Notes: King
Bros. Production / MGM. Filmed in England. 79 minutes.
Joe Ryan: Bill Travers
Sam Slade: William Sylvester
Sean: Vincent Winter
McCartin: Christopher Rhodes
Professor Hendricks: Joseph O'Conor [not O'Connor
as on the video box]
Professor Flaherty: Bruce Seton [not Seaton
as according to the Magill Movie Guide]
Dorkin: Martin Benson
Radio Reporter: Maurice Kauffman
Admiral: Basil Digman
Mate: Barry Keegan
First Naval Officer: Thomas Duggan
First Colonel: Howard Lang
Bosun: Dervis Ward [not Word as according to
the Magill Movie Guide]
Directed: Eugene Lourie (cf. The Giant Behemoth
and The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms)
Produced: Wilfred Eades
Executive Producers: Frank King and Maurice
King
Screenplay: John Loring and Daniel Hyatt
Special Effects: Tom Howard (two-time Academy
Award winner in this field)
Cinematography: F.A. Young
Music: Angelo Lavagnino
Summary:
A pink sky and general atmospheric weirdness interrupt Joe and
Sam's diving for sunken treasure in the Irish Sea. A suboceanic
volcano surfaces and blows, rupturing the plates of their freighter
and forcing them to dock for repairs at Nara Island. Strange
dead creatures float by, signifying that "The whole ocean
bottom must have been torn up."
The locals are unfriendly, but a kid named
Sean at the home of the harbormaster shows Joe and Sam some of
the treasures recovered from the sea. The harbormaster McCartin
returns and is uncourteous. "Well, somethin's eatin' him!"
Joe and Sam decide to snoop.
Locals worry that two divers have not come
up. One finally does and our doofs find some coins in his hand
as he dies, we decide, "of fright." The other diver
never reappears. Joe and Sam dive and see something, they're
not sure what. At night, a Godzilla-like monster with red eyes,
big goofy claws, and flappy ears, obviously unleashed by the recent
volcano, emerges from the water. The locals throw spears and
torches, often into the creature's mouth, and eventually drive
it back into the sea.
Joe and Sam greedily see an opportunity, browbeat
the harbormaster into agreeing to fork over some loot in exchange
for them eliminating the "beast" so that the community
can get back to plundering the sunken treasures. Initially they
wonder how to kill the creature, but soon "stop to think
what what a thing like that might be worth alive." Joe submerges
in a diving bell, the creature attacks, and they succeed in netting
it.
The British news broadcasts initially suggest
an "elaborate Irish hoax," but after some dire warnings
from a couple Dublin professors about hydrating the creature,
Joe and Sam decide to sell it to Dorkin's Circus in London and
the animal is tranked and transported, with a stowaway Sean who
tries to release the animal, through the streets of London and
put on display in a pit. Dorkin (honestly; that's his name) answers
the reference to "Gorgo as he's called--we don't know why,"
with mention of the Greek Gorgons, and bills the 65-foot creature
as "the eighth wonder of the world" (tres Kong!) and
"heavier than six elephants"--all for five shillings.
The carnival is very crass, but Sean is in touch and compassionate.
When some reporters hop the barricades to flash some photos (tres
Kong!), Gorgo breaks free and is subdued after knocking about
a few cars and people with flamethrowers.
Sam is having doubts now, so he drinks a lot.
The man killed by the Gorgo's tail-swipe, after all, had "a
wife and two kids," and so therefore his life is more valuable
than those of us non-breeders. Joe is still consistently a stubborn
sleaze. Those two professors we thought we left behind now hold
a meeting and announce their theory that Gorgo is an infant and
the adult would be "at least 200 feet tall." Lo, an
adult monster comes ashore at Nara Island and crushes most of
the town, including the harbormaster, and then proceeds to destroy
a ship that was innocently trying to blow it up. The adult follows
the phospherous trail left oceanically by the hydration of the
infant.
The British Navy likes its binoculars and we
see lots of footage of military crap trying to blow up the dinosaur.
But it comes ashore despite flaming waters and more arsenal,
destroys Tower Bridge (quel The Lost World 1925!), Big
Ben, and city blocks. This is a long sequence with quite a bit
of repeated footage, but pretty good chaos and destruction, even
to a "tube"! A news reporter insists, "There's
been nothing like it, not even the worst of the blitz!"
The creature (called "she") roams Piccadilly Circus
while one of those London "Repent--the end is near"
people gets trampled by the crowd.
All electricity is directed toward one last
barrier, 4 million volts, but "man's puny efforts" don't
work here either. The adult creature reunites with the infant
"Gorgo" and off they waddle into the sea. Sean is in
ecstasy, and the reporter waxes philosophical, telling us all
what the incident has vaguely moralized, "leaving man to
ponder the proud boast that he alone is Lord of all Creation."
Commentary:
One unidentified woman in shades has one line; otherwise this
is a relentlessly male film. Despite the video box summary announcing
that "Papa Gorgo comes thundering ashore," the film
refers to the adult as "she"; so the one significant
female in the film is a destructive menace. And none of the military
metal phalluses work against her successfully.
We are subjected to endless footage of macho
military posturing, equally balanced between dutiful, dull firings
of weapons and idiots looking through binoculars. We see that
the British military is as stupid and boring as the American,
but theirs is at least offset by a certain silliness.
The "Gorgo," as the video box declares,
"is quite ferocious--except when he wiggles his ears."
Actually, the thing lumbers, and generally moves and holds its
arms in a manner strikingly reminiscent of Sammy Davis Jr.