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Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Audience Rated by buyers R (Restricted)
Type of bind: DVD
EAN num: 0024543056003
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: 20th Century Fox
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox
Quantity: 1
Publishing house: 20th Century Fox
Region Code: 1
Release Date: October 15, 2002
Running Time: 94 minutes
Sale Popularity Level: 53527
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Theatrical Release Date: September 17, 2002
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Editor's Notes and Comments:
Description:
They're coming -- thousands of ravenous, blood-thristy rats -- and the terrified occupants of a New York City department store have no where to hide. Not only are these genetically altered creatures smarter, stronger, and bigger than normal rats, they've also acquired a taste for human flesh. Time is running out for investigator Jack Carver (Vincent Spano), the only man wh can discover how these rodents became violent killers and stop their trail of victims before its too late. The suspense builds in the sewers and subways of Gotham as a battle rages to determine which species will survive?man or beast!
Amazon.com:
'Anywhere you go in this city, you're only about five feet from a rat.' These reassuring words set the tone for The Rats, a cheesy 2002 TV movie with a rather fun attitude toward its icky subject. The furry creatures are overrunning a Manhattan department store, with only store manager Mädchen Amick and exterminator Vincent Spano standing between the city and the establishment of a full-scale rodent kingdom. What takes this movie way beyond Willard is the CGI paint box, which brings scenes--many, many scenes--of swarming rats: rats filling a children's swimming pool, rats dropping onto a subway car, rats teeming over unfortunate extras. The movie isn't top-drawer in budget or anything else, but it seems aware of the 1950s monster-movie spirit, and the rat-cam and nibbling sound effects are unleashed with glee. It might make you think twice about lifting that toilet lid. --Robert Horton
User popularity level:

Rated by buyers
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The RatsAND NOT LAST BUT ANOTHER GREAT MOVIE THAT YOU WOULD WANT TO WATCH ON ANY NIGHT.
THANK YOU,
D.R.B.
DONALD BUTLER
LOS ANGELES, CA.
Rated by buyers
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I've loved killer rat movies ever since I sat mesmerized by the original WILLARD (and it's lesser sequel BEN) back in the early 70s. Something about these furry, much-maligned rodents has always brought a smile to my face and a pleasant chill down my spine. THE RATS is an absurd, yet completely enjoyable return to the good old days of rampaging rodents terrorizing mankind. Garson's department store in mid-town Manhattan is the proverbial "ground zero" for an all-out invasion by millions of genetically-enhanced, über-rats w/ murder on their teeny minds! Madchen Amick (Sleepwalkers, "Twin Peaks") is store manager Susan Costello. It's her job to deal w/ the rat problem, while simultaneously protecting Garson's' exclusive image. Enter Vincent Spano as Jack Carver, discrete exterminator extraordinaire. Carver soon discovers that things are far worse than just a small infestation. Receiving no help from the health dept., it's up to Carver and Costello (weren't they a comedy team?) to eradicate the menace. THE RATS is a lot of fun and moves along at a relatively brisk pace. The rat fx are well done, both cgi and real rats are creepy as well as crawly. Well worth a late-night viewing...
Rated by buyers
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When rogue rats get medieval on a Manhattan department store, its occupants must scratch and scrape their way to survival. Luckily, there just happens to be a rat expert on hand who knows even more about the personal habits of the wily rodents than the American public knows about Paris Hilton. This flick is not to be confused with another mouseterpiece of the same name, released in 2003 -- that one is about killer rats who terrorize the inmates of an insane asylum.
Rated by buyers
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Lab experiments have created mutant rats. Actually, they look just like regular rats, except they're a little stronger and more aggressive. These rats start attacking people, then a department store executive (Madchen Amick) and a rat exterminator (Vincent Spano) unite to defeat the rats -- and fall in love along the way!
Even for a made-for-TV movie, THE RATS's horror content is disappointinly tame. One man gets killed early in the film, then another man gets it 75 minutes into the film, and that's it. That's a pretty low body count.
It's hard to count all the mistakes and cliches in this film. Here are some:
* Vincent Spano sees rats leaving through a hole into the subway tunnels. He immeadiately rushes into the subway to try and see which way the train went, because he knows Madchen Amick is on the train. HUH? How did he know that she was on that particular train? Or even that the rats would attack it?
* When the subway stops, a motorman tells the passengers that they should wait in the train while he inspects the tracks. So an Obnoxious Yuppie complains, "What, you're not gonna leave us in here alone, are you? I don't believe this!" HUH? Who wrote this dialogue? The train stops, you expect the motorman to inspect the problem. Does this Obnoxious Yuppie want the motorman to hold his hand?
* When the rats enter the train, the Obnoxious Yuppies starts shooting a gun at the rats. So another man grabs him from behind to stop him. HUH? The yuppie was obnoxious, but he wasn't endangering anyone but the rats, from which everyone was trying to escape. Why would anyone stop him? My guess is that the screenwriter just wrote cliches (an obnoxious yuppie/gun nut must be stopped) without thinking about the context of his own script, or how his characters would behave in that situation.
* The subway seems to have only one car, the front car. We never see what happens in the previous cars, and the firemen seem not to rescue anyone from any other car. That's weird.
* Lots of opportunities for gore are wasted. A swarm of rats invade a swimming pool full of kids, causing a panicky escape. Good computer effects, but sadly, all the kids escape. C'mon, this is supposed to be a horror film! Let's see some of those brats go under in a pool of blood (as in THE GREAT ALLIGATOR.)
* And NO ONE on the train is killed. Not even the Obnoxious Yuppie, who had Classic Horror Victim written all over him. Yeah, that was a surprise, but not a good surprise.
* Madchen Amick mentions that the department store has an area (many rooms and floors) that was sealed off because the store stopped using it as a post for store detectives. HUH? Floor space is very expensive in New York City. If a store changes its use for an area, it doesn't seal off the area, it finds a new use for it.
* Amick is a single career mom raising a smart and cute little girl. Been there, done that. Again and again.
* Naturally, Amick and Spano initially get on each other's nerves, but then fall in love. It seems the movies are full of smart, professional career women who fall for gruff, blue collar macho guys. It happened in SPECIES and THE RELIC, to name two such horror films. I guess the conceit works because it plays into both male and female fantasies. Men fantasize about having macho, non-office jobs, and women fantasize about being successful career women who are swept off their feet by burly brutes.
* Two men are covered by rats and quickly chewed to death. But then Madchen Amick falls into a pool full of THOUSANDS of rats, and sinks beneath them until she is completely immersed (much like Sigourney Weaver is immearsed into the alien in ALIEN RESURRECTION). But when Amick is eventually pulled out by Spano -- she is pratically unscathed! No bite marks! Just a few reddish smears which barely look like blood. HUH? How come a few DOZEN rats almost instantly chew two men to death, but THOUSANDS of rats barely graze Amick? I'm guessing the filmmaker didn't want to kill off Amick, but he still wanted that "cool scene" of seeing her immersed under THOUSANDS of rats, so he did both, and simply ignore that she should be dead -- or at least severly disfigured. This is another old horror cliche -- horror heroines are immune from monsters. Consider THE DARK, in which an alien instantly kills everyone he meets, until he meets star Cathy Lee Corsby. Then he merely carries her off, giving the hero time to save her.
Still, I'm giving THE RATS a generous three stars.
* Although THE RATS is shot in Canada, its "New York" settings are not as obviously Canadian as some other shot-in-Canada "New York" films. ISLAND OF THE DEAD did a worse job of recreating Wall Street in Toronto, and WES CRAVEN PRESENTS THEY was much worse than THE RATS in recreating New York's ... Read More
Rated by buyers
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We are not talking about cinematic masterpiece here , but this is pretty well done of its kind .Set in New York ,it deals with the situation that arises when mutant laboratory rats escape from their habitat and wreak havoc in midtown Manhattan ,especially in an upmarket department store and a local swimming pool .
The opposition is led by a freelance rat catcher ,winningly played by Vincent Spano ,and by the store's General Manager capably despeatched by Madchen Amick .
Rat attacks are well staged -especially the one on a subway train and the swimming pool attack ,and the budget has been well spent in this regard as the rats actually do look pretty realistic
The script is predictable but that is part of its appeal-movies like this are as ritualised and formulaic as such older forms of drama as kabuki or commedia d'ell arte .
Sip a tinnie or two or relax to an enjoyable minor league but professionally done no brainer creature picture .
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