Them! (1954)

Movie · 1954 · Science Fiction, Horror · 1h 34m · NR · English

Curator score: 7.5/10 (26.9K ratings)

A horror horde of crawl-and-crush giants clawing out of the earth from mile-deep catacombs!

Overview

As a result of nuclear testing, gigantic, ferocious mutant ants appear in the American desert southwest, and a father-daughter team of entomologists join forces with the state police officer who first discovers their existence, an FBI agent and, eventually, the US Army to eradicate the menace, before it spreads across the continent — and the world.

Ratings

Director

Gordon Douglas

Production

Warner Bros. Pictures

Cast

James Whitmore, James Arness, Joan Weldon, Edmund Gwenn, Onslow Stevens, Sean McClory, Sandy Descher, Chris Drake, Don Shelton, Fess Parker, Mary Alan Hokanson, Olin Howland, William Schallert, Ann Doran, Dub Taylor, Leonard Nimoy, Richard Deacon, Forbes Murray, Kenner G. Kemp, Charles Perry

Where to watch

IndieFlix

Curator Review

Verdict

A sturdy, serious-minded 1950s monster movie that plays like a procedural with giant ants instead of a murder case. Its black-and-white desert atmosphere, grounded investigation, and nuclear-age paranoia give it more weight than the premise suggests.

Best for

  • classic sci-fi horror fans
  • viewers who like monster movies with a procedural structure
  • fans of atomic-age paranoia and Cold War allegory
  • people who enjoy practical-effects-era genre filmmaking

Skip if

  • you want nonstop creature action
  • you need modern pacing or polished effects
  • you dislike earnest 1950s dialogue and military-science exposition
  • you prefer horror that is more psychological than pulpy

Overview

Them! is one of the defining atomic-age monster films: a movie that turns nuclear anxiety into a desert nightmare and then treats the threat with surprising seriousness. The setup is simple and effective, and the early stretch of investigation has a grim, almost forensic quality that makes the eventual reveal feel earned.

Worth noting

What gives the film staying power is its blend of pulp spectacle and procedural logic. Rather than rushing to the giant-ant mayhem, it builds dread through missing persons, strange evidence, and the slow realization that something has gone very wrong in the New Mexico desert. That approach makes the movie feel smarter than its poster art.

Bottom line

The effects and creature design are inevitably dated, but the film’s atmosphere, pacing, and commitment to its premise still work. It’s a foundational example of 1950s science-fiction horror: earnest, tense, and more influential than its B-movie trappings might imply.

Top Letterboxd reviews

mia 🦇 (3.5★) · 393 likes

of course you're a gigantic mutant insect and have pronouns 🙄

Ben Hibburd (4★) · 358 likes

Who would've thought a film about gigantic man-eating ants would be so good? Ever since I played the "Fallout 3" quest-line entitled "Those!" I've been meaning to watch this film, and now that I finally have, I can say that I wasn't disappointed. The film takes place nine years after the first nuclear tests were conducted in the New Mexico desert. However, lingering radiation has caused the surrounding ants to mutate into nine-foot-tall monsters that go on a catastrophic rampage.… more Who would've thought a film about gigantic man-eating ants would be so good? Ever since I played the "Fallout 3" quest-line entitled "Those!" I've been meaning to watch this film, and now that I finally have, I can say that I wasn't disappointed. The film takes place nine years after the first nuclear tests were conducted in the New Mexico desert. However, lingering radiation has caused the surrounding ants to mutate into nine-foot-tall monsters that go on a catastrophic rampage.… more

Ethan Colburn (3.5★) · 334 likes

Them’s some big ants!!

Tim Fehrenbach (3.5★) · 204 likes

"them! them! them!" Starkly beautiful at first – Them! opens with wide, empty desert shots, a terrified girl gone mute, and dramatic black-and-white contrasts that create a sense of looming dread. That first act had me hooked – the trauma, the slow procedural investigation, the eerie sound design. When that first beast comes crawling up over that hill, I was all smiles, imagining the original Godzilla – born the very same year – nodding in approval. "we may be witnesses… more

Rafael "Mister Movie" Jovine (4★) · 182 likes

While the ending felt a bit underwhelming, this is a pretty underrated B level movie about a bunch of ants who grow into a very dangerous size after some Atomic Bombs testing back on the 45. It subtly tackles on the fear and dangers of war though it never comes as preachy. Also why the big ants had me laughing more than actually scared, it was fascinating to learn about the many similitudes between them and us humans, There's a… more

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Topics

atomic age, monster movie, science fiction horror, black-and-white cinematography, Cold War, desert setting, procedural, practical effects, 1950s cinema, nuclear paranoia

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