Locusts
Locusts
NR | 09 October 1974 (USA)
Locusts Trailers

A swarm of locusts appears on the horizon near a Midwestern town and the inhabitants must find a way to destroy or divert them before the insects devour the area's valuable crops

Reviews
Cathardincu Surprisingly incoherent and boring
BoardChiri Bad Acting and worse Bad Screenplay
Kailansorac Clever, believable, and super fun to watch. It totally has replay value.
Iseerphia All that we are seeing on the screen is happening with real people, real action sequences in the background, forcing the eye to watch as if we were there.
Coventry Was I wrong to expect something entirely difficult than this lame, sappy and dreadfully boring drama? Is it my fault to assume that this was another "creature-feature/nature revolts" story from the 70s in which the titular locusts had developed a taste for human flesh and go after the inhabitants of a little Montana farming community? I guess so, because "Locusts" simply unfolds like an utmost ordinary episode in any random melodramatic soap-opera TV series! A boy (future director prodigy Ron Howard) returns home to his family after he got kicked out of the Navy before even completing his training, and now he has the face to wrath of his old-fashioned and tyrannical father (Ben Johnson). As to be expected, the father is embarrassed and treats his son worse than a lazy dog. How can poor Donny ever capture the love of his dad again? Hmm, perhaps by protecting the farm's crops against the devastating plague of locusts that is heading towards Montana could work? What a pitiable and tedious excuse for a TV-effort! The first couple of minutes are still somewhat promising, as Donny's bus ends up in the middle of a locusts' swarm, but immediately after that it's purely dull and uninteresting talking. If I wanted to waste my time on lousy father/son relationship issues, I'd visit my own dad a bit more often!
GUENOT PHILIPPE Well that's the main question here. It hesitates all the way between the two. But it's not so a problem for me, just a question. But I guess it is more a drama after all than a swarm film, if you consider the other swarm features involving bees for instance. Here it is mainly a sort of analysis of a Midwest farm family. For TV audiences, home audiences. Not bad.
MartinHafer Despite the title, the film is much more about the concept of what it is to be a man as well as the importance of this father-son relationship. In essence, the locusts are just a plot device in order to facilitate growth and change between these two.Donny Fletcher (Ron Howard) is coming home from WWII in disgrace. Something happened to him and he was discharged from the Navy...though exactly what that was is something you'll need to learn through the course of the film. What is obvious is that his father, Amos (Ben Johnson) is a hard and unforgiving man...and Donny is a disgrace in his eyes. Amos' idea of manliness is just sucking it up and doing what a man has to do and the WHY Donny was discharged is unimportant to him...the boy is simply a coward and a failure. But, by the end of the film and with the coming menace of the locusts, the two get a chance to work out their issues together. Whenever the film brings in the locusts, the story sags and is clearly at its best with the men. Johnson, in particular, is marvelous as the hard-as-nails father. Howard is also nice and it's a decent made for TV film. My only real gripe is that the finale seemed very obvious and predictable...though not enough to make the film one to skip.
spitfire-41 I have only seen this film once, when it originally aired on television. As I recall, it was not a great effort, the plot needed a lot more work to be believable. Ron Howard plays a young Naval Ensign during World War II, who has just washed out of flight school and is returning to his mid-western home in disgrace. His refusal to fly after seeing a comrade die during a training flight has caused his discharge from the Navy. His father, Ben Johnson, has little sympathy for him as do most of the others in his small farming community. The war has demanded many sacrifices of the young men in the area and Howard is looked on as one who was found lacking in courage. Eventually, a locust infestation provides the vehicle for his redemption. With the help of an old biplane pilot and his girlfriend, Howard regains his confidence and gets behind the controls of a crop-dusting plane and uses his piloting skills to stem the locust infestation.