Innerspace (1987)
Dir. by Joe
Dante
Starring
Dennis Quaid, Meg Ryan and Martin Short
Plot:
An experiment in miniaturization is
interrupted by a gang of corporate raiders attempting to steal the
technology. One scientist escapes, and
ends up injecting the test pilot, intended for a rabbit, into the body of a
grocery store clerk. The pilot is able
to establish communications with him, and together they have to retrieve the
technology from the thieves so that he can be re-enlarged before his oxygen
runs out.
Nostalgia:
I could’ve
sworn I’d seen this only a couple of years ago.
However, my movie-watching spreadsheet (which I’ve been keeping since
2008) says that I haven’t watched it in that timespan. It’s not one that I’d watched a whole lot as
a kid, but it’s one I was familiar enough with to remember a lot of the plot
beats, and some of the bigger scenes.
Re-Watch:
Okay, this
is more like it. Unlike The
Last Starfighter and Short Circuit, the previous
two films I’ve reviewed for this project, Innerspace really
holds up as an entertaining movie in its own right separate from the
nostalgia. The plot moves quickly, the
performances are great across the board, and the effects are stupendous – not
just by the standards of the 1980s, but I’d say even now. But more on that later.
Like
Short Circuit, this movie is meant to be an action
comedy. Despite the former film
featuring a robot as a central character, I’d actually say this movie reads as
more “sci-fi”. Besides the miniaturized
pilot, played by Dennis Quaid as a mild “likeable asshole” who is, in fact,
quite likeable, there’s a hitman with a prosthetic arm that doubles as a gun
and a blowtorch, and a microwave device that Quaid uses to blow up a TV
(Quaid’s disgusted “I’m inside a guy who likes game shows” got me to laugh out
loud). The comedy is mostly centered on
Martin Short as the clerk, who gives off a Gene Wilder vibe as the neurotic,
hypochondriac, supremely lacking in self-confidence man that Quaid gets stuck
inside. His reactions and physical humor
had me laughing out loud more than I have while watching a movie alone in quite
a while. Especially so in a bravura
sequence of physical comedy in which Quaid uses muscle stimulation to transform
Short’s face into the other sublimely silly character from the movie, the
fantastic Robert Picardo’s “Cowboy”.
![]() |
Just one of the many facial gyrations Short goes through |
Now, it’s
fairly obvious that Picardo is supposed to be playing a vaguely Middle Eastern
character, from the accent, the fact that he’s reading a magazine printed in
Arabic, and the casual script references to his selling secrets in the Persian
Gulf. However, his character is dressed
as an incredibly ridiculous, stereotypical Texan (this being the era of
<i>Dallas</i>), and the movie never goes into anything specific
about his background. I had a much
easier time accepting his character than Fisher Stevens’s in <i>Short
Circuit</i>. It helps that Picardo is also a gifted comedian, and he
practically steals the show every moment he’s on-screen.
![]() |
The Ewings called. They want their wardrobe back. |
Speaking of stealing the show, this movie is packed full of wonderful character actors playing small parts, a large number of which have subsequently appeared on Star Trek shows. Besides the aforementioned Picardo, William Schallert (Short’s doctor), Henry Gibson (his boss), Andrea Martin (the lady whom he talks to in the waiting room), Kenneth Tobey (the man who observes Short talking to “himself” in the restroom), and Dick Miller (the cabbie who picks up Quaid’s girlfriend) had all appeared in DS9 episodes (Martin actually played Quark’s mother Ishka, and I recognized her without the Ferengi makeup). The lady from Short’s dream sequence was also played by Kathleen Freeman, whom I remember from her memorable cameo as the stern nun from the Blues Brothers movies, the first of which will hopefully be a future review.
Besides the
comedy, which I definitely remembered, there’s also a lot more action in the
movie than I had recalled. There’s a car
vs. bicycle chase at the beginning that works better than it has a right to,
several fistfights, and a sequence in the middle, involving Short hanging off
the back of a truck door while the vehicle was moving, that reminded me of
stuff I’ve seen in Jackie Chan movies. I’m
sure that a lot of it was done with a stunt double, but the part that had him
balancing precariously on the edge of a convertible’s windshield as it’s
driving definitely looked like he’d done it himself.
Which brings
me back around, finally, to the movie’s effects. This film won that year’s Oscar for Best
Visual Effects, and it’s easy to see why.
The sequences with Quaid inside Short’s body look outstanding. The film was clearly influenced by
Fantastic Voyage, and the effects crews took full advantage
of the opportunity to reimagine what the inside of the body would look like up
close. Everything was done practically,
and I really can’t imagine it looking much better even with the addition of CG.
So yeah,
this one’s definitely a keeper. The only
thing that truly dates this movie is a five minute sequence in a nightclub that
just screams mid-late 80s, down to the Madonna inspired wardrobes and Wang
Chung music. It deserves to be better
known than it is, and is one to check out if you’re interested in seeing Martin
Short at the peak of his game, a really young Meg Ryan, and some gorgeous
model, miniature and composite work.
Nostalgia: B
Rewatch: A-
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