The Birds

by Rod Taylor (Actor)

Other

Status

Available

Tags

Description

When Melanie Daniels rolls into Bodega Bay in pursuit of eligible bachelor Mitch Brenner, the small California town is inexplicably attacked by thousands of birds.

User reviews

LibraryThing member comfypants
A woman follows a man to a small town, where he lives with his over-protective mother.

The first 90 minutes is awful - mostly boring "development" of shit characters, with the occasional unintentionally funny bird attack. The last half hour, on the other hand, is great. But why sit through the crap
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when you can just skip to the good bits by watching Night of the Living Dead instead?

Concept: B
Story: D
Characters: D
Dialog: D
Pacing: D
Cinematography: D
Special effects/design: F
Acting: C
Music: F

Enjoyment: C plus

GPA: 1.2/4
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LibraryThing member Familiar_Diversions
Melanie Daniels meets Mitch Brenner while at a pet shop in San Francisco. She's there to buy a Mynah bird, while he's there to get a pair of lovebirds for his younger sister. He pretends to mistake Melanie for a shop employee and eventually leaves without buying anything. Melanie, both intrigued
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and annoyed by handsome Mitch, buys a couple lovebirds and ends up taking them to his mother's home in Bodega Bay, where he goes every weekend.

Out of nowhere, Melanie is attacked by a seagull, which she and Mitch assume is an isolated incident. However, as incidents of odd bird behavior mount, it all becomes more ominous, until finally someone is discovered dead, apparently killed by birds. With no idea what's causing the attacks or how to stop them, Mitch, his mother, his sister, and Melanie try their best to survive and wait whatever it is out.

I don't think I've ever seen this movie before, although I remember talking about it with my mom. When I was a kid, we went to some kind of petting zoo where a bird pecked my foot because I wanted to save the food I'd been given for the other animals. I'm pretty sure my mom got slight The Birds flashbacks.

Anyway, in terms of overall scariness, I thought this was better than Psycho, although since it was a level of scariness even I could handle, I'm assuming most horror fans wouldn't consider it all that scary anymore. I thought Melanie was weird and a bit much, buying birds, traveling for a couple hours, and sneaking into Mitch's house just because of one embarrassing encounter (which she set herself up for, honestly). But the gradually increasing tension involving the birds was great. I think I preferred the scenes in which the birds were gathering, but not attacking, more than the actual attacks.

There were a few moments that were kind of stupid. For example, ushering all the kids out of the school while the birds were gathering was a bad idea. It may not have gone better if they'd stayed in the school, but at least they wouldn't all have been so exposed when the attack finally came. It was mind-boggling, the number of times people went outside when they knew a bird attack was likely.

Where this movie fell apart, for me, was the ending. I remember checking how many minutes were left and wondering how it was going to wrap up in time, because there were no answers and only a few minutes to go. Why were the birds attacking? Did Melanie's arrival really have something to do with it? Were the lovebirds a clue somehow?

It felt like this movie was all build-up with nothing to let the pressure off at the end. No answers, no indications that the characters were or were not going to end up safe, and no additional information beyond the tidbit that Mitch got from the radio, that incidents maybe weren't isolated to Bodega Bay after all. It was a bit of a letdown.

Extras:

A deleted scene (script and some stills), the original ending (script and some drawings), Tippi Hedren's screen test, "The Birds is coming" (Universal International newsreel), "Suspense story: National Press Club hears Hitchcock" (Universal International newsreel), production photographs.

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)
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LibraryThing member jgcorrea
The premise itself is so absurd, hard to be taken entirely seriously, that can only be compared to that of Albert Camus' novel The Plague.

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