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poster of Sssssss
Rating: 5.2/10 by 95 users

Sssssss (1973)

David, a college student, is looking for a job. He is hired by Dr. Stoner as a lab assistant for his research and experiments on snakes. David also begins to fall for Stoner's young daughter, Kristina. However, the good doctor has secretly brewed up a serum that can transform any man into a King Cobra snake-and he plans to use it on David.

Directing:
  • Bernard L. Kowalski
Writing:
  • Hal Dresner
  • Daniel C. Striepeke
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Jul 06, 1973

Rating: 5.2/10 by 95 users

Alternative Title:
SSSSnake - GB
Hissssss - US

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 39 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: experiment, snake, transformation, cobra, college student
Subtitle   Wallpaper   Watch Trailer    

Strother Martin
Dr. Carl Stoner
Dirk Benedict
David Blake
Heather Menzies
Kristina Stoner
Richard B. Shull
Dr. Ken Daniels
Jack Ging
Sheriff Dale Hardison
Reb Brown
Steve Randall
Ted Grossman
Deputy Morgan Bock
Kathleen King
Kitty Stewart
Ray Ballard
Waggish Tourist
Felix Silla
Sam Lee, the Seal Boy
Noble Craig
Tim McGraw, the Snake Man
Bobbi Kiger
Kootch Dancer
J.R. Clark
Station Attendant

Wuchak

**_A serum that turns people into snakes_** A modern Frankenstein-type (Strother Martin) experiments with snakes and human beings in the desert hills of Southern California. David (Dirk Benedict) is hired by Dr. Stoner (Martin) as a lab assistant after his previous lab assistant mysteriously went missing. As the youth falls in love with Stoner's daughter, Kristina (Heather Menzies), the doctor begins injecting David with some king of snake serum. Released in 1973, the curiously titled "SSSssss" is a pretty decent horror flick that has the early 70s written all over it, but I can't give it a higher rating because it comes off as a TV movie more than a theatrical release. Remember the TV movie "Gargoyles" from 1972? "SSSssss" has the same tone and look, but it's not as good even though it was theatrically released. Why? Because "Gargoyles" has a better topic and, at only 74 minutes, it lacks the padding of "SSSssss." Still, there's enough good in "SSSssss" to make it worthwhile for those who like these kinds of movies. There are a couple of carnival scenes, which are always good for horror flicks. Martin is effective as the mad doctor and Reb Brown as a pompous jock, but Benedict and Menzies come off bland as the youthful lovers. Then again, they're playing intellectual college nerds so I'm sure that's how their characters were written. Nevertheless, IMHO Menzies is pretty forgettable here; she's better in 1977's "Piranha." Kathleen King plays the only notable woman, but her part isn't much more than a cameo. Needless to say, bad job on the female front. The film runs 99 minutes and, although there is no listing on IMDb, it was obviously shot in the greater Los Angeles area. GRADE: C+


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