Zaat

For the Egyptian novel, see Zaat (novel).
Zaat

Theatrical poster
Directed by Don Barton
Produced by Don Barton
Written by Don Barton
Starring Marshall Grauer
Music by Jamie DeFrates
Barry Hodgin
Jack Tamul (electronic)
Cinematography Jack McGowan
Edited by George Yarbrough
Production
company
Barton Films
Distributed by Clark Distributors
Release dates
January 1971
Running time
100 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $75,000

Zaat (also known as The Blood Waters of Dr. Z, Hydra, and Attack of the Swamp Creatures) is a 1971[1] American science fiction-horror film that was written, produced, and directed by Don Barton. It gained significant exposure when it was used in an episode of movie-mocking television series Mystery Science Theater 3000 in May 1999.[2]

Zaat has been cited as one of the worst films ever made.

Plot

The film begins with Nazi mad scientist Dr. Kurt Leopold in his lab, where he has lived alone for about 20 years (it is revealed later in the film that he graduated cum laude from MIT in 1934). He is contemplating his former colleagues' derision for his "formula", which is described as "ZaAt" (read Z-sub-A, A-sub-T, but which he simply calls "Zaat"). This compound, it is later explained, can transform humans into sea creature hybrids and "mutate all sea life". He injects himself with the serum and immerses himself in a tank connected to an array of equipment of an unspecified nature, emerging as a furred, fish-like monster.

His first act of revenge on the society that he feels has wronged him is to release several smaller walking catfish around the town's lakes and river (filmed in the St. Johns River near Green Cove Springs, Florida), an annoyance to the townspeople, and releases Zaat into the local water supply, rendering many of the townspeople ill.

Leopold decides to kill the colleagues that scoffed at his work. He begins with a character named Maxson. In a lake where Maxson is fishing, Leopold swims under Maxson's boat, overturns it, and proceeds to kill Maxson and Maxson's son. Maxson's wife escapes, although she is in shock from the attack.

After killing Maxson, Leopold discovers a girl who is camping out alone on the shore of the lake. He approaches her, only to be deterred by her barking dog. The girl carries on with her business, unconcerned about the barking dog. Leopold retreats. Later, Leopold kills another colleague, Ewing.

His two colleagues now deceased, Leopold returns to the lake where the girl is still camping and waits for an opportunity to abduct her. His perseverance pays off when she strips down to a yellow bikini to go swimming. She dives into the lake, swimming carefree until Leopold catches her underwater. He swims with her to his lab, even as she struggles in vain to escape.

At the lab, the bikini-clad girl is lying strapped down in a mesh basket next to the large tank of Zaat. She is unconscious, and Leopold reveals his intentions to make her his mate. Leopold injects Zaat into her neck. As she is immersed into a tank of Zaat, the girl wakes up and struggles against the ropes holding her. The equipment malfunctions for reasons unknown, and her corpse, partially transformed, is pulled from the tank.

The movie strangely diverts from the storyline for approximately 10–15 minutes to show a lingering scene of the town sheriff Lou, watching a small group of youths playing religious folk music. After one of the youths (an acoustic guitarist, Jamie DeFrates, who also wrote the songs for the film) finishes leading the group in a song, the town's sheriff, Lou, places them all in the town's jail, presumably for their own protection. (This scene does not appear in all released versions.)

Leopold attempts to kidnap another mate. His choice is Martha Walsh, the lovely female member of the INPIT scientific team sent to investigate the weird happenings in the town (caused by Dr. Leopold). Leopold grabs her after her male counterparts leave her alone. Leopold takes her to his lab, but two of her companions (having unraveled the plot) are waiting there. Leopold kills them (including the sheriff) violently. He injects her with Zaat, readies her to be dunked into the tank, and makes his getaway, with canisters of Zaat. Martha's transformation does not go as planned and she gets saved from getting dunked in the tank by one of her dying male companions as Leopold flees toward the ocean. Despite being saved from the transformation, she appears to be in a trance and immediately follows Leopold into the sea. The movie ends ambiguously, with Leopold seen shot but not killed.

Cast

Production

Jacksonville, Florida resident Barton co-wrote, directed and produced the film,[3] which was shot during one month in 1970 on a $75,000 budget.[4] Scenes were filmed at various locales in Florida, including Rainbow Springs, Green Cove Springs, Switzerland and Marineland.[5]

Release

The film was shown in Jacksonville as well as in theaters in mostly southern states during its original theatrical release.[6] It was shown on July 11, 2009 in Atlanta,[7] then in Jacksonville on October 28, 2009, reviving interest in the film. The movie was shown in Statesboro, Georgia on November 1, 2009, but received a poor response.

Zaat was originally released on video by ThrillerVideo, with popular horror hostess Elvira hosting and spoofing the film throughout.

In February 2012, it was later issued on DVD and Blu-ray for the first time by Film Chest and HD Cinema Classics. Digitally restored in HD and transferred from original 35mm elements, the DVD/Blu-ray combo pack also contained a feature-length audio commentary by cast and crew, the original 35mm trailer, television spots, outtakes, a radio interview, a before-and-after restoration demo and an original movie art postcard.[8]

Mystery Science Theater 3000

Cult television series Mystery Science Theater 3000 featured Zaat in a season 10 episode under the title Blood Waters of Dr. Z.[9] The episode, which originally aired May 2, 1999,[10] mocked the film's low-budget effects and general tepidity. Director Don Barton was reportedly annoyed with MST3K for mocking his movie, but later clarified that the only reason he was annoyed was because Syfy (then known as the Sci-Fi Channel) had failed to secure the proper rights to the film. Barton issued a cease and desist and a lawsuit, so Syfy pulled the episode, and only reran it twice two years later, when they had cleared the issue with Barton out of court.[11]

Shout! Factory released the MST3K episode on DVD, along with three others, on March 16, 2010 as part of Mystery Science Theater 3000 - Volume XVII, after managing to properly secure the rights.

See also

References

  1. Attack of the Swamp Creatures at AllMovie
  2. TV Guide (2005). TV Guide: The Ultimate Resource to Television Programs on DVD. St. Martin's Griffin. p. 171. ISBN 0-312-35150-X. A human and two robots poke fun at egregiously B-rate sci-fi movies in this underground comedy series.
  3. "Don Barton, creator of cult classic 'Zaat,' dies at 83".
  4. "The Gist (Zaat)".
  5. "Zaat". 1 January 1971 via IMDb.
  6. Lyons, Mike. "Longtime Local Horror Movie Still A Hit"First Coast News (October 28, 2009)
  7. "Zaat" Creative Loafing Atlanta
  8. ZAAT Press Release (February 1, 2012)
  9. MST3K: Blood Waters of Dr. Z episode review. Mighty Jack's MST Temple
  10. "Episode guide: 1005- Blood Waters of Dr. Z « Satellite News".
  11. "Don Barton, RIP « Satellite News".

Mystery Science Theater 3000

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