In an age where horror movies were making small things big, Puppet People did the impossible and reversed it, except it was exactly the same.
Of course I still loved it, these movies are like crack, but it is not a good movie. The poster implies a race against a madman where a few characters struggle to survive in a giant, action-packed world. The movie plays more like Dazed and Confused mixed with Ant-Man. These characters just chill out on a shelf, and occasionally there’s a superimposed hand or rat.
I guess you can blame it on the small budget, but it’s surprising how little these late 50’s sci-fi movies do compared to their predecessors. I think it can be chalked up to the fact that the Cold War paranoia that fuelled the early 50’s had transformed into “small thing go big”.
Look, there’s hardly anything thematically or plot-wise but if you want to see a tiny person attempt to use a normal sized telephone, go nuts, I’m not here to judge.
In an age where horror movies were making small things big, Puppet People did the impossible and reversed it, except it was exactly the same.
Of course I still loved it, these movies are like crack, but it is not a good movie. The poster implies a race against a madman where a few characters struggle to survive in a giant, action-packed world. The movie plays more like Dazed and Confused mixed with Ant-Man. These characters just chill out on a shelf, and occasionally there’s a superimposed hand or rat.
I guess you can blame it on the small budget, but it’s surprising how little these late 50’s sci-fi movies do compared to their predecessors. I think it can be chalked up to the fact that the Cold War paranoia that fuelled the early 50’s had transformed into “small thing go big”.
Look, there’s hardly anything thematically or plot-wise but if you want to see a tiny person attempt to use a normal sized telephone, go nuts, I’m not here to judge.