IMDb RATING
5.2/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
An epidemic of monster babies sweeps across America.An epidemic of monster babies sweeps across America.An epidemic of monster babies sweeps across America.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Jill Gatsby
- Cindy
- (as Victoria Jill)
Alex Baker
- Reservoir Guard
- (uncredited)
Greg Cannom
- Baby Monster
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Weak follow-up to the original cult classic It's Alive is virtually a remake of the first film, but with three babies this time around instead of one. Dull, boring, talky horror flick with a disappointing score and just about all the action and scares confined to the end, but by then it is too late. Rick Baker actually did the poor effects for this inept sequel.
Rated R; Violence & Profanity.
Rated R; Violence & Profanity.
After the first film It's Alive about a mutant baby that's a real killer fresh from the womb, it was decided a sequel was in order. The first must have made a few dollars, that is how these things are decided.
Returning from the first film is John P. Ryan the father who killed his own mutant and now has a mission in life, maybe to save others who are now showing up in the population. Which is why he visits Frederic Forrest and Kathleen Lloyd another expectant set of parents.
After that things get real silly as the all seeing government in the person of John Marley gets into the act. There's also an institute that wants to house and study the mutants that's headed by Andrew Duggan. All these plot elements combine for one bloody ending.
Not that the first film was a world beater, but it's Citizen Kane next to this.
Returning from the first film is John P. Ryan the father who killed his own mutant and now has a mission in life, maybe to save others who are now showing up in the population. Which is why he visits Frederic Forrest and Kathleen Lloyd another expectant set of parents.
After that things get real silly as the all seeing government in the person of John Marley gets into the act. There's also an institute that wants to house and study the mutants that's headed by Andrew Duggan. All these plot elements combine for one bloody ending.
Not that the first film was a world beater, but it's Citizen Kane next to this.
It's cute! It's cuddly! It'll rip your head off! Writer / Director Larry Cohen's saga of babies gone bad continues with IT LIVES AGAIN.
In this dose of pernicious pablum, Frank Davis (John P. Ryan) crashes a baby shower in order to deliver the news that expectant parents, Jody and Eugene Scott (Kathleen Lloyd and Frederic Forrest) are about to hear the pitter-patter of tiny mutant feet!
If that's not enough, the government, led by Mr. Mallory (John Marley) is involved, ready to swoop in and make matters even worse! They're bent on mutant infanticide! Once the "baby" is born, the chase is on, winding up in a secret facility until the inevitable bloodbath.
Not a bad follow-up to the original...
In this dose of pernicious pablum, Frank Davis (John P. Ryan) crashes a baby shower in order to deliver the news that expectant parents, Jody and Eugene Scott (Kathleen Lloyd and Frederic Forrest) are about to hear the pitter-patter of tiny mutant feet!
If that's not enough, the government, led by Mr. Mallory (John Marley) is involved, ready to swoop in and make matters even worse! They're bent on mutant infanticide! Once the "baby" is born, the chase is on, winding up in a secret facility until the inevitable bloodbath.
Not a bad follow-up to the original...
This is not actually a review of 'It Lives Again', just a quick comment, in case anyone is interested. I had a tiny speaking part in this film. I was part of a crowd of extras in the police/sheriff's roadblock scene (right after the tunnel shot), when the director decided to create a dialogue between the Sheriff's Department and the city police about whose jurisdiction it was.
He picked two of us who were wearing sergeant stripes on our uniforms (we were off-duty cops at the time) and we made up the scene on the spot. My two lines made it into the movie: "This is the Sheriff's jurisdiction and we're stopping the truck"...then, I turned to the other deputies and said, "OK, stop the truck." ...that's it. 35 years later, my family and friends still get a huge laugh out of this.
M. Pettit Tucson, AZ 2002
He picked two of us who were wearing sergeant stripes on our uniforms (we were off-duty cops at the time) and we made up the scene on the spot. My two lines made it into the movie: "This is the Sheriff's jurisdiction and we're stopping the truck"...then, I turned to the other deputies and said, "OK, stop the truck." ...that's it. 35 years later, my family and friends still get a huge laugh out of this.
M. Pettit Tucson, AZ 2002
It's Alive epitomizes the realization of the perennial fears: this could really happen and the (Frankenstien-esqe) ideal of setting something in motion that cannot be controlled or committing an act that you cannot repeal or take back. The First Its alive is truly an epic, we have Davis wanting to kill his monster-baby and evolving to the point of wanting to protect it--an adroit display of humanism. It Lives Again multiplies the fears of the first film exponentially by 3 (there are three babies) and the motives of the main characters evolve as well.
Part 3 still manages to pull on my heart-strings yet its tired-feeling. I look beyond the technical deficiencies of all three films and am captivated my their magic. Somehow fans allow themselves to watch King Kong 1933, Phantom of the Opera 1925, The Lost World 1925, and Niosferatu 1922 and three of these films don't have sound and all are shot in black and white and King Kong's effects are far out-dated. We have to look beyond a lot of things to really, to be carried away . . . too often our expectations are too high and we're not humbled in our approach to these genre pictures. A lot of us don't go to church because we feel its boring because there's nothing there . . . same with the movies . . . we have to allow ourselves to feel sometimes what's really there in order to love the films.
Part 3 still manages to pull on my heart-strings yet its tired-feeling. I look beyond the technical deficiencies of all three films and am captivated my their magic. Somehow fans allow themselves to watch King Kong 1933, Phantom of the Opera 1925, The Lost World 1925, and Niosferatu 1922 and three of these films don't have sound and all are shot in black and white and King Kong's effects are far out-dated. We have to look beyond a lot of things to really, to be carried away . . . too often our expectations are too high and we're not humbled in our approach to these genre pictures. A lot of us don't go to church because we feel its boring because there's nothing there . . . same with the movies . . . we have to allow ourselves to feel sometimes what's really there in order to love the films.
Did you know
- TriviaThe opening credits for the film were done using director Larry Cohen's own swimming pool.
- GoofsThe man who gives Jody Scott the instructions for the pick-up tells her to go to a theater and then go out 15 minutes after the beginning of a film. When she goes out, it can be seen that the film (Enter the Dragon (1973)) is running almost at its final sequence.
- Quotes
Frank Davis: Why are you trying so hard to do your job?
Mr. Mallory: I have a high regard for the human race. I want to see that it sticks around a little while longer.
- ConnectionsEdited from It's Alive (1974)
- How long is It Lives Again?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 31m(91 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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