Maybe it’s my age, but while watching Primate, I kept getting distracted by the house where the film takes place. Damn, it’s awesome, maybe the greatest house I’ve ever seen in a movie where it isn’t trying to kill its occupants.
Back my the days of apartment living, I didn’t pay much attention to such things, even with the wife insisting I join her to catch House Hunters on HGTV so I could hear her dream out loud. Conversely, I was stubbornly pragmatic, seeing no point in watching other couples buy dream homes I couldn’t possibly afford. But now that I’m a home owner with equity, some of those fancy digs on TV seem a bit more tangible, therefore more interesting.
As for the house in Primate…I was ready to put our split-level suburban dump on the market and moonlight as a rodeo clown to get it. But alas, one of this disc’s bonus features reveals that the house itself isn’t real. I shoulda known it was too good to be true.
Still, it’s a great setting, even if it isn’t trying to kill its occupants. Something else is, though…a rabid chimpanzee. Primate is sort of a simian version of Cujo and the titular creature is named Ben, who lives with the Pinborough family. Oldest daughter Lucy (Johnny Sequoyah) has come home from college, bringing a few friends along to up the eventual body count. After being bitten by a mongoose, Ben turns rabid and murderous while Lucy’s father is away for a book signing. Lucy, her friends and young sister Erin (Gia Hunter) flee to the swimming pool because Ben can’t swim. However, they’re trapped there.
![]() |
| Scariest of all...Ben is not housebroken. |
And speaking of which…I’m sure the temptation was strong to depict Ben through CGI, but thankfully, he’s a combination of animatronics and a small actor (Miguel Torres Umba) in prosthetics. For the most part, he’s as convincing as the house created for his rampage, and since everyone else looks and acts like refugees from a reality show, Ben ends up being the most interesting character in the entire film. Hell, I was rooting for him from the get-go.
Sure, plausibility is stretched a little thin here and there (especially regarding some of Ben’s abilities), but since the movie attacks its familiar premise with uninhibited, blood-soaked glee, who cares? Movies like this are never meant to challenge the intellect anyway. What ultimately matters is that Primate delivers unpretentious thrills and creative kills…all set in a house that’s a lot cooler than yours.
EXTRA KIBBLES
FEATURETTES - Primal Terror: Directing Primate mostly features director/co-writer Johannes Roberts, as well as cast & crew interviews; New Blood: The Faces of Primate focuses on the cast; Creating Ben is the best of the bonus features and offers a revealing look at how Ben was depicted; Designing Paradise is about how they created that awesome house.
AUDIO COMMENTARY - By director/co-writer Johannes Roberts.


.png)


.jpg)


.png)









