Rating: NR
Genre:
Horror
Release Date: 08/28/2001
SubTitles: French/Espanol/English
Dubbed: English
Sound: 5.1/1
Run Time: 82 min
Distributor/Studio: MGM
The tail of a dinosaur is excavated from the frozen tundra in Lapland and shipped to the Danish Aquarium in Copenhagen for safekeeping in this hilarious
sci-fi mess. Someone turns off the refrigeration, alas, and the tail thaws. Regeneration sets in with alarming dispatch and soon the serpent-like monster, named "Reptilicus" by the learned paleontologist in charge, is devouring a paper mache Copenhagen. Written in Hollywood by Danish-American
Ib Melchior (the son of Wagnerian opera star
Lauritz Melchior) and produced in Denmark by
Saga Films and American
Sid Pink Productions,
Reptilicus contains filmdom's perhaps least convincing monster and some of the worst performances imaginable from a hard-working Danish stock company.
Carl Ottosen stars as the American General Grayson, angrily shouting his every line for unexplained reasons. Ottosen's wooden performance is second only to that of
Bodil Miller, a former
Universal starlet who appears here for no apparent reason other than to accompany Ottosen's general on a pleasant night out at the Tivoli amusement park. (A low point of the film is pop star
Birthe Wilke's rendition of a ditty,
"Tivoli Nights", to a visibly dazed audience.) The monster, meanwhile, fights his battles in what appears to be a child's model train landscape while hundreds of extras do their utmost to look sufficiently frightened. Considering that Reptilicus himself is never in the same frame as any humans, what causes the good citizens of Copenhagen to flee in such panic must be the strange sight of
Carl Ottosen brandishing a bazooka while barking orders at the fashionably gowned
Miller.
Reptilicus was such a financial bomb that employees at the Danish production company,
Saga Films, were prohibited from speaking the name for several years.
~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide