By the time director Phil Karlson made BEN (1972), his best work was far behind him. Although his cult classic WALKING TALL (1973), offered some redemption, Karlson's best work was in the 1950s when he made a series of tough, two-fisted films noir including KANSAS CITY CONFIDENTIAL (1952), 99 RIVER STREET (1953), TIGHT SPOT (1955), 5 AGAINST THE HOUSE (1955), and THE PHENIX CITY STORY (1955). His two Matt Helm films, THE SILENCERS (1966) and THE WRECKING CREW (1969), were smarm fests for star Dean Martin. And BEN? Lord help us, BEN was a movie about an intelligent rat. A direct sequel to the surprise hit WILLARD (1971), BEN finds the title rat befriending an uber obnoxious lonely young boy, played by Lee Montgomery. Ben and his rat friends protect young Danny from bullies and cause other mayhem in Los Angeles before finally being roasted in the sewers beneath the city by LAPD cops with flame throwers (shades of THEM! (1954)). Genre vet Kenneth Tobey has little to do, Joseph Campanella is a frustrated police detective with a smoking problem, Arthur O'Connell is a newspaper report who is never seen reporting, young Meredith Baxter is Danny's older, teenage sister and Michael Jackson sings the Academy Award nominated title song. Thumbs down.
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