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Phase IV

  • 1974
  • PG
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
10K
YOUR RATING
Phase IV (1974)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer2:39
1 Video
99+ Photos
HorrorSci-FiThriller

Suddenly, desert ants form a group intelligence and wage war on the humans. It's up to a couple of scientists and a girl to stop themSuddenly, desert ants form a group intelligence and wage war on the humans. It's up to a couple of scientists and a girl to stop themSuddenly, desert ants form a group intelligence and wage war on the humans. It's up to a couple of scientists and a girl to stop them

  • Director
    • Saul Bass
  • Writer
    • Mayo Simon
  • Stars
    • Nigel Davenport
    • Michael Murphy
    • Lynne Frederick
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    10K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Saul Bass
    • Writer
      • Mayo Simon
    • Stars
      • Nigel Davenport
      • Michael Murphy
      • Lynne Frederick
    • 121User reviews
    • 120Critic reviews
    • 49Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:39
    Official Trailer

    Photos143

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    + 135
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    Top cast7

    Edit
    Nigel Davenport
    Nigel Davenport
    • Dr. Ernest D. Hubbs
    Michael Murphy
    Michael Murphy
    • James R. Lesko
    Lynne Frederick
    Lynne Frederick
    • Kendra Eldridge
    Alan Gifford
    Alan Gifford
    • Mr. Eldridge
    Robert Henderson
    Robert Henderson
    • Clete
    Helen Horton
    Helen Horton
    • Mildred Eldridge
    David Healy
    David Healy
    • Radio Announcer
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Saul Bass
    • Writer
      • Mayo Simon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews121

    6.410.3K
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    Featured reviews

    UHF

    Overlooked film from the Master of film credits

    Phase IV is an incredible full length feature film by Saul Bass who is most acclaimed as a graphic designer who's work can be seen as the opening credits from The Seven Year Itch, Vertigo, West Side Story to Alien, Broadcast News and Casino. Phase IV is a much overlooked film that is very much in the style of The Andromeda Strain. What it perhaps lacks in story, it gains in the photography of the millions of ants - the film's additional cast.
    7MCMCMLXX

    David Attenborough goes berserk!

    Comment not review-

    More than anything, Phase IV is a masterpiece in cinematography. The small scaled shots of ants is amazing. The colours and and surroundings with different types of filming - from time lapse to micro - is fascinating. It is carefully manufactured to showcase the talents of the technical aspects of film making - and the characters are secondary but fun.

    Fun because they just do what they are just plonked in the picture to do. No fuss. Someone gets bitten and goes crazy. The formulae is familiar but the photography wins the day.

    Just watch the positioning of the camera from the car pulling up, the desert landscapes, the isolation, the horror of carcasses being destroyed by ants. ...

    Hooray for the ants. Hooray for this film. Hooray it ain't on anyone's top ten but mine...
    Dr Wily

    More of an essay than a story, but still recommended viewing

    Phase IV is not your average movie experience. Definitely not for everyone, so, see it if you get the chance (Last I saw it was a 1997 airing on The Sci-Fi Channel.) and decide if it's for you.

    It's even hard to generalize WHAT the movie is about. On the surface, a colony of ants has gained a heightened level of intelligence and has apparently decided to drive out the local people. A group of surviving scientists, who were examining the ant phenomenon, rescue a wandering woman, and they become "trapped" in the "laboratory." The lead researcher then goes nutters over trying to determine what the ants are doing and getting nowhere because, well, ants and humans just aren't natural conversationalists. And the story ends... well, it just ends. What did the ants want? Did they take over the woman's body at the end? Did they the one surviving scientist, or, did he "join" them, just come to reason with them, what? Plus, what ARE the other three "Phases?"

    Now, I first saw this film on Beta in 1985 and on VHS many time since, the last being the aforementioned 1997 airing. I've read the reviews here, and, WHERE are people getting the alien intelligence taking over the ants from?! I've been watching this movie for 15 plus years, and, I can't recall any aliens mentioned. An alien influence on the ants WOULD make a bit more sensical motivation for the ants, but, I don't recall this stated even as a theory anywhere in the movie. I welcome anyone to e-mail me and let me know where it is in the film, because, I may have just failed to catch it.

    So, why would I recommend it? This movie manages to effectively pull you into the story without any of the excess baggage one would expect from a nature gets its revenge picture. No drawn out "battle" sequences, like "Empire Of The Ants." The event has happened, so, there's no need to express it with cheap special effects. The story hinges instead on the aftermath, how people deal with it, the scientific community's response, all the time presenting a prevailing air of mystery as to why the ants did it. The casual viewer will be disappointed by its rather quizzical ending because it doesn't "resolve" the question of what the ants want or were doing in a clean cut package. In fact, it doesn't GIVE an answer. It opens up the floor to debate, so to speak, where your own questions about it allow you to formulate your own "message" from the ending. Can we live with the ants? Can the ants live with us? Do either sides want to?



    Many would also find this film boring because of the lack of "action" sequences until the end, pretty much summed up when the nutter scientist is consumed in a pit of ants. Instead, the film builds up suspense with effective small shots of the ants themselves. Ants moving through technical equipment to "sabotage" it. Ants moving through their tunnels, reflecting a genuine "sinister" sense, a sort of "What are they planning, if anything?" atmosphere. Ants moving over furniture, people. Nothing over done with an army of ants crawling all over the place, people screaming as they drown in a flood of insects (Save the one scientist, I suppose.) It doesn't dumb itself down with exploitive action sequences.

    In the end, the film doesn't insult a viewer's intelligence. IF someone doesn't get anything out of about it, the film just lets them be. For others, it opens up the floor with unresolved questions, but, does not hinge on them, like so many cop out endings. You're left to reach your own conclusions, but not as a crutch, to avoid having to write an ending or a low budget, etc.

    An interesting film if you can ever find it. If you do, watch it and decide for yourself. It's one of the few movies made that lets you choose whether to like it or not, and goes along with that.
    7AaronCapenBanner

    Strikingly Weird Film.

    Michael Murphy and Nigel Davenport play two scientists studying the recent peculiar behavior of ants after a strange outer space phenomenon has occurred. They rescue a young woman(played by Lynne Frederick) who has survived an ant attack that destroyed her family and farm. Seems the(normal) sized ants have evolved into a collective intelligence, and are studying them as well, in the next step of mutual evolution...

    Weird(to say the least)film is nonetheless quite original and intelligent; seems to be partially inspired by "2001: A Space Odyssey", and though not a masterpiece, still contains some quite striking visual imagination and ambition(courtesy of director Saul Bass) and a mind-bending ending that gives much to ponder. A thought-provoking Sci-Fi film that deserves to be better known.
    7lemon_magic

    Harrowing, hallucinatory and altogether fascinating

    While it's true that "Phase IV" is rather slow moving in spots, and that the human characters are ciphers with no real depth to speak of, "Phase IV" is a nice sally at an experimental science fiction film that emphasizes mood and dread over action and character development.

    I had the good fortune to watch this on a really large flat screen TV, and the amazing insect photography (major kudos to the editor who managed to integrate it so completely into the story!) and dissonant synthesizer laden sound track come through nicely with good viewing equipment - they add the proper utterly alien and inhuman feel to the movie and turn something pretty good into something really creep and spooky.

    Although the characters are admittedly pretty flat, that's undoubtedly on purpose. "Phase IV" is all about the subjection of the human characters to the overwhelming power of a hive mind where "personality" is besides the point. Even so, Nigel Davenport brings the good stuff to his role as the biologist trying to contain the ants, and you both know everything you need to know and everything you'll ever know about in the first five minutes...without ever knowing him at all.

    An ambiguous and otherworldly/mystical ending might not sit well with a lot of viewers who like their science fiction movies to wrap things up by the end. And, OK, the goofy little montage at the end with the mathematician and the gamin doesn't really match the quality of the hallucinatory insect footage that preceded it.

    Still, Saul Bass knew how to present an otherworldly, truly alien experience, but he was probably just too far ahead of his time.

    A classic of sorts.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to actor Michael Murphy, director Saul Bass was very worried about British actress Lynne Frederick being able to sound suitably American for the film, since her character was supposed to be from Arizona. Bass made her run her lines over and over while he listened for any hint of a British accent.
    • Goofs
      The ant-queens seen are actually a species of wasps. This choice has been most probably made as to not seriously disturb several ant-states. However, ant-queens shed their wings when going into pregnancy and developing the huge white abdomen.
    • Quotes

      Dr. Ernest D. Hubbs: You did your major work applying game theory to the language of killer whales.

      James R. Lesko: Well, it seemed cheaper than applying it to roulette

      Dr. Ernest D. Hubbs: Did you actually *succeed* in making positive contact with the whales?

      James R. Lesko: Only with the emotionally disturbed.

      Dr. Ernest D. Hubbs: How were you able to determine that?

      James R. Lesko: We talked!

    • Crazy credits
      The title is not revealed until the end credits. It is divided into segments "Phase I," Phase II," and "Phase III," and only at the very end when Phase IV is reached is the title ever given.
    • Alternate versions
      The French TV release is cut, the close-up on the scientist being devoured by ants is missing.
    • Connections
      Featured in Mystery Science Theater 3000: Phase IV (1989)

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 13, 1974 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Phase II
    • Filming locations
      • Eloy, Arizona, USA
    • Production companies
      • Alced Productions
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $289
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 24 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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