Watched: 08/25/2024
Format: Amazon
Viewing: First
Director: Mike Mendez
From the same studio that mixed fish and wind, this seems to have been a second stab at the success derived by mixing Animal + Natural Disaster, ie: the Sharknado franchise.
Perhaps the most remarkable thing about Lavalantula (2015) is that it's a mini-Police Academy reunion - a thing nobody was asking for, but it was nice to check in. A curiously sweaty Steve Guttenberg anchors this film, but you can expect to see Michael Winslow (the sound fx guy), Marion Ramsey (the squeaky voiced lady - RIP), and Leslie Easterbrook (the blonde training commander) appear. But no Kim Cattrall, oddly enough.
In non-Police Academy casting, the film co-stars Nia Peeples* as Guttenberg's ass-kicking, defiantly shirt-free wife, and Patrick Renna, who was in The Big Green with Guttenberg back in the 1990's when he was a kid (you will remember him from The Sandlot).
The basic idea is that, uh-oh, LA is sitting on lava tubes that erupt and start spewing out large spiders that spit flame.
And that's it. I mean, Gutternberg and friends need to end the invasion, but that's it. Spiders. It's plenty.
Guttenberg plays a washed up 1990's superhero action star who has to traverse Los Angeles during this 8-legged calamity to find his teen/20-something son, who he failed to take to a Dodgers game and who ran off to ride dirt bikes with his friends.
The FX are... there. But this is a movie that knows what it is, and does ok at that. If you want to see a movie that seems like they blew their entire budget on Police Academy alums, this is it. But there's also some fun sequences, and no one is taking this seriously. It co-stars Ralph Garman as a Hollywood Boulevard costume guy and features the Brea Tar Pits with fire CG'd everywhere. That's the sort of movie it is.
Tackleberry would be so pissed he missed this |
Anyway, it was good to see old Police Academy friends, and had they made more Lavalantulas, maybe we could have seen more.
But the movie never quite feels as insane as Sharknado did that first time, which was absolutely catching lightning in a bottle - and then upping the ante by a factor of 10 with each sequel. And I felt robbed that Easterbrook was in the movie for only a couple of minutes.
*I've never really thought the last name "Peeples" is weird until this very moment, but "Peeples" sounds made up, and yet is not. Peeples.
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