weiler of The New York Times: "...Saul Bass...has fashioned a pictorially persuasive adventure. His ants
in close-up and otherwise make their awesome potential terrifyingly real, even if his principals Nigel
Davenport and Michael Murphy, as the scientists, and Lynne Frederick, as the frightened young woman are
merely one-dimensional figures registering surface emotions. It's ungallant to reveal the denouement but,
like a good deal of "Phase IV", it's beclouded by enigmas. For all of its good, scientific and human
intentions, "Phase IV" cries for a Phase V of fuller explanations."
Most criticisms of the film seemed to demand an explanation for the behavior of the ants and the humans but
the answers at least to me are there in Bass's visual design. In scene after scene we see the
beautifully regimented and purposeful behavior of the ants juxtaposed against the individualistic and often
ineffectual actions of the humans. It's as if the film were directed by the ants it observes everything at
a dispassionate distance. The synchronized unity of the ants, performing as a unit, sacrificing themselves
if necessary, is a model of communication perfection. The human trio, on the other hand, is dysfunctional in
their attempts to communicate with each other in their hermetically sealed sphere. Ego, emotion, a human's
sense of self all of these things become superfluous in the struggle for species survival depicted in
Phase IV and this is where the film ties in thematically with other sci-fi touchstones like
Invasion of the Body Snatchers and The Thing From Another World. Maybe it's better to be an
ant or an intelligent carrot. There is no such thing as self-pity or introspection in this new society where
you're just one replaceable component in a massive organization working together in lockstep synchronicity.
I think the most chilling aspect of Phase IV is the fact that ant society compared to human society
is so much more advanced in terms of communication and the visual representation of this is so seductively
rendered that it becomes a subversive plea for totalitarianism.
I do think Bass wanted to defy expected sci-fi conventions and resist making anyone in the human trio heroic
or even someone an audience could identify with easily. The fact that he cast relatively unknown actors who
were unrecognizable except perhaps to movie buffs seems to support this. Nigel Davenport is, on the surface,
like a lot of scientists in science fiction films. He's highly intelligent, impersonal, egotistical and
incorrigibly curious. But unlike the scientist in...say, The Thing From Another World...he is more
interested in proving his superiority to the ants than communicating with them. And human emotions such as
compassion or sadness seem alien to him. Yet, even the ants honor their dead in Phase IV, arranging
their fallen bodies meticulously in rows, whereas Hobbs feels no remorse for the people who died trying to
seek shelter in his station.
By default, James becomes the only character to engage our sympathies to some degree and even then he's
often hard to read. Sharing an obsessive interest in the ants with Hobbs, he at least has a quirky sense of
humor and a stronger sense of self-preservation. And despite expectations of a romantic relationship
developing between James and Kendra, this too is avoided in a further departure from the usual sci-fi movie
norm. Many detractors of the film, in fact, feel that Kendra barely registers as a person but that's because
she spends most of the film in a state of shock which is quite understandable after witnessing the death
of her family and beloved horse. If James and Kendra do end up as a couple in the final moments of the film,
it's because its part of the ants' grand design, not a matter of romantic love or sexual attraction.
As a first time director, Bass did not have the power to insist on the final cut of the film and there are
reports of changes made to the film by Paramount after his departure. According to John Brosnan in Future
Tense: The Cinema of Science Fiction, "Bass originally filmed a spectacular, surreal montage lasting
four minutes, showing what life would be like on the 'new' Earth, but this was cut by the distributor." This
is confirmed in a posting by Bruce Holecheck on the DVD Savant web site: "The trailer to Phase IV can
be found on Synapse Films' 42nd Street Forever Volume 3: Exploitation Explosion and it does indeed
contain some snippets of the more tripped-out climax that unfortunately didn't make it into the release
version. Additional glimpses include a man and a woman merging into one new, faceless being, and some
additional psychedelic photography and effects."
Bass also had no control over the marketing campaign for Phase IV and that included the design of the
film poster. One version of it shows a bloodied hand with an ant emerging from a hole in the palm a homage
to Luis Bunuel & Salvador Dali's Un Chien Andalou which appears in the film and the taglines, "The
Day the Earth Was Turned Into a Cemetery. Ravenous Invaders Controlled by a Terror Out In Space..Commanded
to Annihilate The World," which is a total misrepresentation of the film. Even an international version of
the film poster indicates that space aliens are behind the catastrophic incidents.
It's no wonder Phase IV was positioned for failure by Paramount which took the horror exploitation
approach and ended up misleading sci-fi fans and probably alienating more open-minded filmgoers and art
cinema audiences. Bass never made another film and it's our loss. But now that Phase IV is available
on DVD it may finally reach an appreciative audience.
Producer: Paul B. Radin
Director: Saul Bass
Screenplay: Mayo Simon
Cinematography: Dick Bush
Film Editing: Willy Kemplen
Art Direction: John Barry
Music: Brian Gascoigne
Cast: Nigel Davenport (Ernest Hubbs), Michael Murphy (Lesko), Lynne Frederick (Kendra), Alan Gifford (Eldridge), Robert Henderson (Clete), Helen Horton (Mrs. Eldridge).
C-93m.
by Jeff Stafford
Phase IV
by Jeff Stafford | May 25, 2004

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