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IMDb Rating
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6.7
The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms
BeastDVD
They couldn't believe their eyes! They couldn't escape the terror! And neither will you!
Directed By
Eugène Lourié
Produced By
Jack Dietz
Hal E. Chester
Written By
Lou Morheim
Fred Freiberger
Ray Bradbury
Daniel James
Eugène Lourié
Robert Smith
Starring
Paul Hubschmid
Paula Raymond
Cecil Kellaway
Music By
David Buttolph
Cinematography
John L. Russell
Editing By
Bernard W. Burton
Distributed By
Warner Bros.
Release Date(s)
June 13, 1953 (USA)
Runtime
80 minutes
Country
United States
Language
English
Budget
$210,000
Gross
$5,000,000

The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms is a 1953 science fiction giant monster film directed by Eugène Lourié, starring Paul Christian, Paula Raymond and Cecil Kellaway, and with visual effects by Ray Harryhausen. The film is about an atomic bomb test in the Arctic Circle that unfreezes a hibernating dinosaur, the fictional Rhedosaurus, which begins to wreak havoc in New York City. It was one of the first monster movies that helped inspire the following generation of creature features. 

Plot[]

Far north of the Arctic Circle, a nuclear bomb test, dubbed Operation Experiment, is conducted. Prophetically, right after the blast, physicist Thomas Nesbitt (Paul Christian) muses, "What the cumulative effects of all these atomic explosions and tests will be, only time will tell." Sure enough, the explosion awakens a 9.1-metre (30 feet) tall, 30.4-metre (100 feet) long carnivorous diapsid known as the Rhedosaurus, thawing it out of the ice where it had been hibernating for 100 million years. The only witness to the beast's awakening, Tom Nesbitt, is dismissed as delirious, but he persists.

The Beast starts making its way down the east coast of North America, sinking a fishing ketch off the Grand Banks, destroying another near Marquette, Canada, wrecking a lighthouse in Maine, and crushing buildings in Massachusetts. Nesbitt gains allies in paleontologist Thurgood Elson (Cecil Kellaway) and his lovely young assistant Lee Hunter (Paula Raymond) after one of the surviving fishermen identifies from a collection of drawings the same dinosaur as Nesbitt saw. Plotting the sightings of the Beast on a map for skeptical military officers, Elson proposes the Beast is returning to the Hudson River area where fossils of Rhedosaurus were first found. In a diving bell search of the undersea Hudson River Canyon, Professor Elson is killed by the Beast. The Beast eventually comes ashore in Manhattan. A newspaper report of the Beast's rampage lists "180 known dead, 1500 injured, damage estimates $300 million".

Arriving on the scene, military troops led by Col. Jack Evans (Kenneth Tobey) stop the Beast with an electrified barricade, blast a bazooka hole in the Beast's throat and drive it back into the sea. Unfortunately, it bleeds all over the streets, unleashing a "horrible, virulent" prehistoric germ, which begins to contaminate the populace, causing even more fatalities. The germ precludes blowing the Beast up or burning it, lest the contagion spread. Thus it is decided to shoot a radioactive isotope into the Beast's neck wound with hopes of burning the Rhedosaurus up from the inside, killing it.

When the Beast comes ashore and attacks the Coney Island amusement park, military sharpshooter Corporal Stone (Lee Van Cleef) takes a rifle grenade loaded with a potent radioactive isotope, (the only one of its kind outside of Oak Ridge, so pressure is on him not to miss), and climbs on board a rollercoaster. Riding the coaster to the top of the tracks so he can get to eye-level with the Rhedosaurus, he fires the isotope into the Beast's wound. The Beast lets out a horrible scream, thrashes about setting the park ablaze and finally crashes to the ground in its death throes.

Cast[]

  • Paul Christian as Professor Tom Nesbitt
  • Paula Raymond as Lee Hunter
  • Cecil Kellaway as Dr. Thurgood Elson
  • Kenneth Tobey as Colonel Jack Evans
  • Donald Woods as Captain Phil Jackson
  • Ross Elliott as George Ritchie
  • Steve Brodie as Sgt. Loomis
  • Lee Van Cleef as Corporal Jason Stone
  • Frank Ferguson as Dr. Morton

Legacy[]

The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms was the first live-action film to feature a giant monster awakened or brought about by an atomic bomb detonation to attack a major city. Due to its financial success, it helped spawn the genre of giant monster films of the 1950s. Producers Jack Dietz and Hal E. Chester got the idea to combine the growing paranoia about nuclear weapons with the concept of a giant monster after a successful theatrical re-release of King Kong. In turn, this craze included Them! the following year about giant ants, the Godzilla series from Japan that has spawned movies from 1954 into the present day, Behemoth, the Sea Monster (UK 1959, US release entitled The Giant Behemoth) and Gorgo (UK 1961).

In the 2008 monster movie Cloverfield, which also involves a monster terrorizing New York City, inserts a frame from The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (along with frames from King Kong and Them!) into the hand held camera footage used throughout the film.

Videos[]

File:The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms







Trivia[]

  • In the 1990 film, "Gremlins 2: The New Batch", Lenny and George watch a small part of the film on a computer. Well the film was playing, the computer showed a old lady getting eaten, both of the Gremlins laughed as if this was a joke.
  • In a Video on YouTube, called "GREMLINS FAN FILM - Gremlins 3 Warmup", was by a YouTuber call batgremlin. He spoofed this film. How batgremlin spoofed it was by Having a gremlin go on a computer, click on the film, then a gremlin version appeared, the version had a bunch of Giant Gremlins walking around New York, with a similar area. The reason "The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms" was chosen to be spoofed was because Gremlins show a scene from it.

External links[]

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