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Frogs

  • 1972
  • PG
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
4.4/10
8.4K
YOUR RATING
Frogs (1972)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:10
1 Video
91 Photos
B-HorrorDystopian Sci-FiHorrorMysterySci-FiThriller

A group of helpless victims celebrate a birthday on an island estate crawling with killer amphibians, birds, insects, and reptiles.A group of helpless victims celebrate a birthday on an island estate crawling with killer amphibians, birds, insects, and reptiles.A group of helpless victims celebrate a birthday on an island estate crawling with killer amphibians, birds, insects, and reptiles.

  • Director
    • George McCowan
  • Writers
    • Robert Hutchison
    • Robert Blees
  • Stars
    • Ray Milland
    • Sam Elliott
    • Joan Van Ark
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.4/10
    8.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George McCowan
    • Writers
      • Robert Hutchison
      • Robert Blees
    • Stars
      • Ray Milland
      • Sam Elliott
      • Joan Van Ark
    • 184User reviews
    • 94Critic reviews
    • 51Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Frogs
    Trailer 2:10
    Frogs

    Photos91

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    Top cast16

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    Ray Milland
    Ray Milland
    • Jason Crockett
    Sam Elliott
    Sam Elliott
    • Pickett Smith
    Joan Van Ark
    Joan Van Ark
    • Karen Crockett
    Adam Roarke
    Adam Roarke
    • Clint Crockett
    Judy Pace
    Judy Pace
    • Bella Garrington
    Lynn Borden
    Lynn Borden
    • Jenny Crockett
    Mae Mercer
    Mae Mercer
    • Maybelle
    David Gilliam
    David Gilliam
    • Michael Martindale
    Nicholas Cortland
    • Kenneth Martindale
    George Skaff
    • Stuart Martindale
    Lance Taylor Sr.
    • Charles
    Hollis Irving
    Hollis Irving
    • Iris Martindale
    • (as Holly Irving)
    Dale Willingham
    • Tina Crockett
    Hal Hodges
    • Jay Crockett
    Carolyn Fitzsimmons
    • Lady in Car
    Robert Sanders
    • Young Boy in Car
    • Director
      • George McCowan
    • Writers
      • Robert Hutchison
      • Robert Blees
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews184

    4.48.3K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    5dinky-4

    A minor thriller with major atmosphere

    The plot here is little more than: "Help! We're surrounded by hostile creatures!" Yet there's something about this movie that lodges in the memory and it's probably its heavy, humid atmosphere -- like a hot summer day where nothing's happening yet you know there must be a storm brewing just over the horizon. The eclectic cast is headed by Ray Milland but the star here is Sam Elliott who makes his first real impression in the movies. His let-me-strip-off-my-sweaty-shirt-and-display-my-hairy-chest scenes were SO impressive that they landed him the lead role in that piece of beefcake-nirvana called "Lifeguard."

    (June 2009 update: Note how this movie finds echoes, seven years later, in another Sam Elliott movie: "The Legacy." In both movies Elliott plays a young man who, because of a transportation accident, winds up as a reluctant guest at a mansion located in an isolated spot in the country. The mansion is owned, in both cases, by a distinguished older gentleman who suffers from a physical disability. There are other guests at the mansion and during the course of Elliott's stay, these guests are killed off, one by one -- in a variety of bizarre fashions -- by a mysterious force. In both movies, Elliott performs "beefcake" scenes which have a gratuitous quality. In "Frogs," he appears twice without his shirt and in "The Legacy" he has a rear-view nude scene.)
    5claudio_carvalho

    Nature against Mankind – The Payback

    The free-lance photographer Pickett Smith (Sam Elliott) is taking pictures of the pollution in a swamp in Florida for a magazine of ecology in his canoe. Out of the blue, he is hit by a motor boat piloted by Clint Crockett (Adam Roarke) and his sister Karen Crockett (Joan Van Ark) and capsizes.

    Clint and Karen invite Pickett for the party in the private island of their grumpy grandfather Jason Crockett (Ray Milland), an old fashioned disabled patriarch that enjoys celebrating his birthday on the 4th July with his family.

    Pickett realizes that the island is infested of frogs and reptiles and Jason has ordered his caretaker to poison his real estate to get rid of the amphibians and creepy crawlies. But soon Picket realizes that they are living the payback of nature against mankind.

    The trash "Frogs" is probably one of the first movies to defend the ecology and absolutely ahead of the time. This is the first feature of Sam Elliot, who acts with the veteran Ray Milland. The story is funny and never scares but entertains. My vote is five.

    Title (Brazil): "A Invasão das Rãs" ("The Frogs'Invasion")
    3bkoganbing

    Amphibians and Reptiles go to war

    Ray Milland's career was tanking real fast when he agreed to do this one for American-International. The story behind Frogs is similar to the plot of the Elizabeth Taylor less than classic Elephant Walk. That's the one where Peter Finch's father built his mansion in Sri Lanka where the elephants used to trod. Eventually they trod there again.

    In Frogs Ray Milland has a large old plantation estate on an island in the Everglades and he's been expanding it for years crowding out the swamp life. It's not just the frogs but all the swamp critters want their turf back.

    And when do they pick to begin their war? On the 4th of July which coincidentally enough is Milland's birthday and he's thrown a party and he's got his kids and grandkids with him. And a stranger played by a young and beardless Sam Elliot.

    The movie gets the title Frogs because they seem to be directing the battle. One by one Milland's family and help are picked off. Only a few manage to escape.

    Frogs is done kind of tongue in cheek and Milland grumps and groans his way through the film like a man with a bad case of hemorrhoids. Maybe being confined to a wheelchair in the part gave him a case. He had to be wondering how his agent talked him into this.
    3JoeB131

    eco-thriller from the 1970's

    Actually had good actors in it, but I think the directors of the early 1970's were just taking too many drugs.

    So a decent ecology journalist scoring extra Politically Correct points is taking pictures in a swamp in Florida when he falls in with a family of rich industrialists browbeaten into obedience by a wheelchair bound Ray Milland.

    A bunch of menacing frog direct reptiles to engage in a series of attacks requiring a lot of ineptitude by the character actors who are picked off. I don't think the frogs actually kill anyone, they just keep looking menacing... maybe they were co-ordinating the operation as the other reptiles did all the hard work.

    Bonus point.. Joan van Ark in a tight-one piece showing a lot of leg.
    6gridoon

    Frogs on the warpath.

    If this movie ultimately fails to be scary (and it does), it's not because the filmmakers didn't try; they did their darnedest to make those frogs look as menacing as possible. But it was all for naught, because frogs are fundamentally un-vicious creatures and, well, they cannot be trained to look mean. They don't care about us annoying humans! They just want to hop around! So this movie can't hold a candle to, say, "The Birds". That doesn't mean it's not enjoyable though - it is, in a schlocky way. It's colorful, it's beautifully photographed, and Sam Elliott is rather cool, as 70s leading men go. (**1/2)

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Many of the 500 Florida frogs and 100 South American cane toads purchased for use in the film escaped during production.
    • Goofs
      When Pickett Smith is wandering around the island, he sees Grover lying face down in a marsh, where he was killed by being bitten by a venomous snake. Grover, however, is clearly still breathing.
    • Quotes

      Jason Crockett: Karen... and everyone else... this conversation has ended!

      Pickett Smith: No, it hasn't, Mr. Crockett. Look, with Grover and Kenneth dead, I don't know what's going on around here... or if it is happening anywhere else... but we are a bunch of damn fools not to face the fact that we are in a hell of a lot of trouble! And we're gonna have to get together to fight it!

      Bella Garrington: Keep talking Mr. Pickett, 'cause you are the only man around here who's saying anything!

      Pickett Smith: First of all, we're gonna have to try to find Iris, Stuart and Michael. But to be very honest with you... I don't think we will. Not alive anyway. But whether we find them or not, we've got to get off this damn island! All of us, now! We'll take the power boat. If we have to, we'll tow the canoe.

      Jason Crockett: And leave this house empty and deserted... on the Fourth of July?

      Pickett Smith: I don't really think there's gonna be anybody around here to worry about today. Maybe if you didn't notice, but there hasn't been one boat out on that lake all day!

      Clint Crockett: Do you think this is happening everywhere, Mr. Smith?

      Pickett Smith: Well if it is, I think we'd stand a better chance if we all get out of here together.

      Jason Crockett: Well, I forbid it! I control these people, not you!

      Bella Garrington: Nobody controls me, Mr. Crockett! Now I'm asking for your permission to get off this island, by myself or with anyone else, I just want to go!

    • Crazy credits
      After the closing credits fade out, an animated frog hops onscreen with a human hand hanging out of its mouth, after which it turns to face the audience and slurps the hand into its mouth, then it turns away from the audience and hops off-screen.
    • Alternate versions
      In the film's pre-release prints, Iris (Holly Irving) dies by being forced into a quicksand pool by a giant butterfly and then drowning in it rather than dying by snakebite. The scene, however, was thought to be too silly-looking and, thus, it was cut. Clips of the cut scene can still be glimpsed in the film's theatrical trailer, however.
    • Connections
      Edited from Bloody Mama (1970)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 10, 1972 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Los sapos
    • Filming locations
      • Eden Gardens State Park - County Road 395, Point Washington, Florida, USA(the swamp area scenes)
    • Production companies
      • American International Pictures (AIP)
      • Thomas/Edwards Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $200,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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