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History
of the Insect Fear Film Festival
The Insect Fear
Film Festival at the University of Illinois was initiated by our
Department Head Prof. May Berenbaum in 1984, and has grown into
a nationally recognized event. Below in her words is a history of
the festival.
The Insect Fear
Film Festival basically began as an idea that I had as a graduate
student in Cornell; upon reading a poster advertising a Godzilla
festival, sponsored by the campus Asian-American Society, I thought
a similar event, featuring insect fear films (a term I borrowed
from my film buff brother), might be both fun and educational. When
I pitched the idea to the head of the entomology department, he
almost instantly vetoed the idea, fearing that such an event would
be too undignified. He countered with a plan to host a series of
documentary films about insects, but that wasn't really what I had
in mind, so the idea more or less was shelved for a while. After
a year as an assistant professor at Illinois, however, I worked
up the courage to approach then-head Stanley Friedman with the same
pitch. This time, the idea enthusiastically embraced; Stanley thought
it was such a good idea that he suggested charging admission in
the hopes of getting another TA line out of it. The rest of the
faculty and the graduate students embraced the idea as well. Campus
regulations being what they were at the time, we stuck with the
plan for a free event, sponsored in part by the Student Government
Assocation, open not only to the university community but to the
public at large.
The first festival
was held in March 1984; our optimism in calling it the "first Insect
Fear Film Festival" proved well-founded. The first festival established
a format that turned out to be quite durable. At each festival,
we show two or three feature-length films (in 1984, these were "Them"
and "Bug") interspersed with animated shorts (in 1984, these included
the 1980 Academy Award winning Hungarian short, "The Fly"). Before
the festival begins, and between films, the audience is invited
to see and handle a variety of live specimens (kind of a "meet the
stars" opportunity), invariably including tarantulas (not insects,
but a crowd-pleaser nonetheless), hissing cockroaches, and tobacco
hornworms, among many others), as well as to see Cornell drawers
and Riker mounts of all kinds of arthropods. Another common element
to all festivals, beginning with the second, has been a festival
T-shirt, designed by a graduate student and sold at the festival.
This general format has served us well, but it has been modified
over the years. After a few years, the festivals began to be organized
around themes--thus, the fourth festival featured female insect
fear films (Mothra, Empire of the Ants, and the only soft core insect
fear film, Invasion of the Bee Girls), the fifth festival was an
all-spider affair, the sixth featured orthopteroid insects, the
seventh social insects, the eight cockroaches, and the ninth flies.
For the tenth festival, in 1994, we had a 12-hour marathon and,
for the first time, served insect treats to accompany the film (deep
fried waxworms, stir-fried silkworm pupae, and the ever-popular
Hotlix tequila-flavored lollypops complete with maguey worms). That
same year, we also held a children's insect art contest in conjunction
with the Natural History Museum; the winning drawings were on display
at the museum for two weeks after the festival. Other events that
have been held in conjunction with the festival included a thematically
relevant blood-drive, held in cooperation with Community Blood Services
of Champaign, for the 1999 mosquito film festival.
All told, we
have shown 38 different feature films and over forty shorts in the
name of public education; over a hundred graduate students have
bravely sat through hours of unspeakably bad film footage (often
multiple times) so as to be ready and able to wrangle tarantulas
between films, assist with crowd control, repair recalcitrant 16
mm projectors, deep-fry and serve appetizers, and contribute in
a thousand other ways that are not generally within the purview
of a graduate education in entomology. When we began, Ronald Reagan
was in office, materialism was rampant, and insect movies were terrible;
today, there's a democratic president in Washington, environmental
awareness and volunteerism are more fashionable, and insect movies
are still terrible; it's nice to know that there are some things
in life to count on. For some reason, the Insect Fear Film Festival
has tremendous media appeal. Over the years, the festival has been
featured in the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the New
York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune, the Chronicle
of Higher Education, the Philadelphia Inquirer, and the Saint Louis
Post-Dispatch; internationally, the story has been carried by the
International Herald Tribune, the Jerusalem Post, the London Times,
Der Spiegel, and the Wellington Dominion from New Zealand. A story
even appeared in one of the most widely read and influential publications
of our day--the Star (available at grocery store checkout lines
everywhere), where I was taken to task for revealing Jiminy Cricket,
one of the nation's most beloved cartoon icons, to be a "fraud."
Magazine coverage has included Science News, Chemical and Engineering
News, National Gardening, National Wildlife, Outside, Premier, Twilight
Zone Magazine, and Spin. I can't imagine too many other events covered
both by Premiere and Chem. and Engineering News. Bob Edwards of
National Public Radio's Morning Edition ran a story, as did Terry
Gross of "Fresh Air". The Independent Broadcast Network ran a 15
minute debate in 1993 on whether inaccurate depictions of insect
biology were protected by the first amendment, and Voice of America
ran a ten-minute interview, presumably to showcase the benefits
of freedom to oppressed peoples everywhere. Locally, WILL FM ran
an hour of classical insect music in honor of the festival last
year. Television coverage has included CNN, CBS Morning News, and
ABC World News Tonight (the latter of which sent a four-man film
crew and gave the festival 2 1/2 minutes in prime time on Super
Tuesday in 1992). Even the festival T-shirts
have received media coverage--in an interview in the Village Voice,
Richard Linklater, director of the generation-X classic "Slackers,"
was revealed to be wearing a UIUC Insect Fear Film Festival T-shirt,
although he admitted in the interview that he didn't know exactly
how he came to possess it.
Why the fuss?
Have there been that many slow news days in the past ten years?
Maybe it's because insects remain the one familiar and conspicuous
group which is politically correct to hate. Probably for this reason,
Hollywood has shown no inclination to stop producing bad insect
science fiction films either; while the effects certainly are getting
better, the biology is not. As long as they keep disseminating disinformation
about the most misunderstood taxon on the planet, we have an obligation
to counter with the truth about insects. So it's my fervent hope
that the festival will continue--and if we manage to have fun in
spreading the gospel, as it were, so much the better!
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