Featuring:
The Hellstrom Chronicle (Color, 1971)
This strange, dark satiric pseudo-documentary about the end of the human race and the beauty and adaptability of insects may not have the credibility of a National Geographic film, but its subjectivity doesn't make it any less fascinating, or even plausible and certainly makes it more entertaining and provocative. The film intersperses incredible microcinematography that illuminates the grotesquely beautiful life of insects with a journey through man's failings led by fictitious scientist Nils Hellstrom, played to the hilt by Lawrence Pressman. While highlighting insects' adaptability and longevity on the planet, Hellstrom paints a picture of the annihilation of man and the reclamation of the Earth by our six-legged enemies.
Though based in some scientific fact, the heavy-handed narrative strays from objectivity as it unfolds as decidedly Science Fiction. We begin to see Hellstrom's bias in the first line voiced-over images of volcanic eruptions: “The world was created not with the sweetness of love, but with the violence of rape.” And the apocalyptic poem begins from there, and continues with an endless stream of lines like "specters as limitless as the imagination of the insane." Which is not to say there isn't some basis in real science. There are several institutions cited in the credits listed as consultants and a few kernels of real entomological and anthropological facts, but the overriding feeling of pretentious subjectivity transforms it into a kind of horror film for scientists and conservationists.
The insects are truly awe-inspiring, especially when filmed in slow-motion, and truly hair-raising when African driver-ants are swarming in alarming numbers to eat a monitor lizard. There's an intimacy with these creepy-crawlers that holds its own merit even in the face of Hellstrom throwing bugs around a grocery store and hosing down a hornet's nest. It is not as if this kind of manipulation hasn't been used in more prestigious documentaries for years, it is just more blatant. Robert Flaherty sacrificed baby seals for the sake of "documentation" in Nanook of the North and musical scores of children's choirs seem to run rampant in most modern nature documentaries, to sway the viewer into a heightened sense of awe. We must also forgive the use of a fake scientist for a host - for after all Sigourney Weaver is no biologist, but we accept her narration as fact in Planet Earth. Whether credible or not, Hellstrom is a must see!
“A masterpiece! Incredibly beautiful, a visual and aural feast. Infused with magical
drama and sinister excitement.” – Newsweek Magazine
“This film is simply and literally a stunner, totally absorbing” – New York Times
• 1972 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER: BEST DOCUMENTARY
• 1972 BAFTA AWARD WINNER: FLAHERTY DOCUMENTARY AWARD
• 1971 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL AWARD WINNER: TECHNICAL GRAND PRIZE
With a Double Dose of the Evangelical Science Organization, The Moody Institute of Science!
The Moody Institute of Science, founded under the auspices of the Moody Bible Institute, an evangelical group started by Erwin Moon in San Francisco in 1938, produced a number of religious cult science films that were intended to demonstrate intelligent design through scientific experiments. These were marketed to schools and churches across the United States and their biblical subtext hit the viewer over the head with the proverbial hammer of faith. Evangelist Erwin “The Million Volt Man” Moon stars in many of these eye-popping classroom science films as he inhales helium, runs electricity through his body, makes metal float in space, experiments with electric eels and preaches god’s creationist “intelligent design” ideology.
The Electric Eel (1954, Color)
Dr. Irwin Moon - part showman, part scientist, part crackpot religious nutcase shows us the electric eel and demonstrates its amazing abilities to shock fish for food and to use "radar" to find them. Don’t miss the scene where he illuminates a florescent light tube using his eel then jolts his staff with electrodes attached to the deadly fish!
Slow as a Sloth (1954, Color)
Moon presents different breeds of sloths with the help of his lab-coated assistant. The duo explain interesting facts about sloths and attempt to elicit reactions from the animals by petting their fur the wrong direction, poking them with sticks and other "scientific" methods.