Every now and then, there’s a short that comes across my desk that plays on each and every one of my things. The Ugly Chickens happened to be one like that. Subtle science fiction? Yep. Extinct animals? Quite. An adaptation of Howard Waldrop? No doubt. Felicia Day? In the extreme!
Let me start with a thing that has always been true: the
best science fiction short films are gentle science fiction. This is
what draws the line with features for me. Yes, effect-driven features are really where
it's at (and you can fight me on that!), but the shorter the short, the more
based on our world the science fictional scenario should be. When I came across The Ugly Chickens, I
knew that it was going to be the one that made me happiest.
The story of The Ugly Chickens is fairly simple: it’s the late 1970s in Texas, and an ornithology associate professor, Paula (played by Felicia Day) is running to her class when she bumps into a woman who sees the cover of her extinct birds book showing a dodo. She says she hadn’t seen ‘those ugly chickens’ in years, and tells the story of how her neighbors had raised them. She’s been obsessed with the dodo for a long time, and that led to an adventure to find the dodo, who she hopes is not as dead as everyone had thought. Her obsession leads her to travel to Louisiana, and she finds proof that there were dodos, but runs into a local, and that sets her off on another series of adventures at tremendous cost to herself. The way it plays out is both utterly satisfying and completely non-ambiguously a let-down.
I can remember reading the story in the late 1980s. It was
so smart, and it dealt with my favorite: the dodo. They were a sweet, loving
bird. They weren’t dumb, just trusting. I might have identified with them a bit
too closely, and when I read a story where these noble creatures were present, well, I dove in.
It’s helped by the fact that it was a Howard story as well. His writing went into so many
other areas and there's always the Waldrop style I miss so much now
that he’s gone. I was lucky enough to get to meet Howard a few times, and even
did an exhibit based on his book The Texas-Israeli War of 1997. The Ugly Chickens
was easily my favorite of all his stories.
The short switches the gender of the ornithologist to a
woman, which, when played by Felicia Day, is a perfect choice. I maintain that Felicia is the finest genre actor
in America today. Yes, it is a different and more specialized form of the art.
It requires the ability to interact with a setting as much as other characters.
It’s a multi-tier reaction process that Felicia has mastered in a way that few
not named Christopher Lee have managed. She gets to roll through a series of
emotional tones in a way that brings her natural charm to the front, while also not blowing out the story as it progresses.
The film is beautiful. The cinematography, handled by Alan
Poon, is magnificent. It looks gorgeous, and it takes the changing setting,
various time periods, and regional environments, and gives each a deliberate sense
of place. Poon also handled the shooting of American Born Chinese, one
of the best shot TV programs of the last decade. The entire look of the film
plays with Howard’s tendency towards the rural, the backwaters and backwoods. There’s
a certain Southern Gothic sense even to the classroom scene.
Now, is this an adaptation that isn’t exactly
fully faithful to the story, but it absolutely maintains the spirit of the
original. George R. R. Martin, one of the producers, reports that Howard saw an early
cut of the picture before his passing and much approved. The script is really smart, and moves between
beats without dwelling too much. This is actually more difficult than it sounds
to maintain across 30 minutes and still give time for character development and
Day’s amazing emoting.
I’ve programmed thousands of shorts, and there are a few which
I knew would be winning awards from both audiences and the jury. The Ugly Chickens
was absolutely one that I knew would, and I wasn’t wrong. At Cinequest, it
won both, and I could not have been happier.
I hope that The Ugly Chickens gets a release along
with the other short films that are being made from Howard’s stories, including
Night of the Cooters and Mary Margaret Road Grader.
POSTED BY: Chris Garcia - Archivist, curator, and professional wrestling enthusiast. @johnnyeponymous



