The F*cking Black Sheep: Mimic (1997)

Last Updated on July 23, 2021

THE BLACK SHEEP is an ongoing column featuring different takes on films that either the writer HATED, but that the majority of film fans LOVED, or that the writer LOVED, but that most others LOATH. We’re hoping this column will promote constructive and geek fueled discussion. Dig in!

Mimic (1997)
Directed by Guillermo Del Toro

“Mimic’s opening sequence is perhaps the most horrific moment ever captured on film.”

Guillermo Del Toro has become a bit of a Hollywood juggernaut. Sure, he’s not on the JJ Abrams scale (yet), but he’s getting there. No matter what he attaches his name to it gets a dose of instant cred. Of course, that cred will be put to the test next summer when Pacific Rim (his big budget monster versus robots movie) hits. If it tanks it’ll end a remarkable run that includes both critically acclaimed flicks and nerd approved material. With all that said, I think folks have forgotten about his first Hollywood entry – 1997’s Mimic. I’m here to remedy that.

In case you missed it, Mimic is about entomologist Dr. Susan Tyler (Mira Sorvino), who creates a superbug that will finally stop man’s greatest enemy, the cockroach, by doing some fancy pants stuff with their DNA. At first, things work just dandy, but if you f with Mother Nature, well, she’ll bitch slap you and send the biggest roach ever seen to destroy the world.

I should give a disclosure here. I hate cockroaches. Actually, I fear them. If I have to create a list of mortal enemies that would frighten me, they would perhaps be number one. That or cats. If I were Indiana Jones, it wouldn’t be snakes that keep interfering with my archeology fun, no. It’d be lots and lots of the same bug – Satan’s version of the ladybug. If you’ve dealt with roaches before, they are the most disgusting things ever put on this planet. In fact, Mimic’s opening sequence is perhaps the most horrific moment ever captured on film where Sorvino’s experiment in the sewer attracts millions of roaches. It’s nasty, which is a lame definition, but simple and true.

Besides the fact that Mimic kills a lot of roaches, the film works on a couple of different levels besides preaching a cause. 1) Its science horror, which is hard to screw up because the characters can say about anything and unless you’re a registered scientist (or at least hold a vo-tech certificate), it sounds legit. 2) Its a bug movie, which is hard to screw up because if you’re like me, bugs, especially roaches, are naturally horrific. Demons and ghosts are scary too, but I’ve never seen one of those up close. And the roaches aren’t solo terrors, no. They’re bitches who always have a flock of friends. 3) Its a monster movie, which is hard to screw up because monsters are inheritably terror inducing. Sure, some of the CGI isn’t perfect, but Del Toro smartly sets the thing in the darkness of the sewers to hide all the flaws. The villain here, known as Long John, are man-roaches who roam the darkness sporting black coats to fit into the world. However, no one mentions if they stink or not. I assume they do.

Besides that all, it’s always a ballsy movie when you kill off a couple of kids via sewer monster. Maybe some jerky teens, but kids? That’s a quick way to make the bad truly evil.

Mimic isn’t short on star power. Sorvino, Jeremy Northam, Josh Brolin, Giancarlo Giannini, Charles S. Dutton. That’s a pretty decent cast for a monster movie. It’s odd seeing a semi-young Brolin, who for some reason has always looked mid-30ish (even in Goonies). Dutton I’ve always had respect for, but this is the forgotten Sorvino’s film, who had a great run there for a while. She does an ok job here, and by the end of the film I think Del Toro wanted to make her into Ripley, even though she couldn’t pull off the tough element. Her character ultimately ends up flat, without anything to make her character memorable. Oh, and it’s kinda fun seeing a young Daryl Dixon (Norman Reedus), who has a throwaway role. Though now I always think of him as a redneck with a chopper. It’s a good look.

Mimic isn’t perfect as moments seem to drag in points, and Del Toro attempts to create some depth to the characters that don’t work, but overall, it’s effectively tense as the creatures slowly pick off folks one by one in the underground. Supposedly, Del Toro disowned this version of the film after constant studio interference, so I’d like to see the director’s cut some time. But for now, this is the version I remember, and it still holds up.

GET MIMIC DVD HERE

GET MIMIC (all 3 films) BLU RAY HERE

Source: Arrow in the Head

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