Wissenschaftliche Experimente gehen nach hinten los und bringen schreckliche Mutationen hervor: halb Mensch, halb Fisch, die ein kleines Fischerdorf terrorisieren, indem sie die Männer töten... Alles lesenWissenschaftliche Experimente gehen nach hinten los und bringen schreckliche Mutationen hervor: halb Mensch, halb Fisch, die ein kleines Fischerdorf terrorisieren, indem sie die Männer töten und die Frauen vergewaltigen.Wissenschaftliche Experimente gehen nach hinten los und bringen schreckliche Mutationen hervor: halb Mensch, halb Fisch, die ein kleines Fischerdorf terrorisieren, indem sie die Männer töten und die Frauen vergewaltigen.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Johnny Eagle
- (as Anthony Penya)
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It tells the story of a small fishing town that comes under attack from *Drumroll* humanoids from the deep, essentially the creature from the black lagoon looking fellows just darker and bloodier.
Full of gratuitous nudity, cheesy monster costumes and the tropes of the time I have to say they did an incredible job all things considered. Around this time the industry was saturated with b-movies like this and yet it manages to stand out from the rest due to a lot of competence behind the camera.
The practical effects are fantastic considering this is barely out of the 1970's, it's paced perfectly and the racial tension side story actually adds a lot to it. The needless animal deaths however I did not appreciate, that was overkill.
The cast are a host of vaguely familiar faces that you'll likely struggle to put a name to, they're a mixed bag ranging from great down to "Oh for the love of baby jeebus how did this person get the role?!!?!".
If you like your cheesy creature features this one is certainly recommended.
The Good:
Very impressive visuals
Well made little movie
The Bad:
Too much animal violence
Some questionable acting
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesAs the film was being finished up, producer Roger Corman felt that the picture needed more sex, nudity and monster shots throughout, so he ordered scenes shot that showed the humanoids attacking and ripping the clothes off of other nubile young women. Director Barbara Peeters, who was a feminist who hated that idea, refused to shoot the scenes. Corman said he'd hire a second director and get her feedback before using the new footage. She agreed to that. But Corman ended up never showing the new footage to her or the cast and other crew. They didn't see them until the preview of the film. Peeters was furious, protesting that they were inserted purely to show gratuitous nudity. Corman also edited out many of the scenes dealing with the plot and character development in order to make room for the nudity and more creature scenes. Peeters complained that it was no longer the film she made and wanted her name taken off. Corman said he'd do that but only if she paid the expense of redoing the credits. She wouldn't, so her name stayed on the project. Many years later, Peeters ended up watching the film on cable and admitted it actually ended up being "a fun little movie."
- PatzerOnce the humanoids break through the bottom of the dock, the commotion starts. And the first eight or nine seconds of screaming is "looped" and continually heard throughout the rest of the attack at the carnival.
- Zitate
Dr. Susan Drake: Hold it! We think we know where these things come from, but we have no idea how many there are.
- Alternative VersionenThe US Blu-ray release from Shout! Factory has the scene with man's head being ripped off intact.
- VerbindungenEdited into Das Nest - Brutstätte des Grauens (1987)
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Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 160 $