Before horror-comedy became a carefully calibrated studio formula, Critters arrived like a feral little gremlin — scrappy, irreverent, and gleefully chaotic. Directed by Stephen Herek, this pint-sized creature feature didn’t just ride the wave of 80s monster mania — it bit into it with razor-sharp teeth and refused to let go.
Nearly four decades on, Critters remains a cult favourite, not because it tries to be polished or profound, but because it understands something fundamental about horror: sometimes, the most memorable monsters are the ones having the most fun.
Small Creatures, Big Attitude
At first glance, the film’s premise feels comfortingly familiar — small-town America, a quiet Kansas farm, and something from the stars crash-landing into unsuspecting territory. But where Critters distinguishes itself is in its creatures.
The Krites — carnivorous, fur-covered, needle-toothed balls of extraterrestrial appetite — are pure 80s invention. Brought to life through practical effects that favour personality over realism, they chatter, roll, swarm, and devour with gleeful abandon. They are less silent predators and more anarchic invaders, driven by hunger and mischief in equal measure.
It’s impossible not to draw comparisons to Gremlins, but Critters carves its own identity by leaning harder into the horror. These creatures don’t just cause chaos — they kill, and they do so with a vicious streak that gives the film real bite beneath its playful exterior.
Madcap Mayhem from the Cosmos
Then there are the bounty hunters — shape-shifting intergalactic lawmen whose presence injects an entirely different strain of absurdity into the film. Their awkward attempts at blending into human society provide some of Critters’ most memorable moments, particularly as they adopt bizarre, often ill-fitting disguises.
This collision of tones — small-town horror, sci-fi absurdity, and slapstick comedy — could easily have unravelled in less capable hands. But Herek keeps the film moving at a brisk pace, allowing the madness to escalate without ever losing its sense of momentum.
There’s an infectious energy to it all, a sense that the film is constantly teetering on the edge of chaos — and enjoying every second of it.
The Heart of 80s Creature Feature Cinema
What makes Critters endure is its commitment to the spirit of practical filmmaking. The creatures feel tangible, their presence grounded in physical effects that give them weight and texture. There’s a scrappiness to the production that works in its favour, lending the film an authenticity that glossy modern creature features often lack.
It also taps into the quintessential 80s horror formula — the invasion of the domestic space. The Brown family farm becomes a battleground, a place of supposed safety transformed into a site of escalating terror. This grounding in everyday life makes the absurdity all the more effective.
A Cult Legacy That Keeps Rolling
While it may not have reached the same mainstream heights as some of its contemporaries, Critters has carved out a lasting legacy within genre circles. Its success spawned sequels, expanded its mythology, and cemented the Krites as enduring icons of creature-feature cinema.
The film also serves as an early showcase for Herek, who would go on to helm films like Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, carrying with him that same sense of playful irreverence.
The Prognosis:
Critters is messy, mischievous, and gloriously unrefined — a film that embraces its own ridiculousness while delivering genuine thrills and memorable monsters.
It may not be the most sophisticated entry in the 80s horror canon, but it’s undoubtedly one of the most fun.
A madcap creature feature that proves sometimes the smallest monsters leave the biggest bite.
- Saul Muerte