RATTLERS (1976)
Muscle relaxers. They give, and in the case of today's subject, they take away. Man, about an hour into Rattlers, my eyelids were beginning to drag on the floor. I managed to pull myself together, though. I came close to hitting eject. By that I mean, I came close to hurtling myself through the ceiling, as I watched this film on Tubi. Rattlers feels like a made-for-TV cheapie. But it's not that inviting. I should have known better. Any horror freak worth their Himalayan pink salt could tell you that snake movies are only rewarding propositions if the snakes involved are either giant or mutated in some way. Or preferably, both! Rattlers concerns...rattlers. Technically, their genes have been modified by nerve gas, but big deal. That just makes them aggressive. And if I've said it once, I've said it a million times; an aggressive snake is not as interesting as a 50-foot snake. Wait, have I ever said that? I'm probably lying. Let me start another paragraph before I divulge another untruth.
Our main character, a herpetologist (of course), is played by some guy named Sam Chew Jr. How he wasn't a bubblegum mascot is anyone's best guess. As an actor, he seems to be on the ball, but I don't think anyone told him that he was in a fright flick. His blood pressure couldn't have eclipsed triple digits. I know mine was low, but I wasn't dealing with live snakes. Rattlers is humdrum through and through. The script is floating with small talk, and I do mean floating. There is no memorable score to punch up the scares. Any screams you hear on the soundtrack merely break up perpetual lulls of silence. If I wasn't an obsessive-compulsive when it came to logging my cinematic conquests, I seriously doubt that Rattlers would have made the cut for Random Reptile Month. Hey, someone has to raise the red flag over this fiasco.
Sam Chew Jr. No way that's his real name.