Deliver to Romania
IFor best experience Get the App
Dr. Akom and Dr. Roger are planning a family vacation at the beach, but their trip turns to tragedy when three people from their family turn up missing. After the bodies are discovered, the Doctors examine the remains of their family members and determine a giant crocodile had ripped through their bodies. They set out to destroy the crocodile at all costs, Dr. Akom hires an expert to kill the beast but it is too large to be hunted and trapped. Soon the giant, ravenous crocodile devours dozens of the local people and after a long search they find the monstrous crocodile, and do everything to blow it to bits. Bonus Features: Original Radio Spots, Horror Trailers, Interview with legendary producer Herman Cohen| Scene Selection. Specs: DVD5; Dolby Digital Mono; 93 minutes; Color; 1.85:1 Aspect Ratio; MPAA - R: Year - 1979; SRP - $9.99.
H**T
A Crocodile Movie that is a Departure from the Norm!
Since the very first time I heard about this movie I've been waiting to get it for a good price hoping one day I would succeed, and on one day I rebelled and dared to check the price, I could afford it and this is my review of CROCODILE!Plot: Some atomic waste has been unleashed after a giant hurricane hit an island, Now.... after a mans family has been taken away from him by the giant beast and entire villages have been destroyed he and three other characters (A Quint-Like Captain, A Semi Hopper-Like Friend and an Annoying Photographer) go out to hunt this hideous beast, but can they stop this massive 60-100 foot crocodile who is never consistent to its original size!Review: When I was around eleven years old (eight years ago) I was obsessed with the internet and finding out about horror films (in particular, Friday the 13th) but a few movies where in my grasp and I never got around to buying them because A.) They Were Rated R and B.) Because, I had no money to do so, I spent it all on rubber toy animals such as Sharks and Crocodiles! One of the films happened to be this one, (the others where Great White (1982), Killer Crocodile (1/2) Alligator (Both the 1979 Version and the 1980 Version) and to this day I only own both the alligator movies.) I finally found it for a reasonable price and bought it immediately. Let me just start off by saying that the atmosphere is incredible. There was plenty of intense destruction sequences and some mildly decent gore (Highlight the severed legs scene) but it was very poorly dubbed and the crocodile looked awesome in some scenes and terrible in others. One thing that immensely amazed me was how they built such a giant crocodile head and were able to use it on there probable very low budget!?! Most people despise this movie and I can't see why, it is probably the best croc/gator movie of the 70's.... There is a very small dispute in the fact that if this were the very first crocodile film and since it was originally thought of in either '76 or '77. This film also has a very controversial scene involving the death of a real live (or already dead) Crocodile and another scene where a water buffalo is killed by the crocodile but I don't know if it was actually killed or not, these scene are very disturbing but right after them a village is destroyed and you soon forget about it unless you are in vote for not seeing any live animals being slaughtered, that's fine, it was shocking to me but I wasn't going to turn of the movie because of it..... Crocodile is a fairly decent movie in my opinion and I believe more crocodile movies should be made in foreign countries (some good examples are Croc from 2007 or Million Dollar Crocodile from 2012)Acting: I don't even want to talk about it!Gore: severed legs, a very disturbing and bloody water buffalo death scene, the snuff crocodile scene, lots of red water and some more, much gorier than I expected!Bottom Line: A somewhat fun and disturbing departure from the norm, it is a grisly good time but it could've been better, the plot was weak in some aspects and the dubbed acting was horrendous but I still thoroughly enjoyed the film!Suggested MPAA: Rated R for grisly violence, disturbing images, sexual content, and brief languageIs it worth the Buy on a scale of 1-10: 4For the Movie itself on a scale of 1-5: 3 (it'd be 3 and a half but unfortunately Amazon's voting system doesn't work like that!)
C**8
"I've examined those pieces of anatomy over and over again and I'm convinced it was the work of a giant crocodile."
There are films that stay with you long after you've seen them because they touch something deep inside you, lift your spirit, or relate to you in a way few films can...and then there are films that are a blight on the collective consciousness, ones that define a new, previously unheard of level of total cinematic rottenness...Crocodile (1981), originally titled Chorake, most definitely falls into the latter category. Directed by someone named Sompote Sands, whose previous credit includes an obscure Thai made Ultraman film titled The 6 Ultra Brothers vs. the Monster Army (1979), the film features a cast of nobodies whom I hesitate to call actors only because they obviously had little or no skills, this movie generally being their only credit. The only named I recognize attached to this feature is that of Herman Cohen, the man behind such features as I Was a Teenage Werewolf (1957), Horrors of the Black Museum (1959), Konga (1961), whose only apparent involvement seemed to be in the form of the distributor of this little Asiatic produced nugget of joy.At the outset of the movie a booming voice pours forth, stating "From the very beginning man has been trying to destroy nature...perhaps one day he will succeed...but, then again, on that day nature may rebel, and this could happen", `this' referring to following scenes of a cataclysmic storm destroying a miniature representation of a tropical, southeastern Asian coastal village. Oh man, those phony natives are getting it good...and from the carnage something nasty (and bitey) this way comes...the next twenty or so minutes of the film are hard to discern, but basically focus on two couples, one with a young daughter, leaving the bustling city to take a vacation at a tropical resort. Once arriving, there's much frolicking, and eventually the two women and the young girl are eaten by a giant crocodile (I guess the vacation's over), or so we're led to believe as we don't actually see them getting attacked or anything, only a bit of thrashing about in the water. Anyway, once it's learned what actually killed the women, that of a colossal croc, the grieving men set out on a quest to destroy the creature what ruined their lives. Oh, by the way, I almost forgot to mention this wasn't just any, run of the mill mammoth crocodile, but a ginormous, voracious reptile embiggened by atomic radiation...geez, I thought that plot device died out in the 1950s. All right, so the two men hook up with a sweaty, shirtless, very muscled sea captain with a giant tattoo of an eagle on his back, and head out into the open water in search of the large beast, whose since wiped out numerous miniature fishing villages. They're soon joined by an overly effeminate news photographer, who provides some unexpected, but much needed comic relief, along with giving us more potential crocodile fodder. Eventually the S.S. Funboy and her crew run across the fearsome, humungaloid, beast, highlighted by a sequence involving a plastic crocodile attacking a toy ship, setting up for the climatic final confrontation of grievous proportions...This movie's a huge, tedious mess...the first twenty minutes are so disjointed I would challenge anyone to properly put the pieces together and come up with some sort of cohesive storyline. The scenes, many of them too dark to see much of anything, are tacked together with little or no thought towards continuity, indicating perhaps a retarded orangutan was hired for the editing process. Eventually some semblance of a plot does become evident, but guess what? It's one I saw in a much better film by Steven Spielberg called Jaws (1975)...perhaps you've heard of it? Given the immense popularity of Spielberg's film, the knock offs following were abundant, and of all the ones I've seen (which is to say I've seen a great many), few failed as miserably as this one, in my opinion. And that's pretty pathetic given the makers of this film are not only following an established formula, but actually lifting scenes directly from that other film. The most vivid example is near the end when the ship is sinking, and one of the men, in a Chief Brody-like maneuver, props himself on the now angled crow's nest of half submerged ship in an effort to take pot shots at the approaching beast, whose size ranged from big (about twenty feet) to ginormous (one hundred feet), given which part of the movie you were watching. There's a particularly stoopid occurrence of self sacrifice soon after this which I'm hesitant to go into further if only because it provided me with so much laughter in its complete ridiculousness, and I'd not want to spoil that rare opportunity of enjoyment for anyone else. Perhaps this was included in an effort to outdo Jaws, but, if so, it fell short of its intended mark. The movie is brimming with pointless filler including stock footage of monkeys, sea coral, numerous close ups of crocodile eyes, etc., my favorite possibly being a mondo scene where an actual crocodile is butchered by a skinny Asian man with a large knife...lovely...there's very few scenes where we actually see the crocodile attacking anyone, as much of it was inferred by people splashing around in the water, biting on blood capsules or such indicating something was attacking them in the water...there was one pointless sequence in the middle where the creature eats a water buffalo, finally giving us some sort of frame of reference of the beast, and then a couple of scenes near the end when various individuals find themselves in the jaws of the creature, allowing the audience some much needed visceral thrills. I did like some of the mass destruction sequences, especially the scenes involving small, Asian people being tossed around and such, but I despised the often out of sync musical score...ouch...it's a mixture between cacophonous, insipid, absolutely horrid disco pieces and goofy, monotonous, psuedo classical thematic music during the more serious sequences, none of which did much to help the overall end result any. The film did feature a grand, explosive finale, for what it's worth...The picture, presented in widescreen (1.85:1), on this VCI Entertainment DVD release is just plain awful. I can deal with the minor wear elements present, but there was a consistent, irritating jitter throughout the film, indicating a poor transfer. If the hideous material in the film doesn't induce a headache, this aspect surely will...the audio, presented in Dolby Digital stereo, is decent enough, but given the rotten scoring and lousy dubbed dialog, it's not doing anyone any favors. As far as extras, there are two radio spots, along with trailers for other films like Kiss of the Tarantula (1976), Don't Open the Door! (1975), The Twilight People (1973), and Gorgo (1961). Overall this film, the material and the presentation, deserves one star, but I'm throwing in an extra due to the unintentional humor.Cookieman108If I learned anything from this film it's that not only can enormous, irradiated reptiles live in the sea, but they can also fly...
Trustpilot
1 day ago
2 weeks ago