It’s a triple feature of movies including a Bigfoot, ghosts, aliens, a giant boar, and a zombie kangaroo. Is it all as fun as it sounds? Let’s find out.
MONSTERS OF CALIFORNIA (2023)
This flick has so much going for it, but it doesn’t deliver enough on the title, and the plot absolutely crumbles, running on fumes with no sense of motivation or story arc by the time it reaches the final act of it’s too-long runtime.
The vibe is straight out of an 80s Spielberg film, and I was loving it. We meet a dude and his two best buddies, who are always chasing paranormal experiences. The first sequence has them in a haunted house and encountering a ghost, and it’s 80s awesome, like something out of Ghostbusters. As a bonus, one of the dudes even gets stripped down to his undies.
Then we get a bunch of plot points. The main guy’s dad disappeared while studying something paranormal for the government. His mom is a religious fanatic. His uncle is a military man, played by Casper Van Dien.
His two best buddies are somewhat of a comic duo, and there’s this odd thing going on with them—one friend is somewhat obsessed with the other friend’s crotch. The crotch lover actually absolutely steals the show with his comical delivery. Meanwhile, there’s so much potential for a bromance turned homomance angle, but it never fully develops.
Instead, the main guy gets a female love interest, and I’m not being biased when I say that their intimate hetero moments destroy the pacing. There was no need for this romantic element other than to add to the 80s feel. In fact, if the romance and the religious mom aspect had been dropped, the pacing would have been so much better, because those two side stories add nothing to the already struggling main plot.
There’s only one other major “monster” in California, in another great sequence involving Bigfoot, which goes from suspenseful to hilarious thanks to the crotch lover.
Eventually, the group of friends gets entangled in a government coverup, and we even get a UFO sequence in the end that feels like a total nod to Close Encounters.
It’s a bummer that as much as this feels like an 80s comfort movie, it really falls short in both monster action and script strength.
BOAR (2017)
I wasn’t surprised to see numerous comments online comparing this movie to Razorback. It is another good old monster movie about a giant boar tearing people apart in the Australian wilderness, so it’s impossible not to read that description and think of the 80s classic.
For a majority of the film, the giant boar is presented without CGI, which is amazing in this day and age considering how big this beast is. However, it’s mostly closeups of the mouth and head for some great gory attacks.
In the final act, a decision is made to show the entire boar as it snaps victims up, which is when some seriously hokey CGI is used. Still cool attacks, but it does change the feel a bit.
The other issue with the movie is the messy flow. Early on, we meet Bill Moseley and family on a road trip to visit a super hunky, bald uncle…but then they disappear for a major portion of the middle of the film.
The focus turns to random people getting attacked and locals hanging around and talking in a diner. What they never talk about, however, is how this damn boar got so big. Therefore, you just have to go with the horror action, which delivers plenty of blood and guts. There are some delicious glimpses of man bods as well.
For the final act, the focus is once again on Moseley and his family, which is when the attacks shift to CGI. Even so, the whole sequence with the family trying to survive is a blast.
RIPPY (2024)
Would you believe it’s another Australian creature feature? And would you believe the hunky baldy from Boar also appears in this one? That was totally unintentional on my part when I selected these three flicks for a triple feature.
Rippy simply isn’t as horror-loaded as Boar, and many of the kills are essentially cutaway kills. Also, Rippy the killer kangaroo, who I think is supposed to be a zombie kangaroo, is pretty much exclusively CGI.
On top of that, each of the main characters (including Michael Biehn) gets their own little backstories, most of it concerning some form of PTSD. None of it adds anything to the plot, but what it does do is slow down the pace.
This just isn’t a very energetic monster movie, and there are large gaps of “character development” between the kills. It’s only in the final fifteen minutes that Rippy leaves the wilderness and comes to town to terrorize the main cast in a bar. This final battle is so disappointingly low key and over in the blink of an eye.
Finally, there’s one last scene that makes it look there could be a sequel focusing on human zombies.