
Little Big Screen is a new column for LV movie lovers that will run monthly online. Look for highlights of the best streaming content available, selected to complement the outstanding curation of our local independent cinema (scroll to the end or click here).
Iโve been keeping a tab open on Culligan.com. This page, held in limbo for who knows how long, has a big blue button telling me to schedule a consultation for something called a reverse osmosis system. I always appreciate the buttonโs even tenor, bordering on bedside manner โ especially in comparison to the headlines (Disastrous figures show the poverty of Iowaโs water quality approach) and news copy (โa cancer common in farm countryโ) that tell me basically the same thing.
The cutting-edge filtration system for worry-free drinking water would cost a couple thousand dollars. So I donโt know how many million pounds of nitrate run-off will need to pollute Iowaโs taps before I finally call the Culligan Man. In the meantime, to kinda-sorta cope, Little Big Screen has a stack of dirty water movies to stream this month.
The Crazies (2010)
Directed by Breck Eisner
America Needs Farmers โฆ to maybe lay off the murdering in this remake of George Romeroโs 1973 eco-horror classic. One farmhouse set piece gives us whatโs gotta be the remakeโs most brutal image: A farmer isnโt acting right. His wife and kid have to hide from him in a closet. The farmerโs footsteps find them anyway. But he doesnโt open the door. He locks them in there, pours kerosene all over the place, then lights his home and family on fire. The last thing we see is the death rattle of that locked door knob.
Set in the made-up town of Ogden Marsh, Iowa, but actually shot on location in Lenox, The Crazies is a pretty good picture of a small town โ as long as you can get past the unbelievable number of hot people. We meet the hottest of them all, the sheriff (Timothy Olyphant), at a high school baseball game. Thatโs when a man wanders into centerfield, kind of like โShoelessโ Joe in Field of Dreams, except this guyโs got a blank look on his face and a shotgun in his hand. The hot sheriff shoots him dead somewhere around second base.
Of course, the homicidal mania isnโt the fault of the farmer or โBrainlessโ Joe. Some sort of biological weapon has been spilled into Ogden Marshโs water supply, and masked feds arrive to quote-unquote contain the problem. These big-government baddies look a little clichรฉ, like if a Slipknot music video dared to imagine Ronald Reaganโs greatest fear, but I mean, the un-unseeable sight of a concentration camp set up on a football field is gnarly no matter what. And I felt like the effect โ more The Fugitive than Invasion of the Body Snatchers โ hit harder than the go-for-it gore of a crazed farmer pitching internal organs like bales of hay.
This Crazies is a riff for sure, with themes, motifs, etc. thatโve been done before, both by Romero and many others. But itโs big and broad in the right way, totally able to take on new meaning. If you havenโt seen this movie since it came out in 2010, see what you think of it in 2024, now that we know whatโs in the water, and now that weโve seen the crazies at school board meetings.
Dark Waters (2019)
Directed by Todd Haynes
Dark Waters is the true story about the Teflon inside all of us. The film opens with a setup youโve seen before: Naked bodies getting into a body of water. The camera watches them swim from beneath the surface โ but this isnโt the same POV shot youโve seen in Jaws and The Creature from the Black Lagoon. Because here, the monster isnโt in the water. The monster is the water.
The dread builds as we wait for Robert Bilott (Mark Ruffalo), a corporate defense attorney, to catch up with Wilbur Tennant, a West Virginia farmer, whose land neighbors a DuPont dumping ground. Tennant has collected and cataloged the horrors inflicted upon his cattle by the chemical giant, including gallbladders as green as aliens and river rocks somehow bleached by their own stream. Their polluted hues hang over the whole film, each scene doused in a gasoline sheen until the yellow paper on legal pads mutates into the shade of digested bile.
The result is too bleak to be another Erin Brokovich. Even the Hollywood of it all is diseased by the end. In what should be a big Oscar swing between Ruffalo and Anne Hathaway, the performances are blunted by the background: Benihana.
(Also, when you get to the 1999 Ohio Chemical Alliance Dinner, look for the lawyer sitting next to Hathaway โ the man whoโs having trouble hearing her. Thatโs Barry Bernson, a University of Iowa grad who spent decades doing broadcast news, then retired, got into screen acting, and snagged roles in Todd Haynes and Yorgos Lanthimos films. Go Hawks.)
The Host (2006)
Directed by Bong Joon-ho
The first few minutes of The Host were inspired by the 2000 conviction of a U.S. Army mortician who got caught dumping a bunch of toxic chemicals into the Han River. The incident could be used as a tidy metaphor for many things but certainly none better than this monster genre mash from Bong Joon-ho. Where the story goes from there reminded me, and my red-white-and-blue brain, of Steven Spielbergโs War of the Worlds, with the first monster attack captured from ground-level, like the arrival of the aliens. Except weโve got Song Kang-ho (the dad from Parasite) running around instead of Tom Cruise. And you know, Iโve also gotta say, itโs kind of nice to be up against a monster โ not multinational or microscopic but big and gross โ that you can see with your own two eyes.
The Grapes of Death (1978)
Directed by Jean Rollin
I love a movie title so good that youโve just gotta watch it โ and embrace being reduced to someone who does judge a book by its cover. The Grapes of Death, which is actually called Les Raisins de la Mort, has not one but two good titles, so youโre gonna go in wanting to like it. The plot is thin, thankfully: A vineyardโs choice of pesticide poisons their grapes and turns an entire town into ghouls, then one unlucky young woman (Marie-Georges Pascal) stumbles upon said nightmare in the middle of nowhere. The Grapes of Death holds you at a dreamlike distance as the woman goes door to door looking for human help, almost like the landscape is a level in a video game. But donโt worry, beyond the beauty that oozes from the French countryside, thereโs plenty of nasty blisters and crafty puss as payoff.
On the Big, Big Screen
Before Sunrise, directed by Richard Linklater
Tuesday, July 9, FilmScene in Iowa City
Scream, directed by Wes Craven
Thursday, July 11, The Varsity Cinema in Des Moines
Barbie, directed by Greta Gerwig
Friday, July 12, Last Picture House in Davenport
The Taking of Pelham One Two Three, directed by Joseph Sargent
Sunday, July 21, FilmScene in Iowa City
Speed, directed by Jan de Bont
Saturday, July 27, Fleur Cinema in Des Moines

