Starring Dan Gauthier, Amy Acker, Tom Towles, William Shatner, Dick Van Patten, John Prosky, Dan Martin, Rickey Medlocke, Duane Whitaker, Brenda Bakke, J.T. Colosa, Debra Mayer, Chuck Williams
Directed by William Shatner
Expectations: I’m a big Star Trek fan, so I’m oddly and probably misguidedly excited for this one because of Shatner.
On the general scale:
On the B-movie scale:
There’s no way around it: Groom Lake is not a good movie. It fails at nearly every turn, in spite of having many intriguing elements with potential. Even if you do manage to care about the characters and what happens to them, nothing really comes together well enough to form a cohesive experience. I remember having similar feelings the last time I watched the Shatner-directed Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, so I suppose the two films together form some kind of evidence that if you’re not suited to the task of directing and telling stories visually, it doesn’t really matter how much money you have.
The film opens with a tow truck making its way over desert roads towards a butte. Mystical lights, similar to the Aurora Borealis, shimmer in the sky over his destination, and the driver, Dietz (Tom Towles), is intent on seeing just what the hell is up with all that. When he arrives, he jumps onto the back of his truck and approximates Arnold’s “I’m here! C’mon! Do it!” speech from Predator, telling the presumed alien ship, “I’m here, you son of a bitch!” The son-of-a-bitch alien does not respond; the lights merely dissipate and leave some sparkly residue on the man’s hands.
Upon watching an interview with Shatner on the DVD, I was surprised to learn that this story line, and the idea of “A love that never dies,” was actually the genesis of the project. His wife had recently died, so he came up with this story as a way of coping. It makes total sense in retrospect, but the movie does not do justice to the point of the story line. The film’s resolution is profound, but it’s presented subtly, almost like an afterthought, so it would be easy to miss it.
Groom Lake inspires the most love when it’s at its most creative. The premise surrounding the aliens and their ship, as well as their design, is unique in a way that only visionary science fiction can be, expanding your concept of what is possible in this grand, unfathomable universe we live in. It could also be seen as somewhat campy, in a ’50s short story kind of way, so whether we agree on this point will depend on your tolerance for that sort of thing. The low budget also keeps these elements from being as flashy as they could have been, but I thought they were all realized rather well for what the filmmakers were working with. The film is also nicely shot by Shatner and seasoned cinematographer Mac Ahlberg, in spite of the inherent ugliness of video from the early 2000s.
Groom Lake is not really worth the time, but after learning how it came to be, I do like the film more than I did while watching it. Not enough to recommend it, even to Shatner fans, but enough for the film’s message to stick with me in my down moments as I care for my ailing wife.
Next time I get around to a Full Moon movie I’ll be watching the oldest Full Moon movie I haven’t seen: J.S. Cardone’s 1990 film Shadowzone! See ya then!