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Monstro Marinho

Título original: The Sea Bat
  • 1930
  • Passed
  • 58 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,3/10
311
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Charles Bickford, Nils Asther, and Raquel Torres in Monstro Marinho (1930)
AçãoRomanceSuspense

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe West Indies island of Portuga exists mainly for sponge diving. But the best area of collection is frequented by a very large manta ray. Nina loses her brother to the creature and is comf... Ler tudoThe West Indies island of Portuga exists mainly for sponge diving. But the best area of collection is frequented by a very large manta ray. Nina loses her brother to the creature and is comforted by a newly arrived minister, who seems very interested in an old poster offering a r... Ler tudoThe West Indies island of Portuga exists mainly for sponge diving. But the best area of collection is frequented by a very large manta ray. Nina loses her brother to the creature and is comforted by a newly arrived minister, who seems very interested in an old poster offering a reward for a convict recently escaped from nearby Devil's Island. More deaths attributed to... Ler tudo

  • Direção
    • Lionel Barrymore
    • Wesley Ruggles
  • Roteiristas
    • Dorothy Yost
    • Bess Meredyth
    • John Howard Lawson
  • Artistas
    • Raquel Torres
    • Charles Bickford
    • Nils Asther
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,3/10
    311
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Lionel Barrymore
      • Wesley Ruggles
    • Roteiristas
      • Dorothy Yost
      • Bess Meredyth
      • John Howard Lawson
    • Artistas
      • Raquel Torres
      • Charles Bickford
      • Nils Asther
    • 15Avaliações de usuários
    • 10Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos10

    Ver pôster
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    Elenco principal11

    Editar
    Raquel Torres
    Raquel Torres
    • Nina
    Charles Bickford
    Charles Bickford
    • John Dennis aka Reverend Sims
    Nils Asther
    Nils Asther
    • Carl
    George F. Marion
    George F. Marion
    • Antone
    John Miljan
    John Miljan
    • Juan
    Boris Karloff
    Boris Karloff
    • Corsican
    Gibson Gowland
    Gibson Gowland
    • Limey
    Edmund Breese
    Edmund Breese
    • Maddocks
    Mathilde Comont
    Mathilde Comont
    • Mimba
    Mack Swain
    Mack Swain
    • Dutchy
    Jimmy Dime
    Jimmy Dime
    • Sailor
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Lionel Barrymore
      • Wesley Ruggles
    • Roteiristas
      • Dorothy Yost
      • Bess Meredyth
      • John Howard Lawson
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários15

    5,3311
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    searchanddestroy-1

    Amazing adventure chiller

    I totally forgot this Wesley Ruggles' early masterpiece. Because, yes, for a thirties flick, the early talkies, this is a true tremendous piece of work. It may announce MOBY DICK, but of course at a lesser scale. I enjoyed this movie so much, and it is even more painful to realize that many other films of this kind will forever remain unknown, forgotten for good. This one, fortunately emerged from the darkness, from the depth - not of the sea - but from oblivion. Wesley Ruggles also directed CIMARRON, a gem of the western genre. The rest of his filmography remains mostly unknown, because there are so many silent features.
    4PeopleEveryWhere

    More of a drama than thriller

    This movie is SOOOOOO boring!

    The Seabat only has around 3-2 minutes of screen time and disappears for a good 40 minutes. I think it's false advertising.

    Bad acting from most of the supporting cast, unlikable characters, outdated depictions of native tribes, and probably Boris Karloff's worst movie.

    But there is a couple good things about the movie!

    The cinematography is dang good for the time, the underwater scenes look good too! At the end of the film when the Seabat gets shot with a harpoon it cuts to this beautiful shot of the Seabat jumping out of the water while the sun rises and the camera is placed on a high shot while on a 60 degree angle! It's one of the best shots in early sound films!

    If you wanna watch this one, skip to the last five minutes.
    5genet-1

    Above Average Early Sound Action Picture

    Wesley Ruggles began directing THE SEA BAT but Lionel Barrymore completed it. This would account for the contrast between the outdoor scenes, shot on Mexican locations, and the interiors, particularly a sponge-diving episode, filmed in the studio tank, and some dialog between Charles Bickford and Raquel Torres.

    The exteriors bear all the hallmarks of Ruggles - in particular a long tracking shot following Torres through the ramshackle village to the dock, where the sponge fishing boat is about to leave with her brother Asther aboard. The hand of Ruggles is also evident in the scene of Torres fending off potential rape on the rocky seashore, the star pulling a knife and snarling defiance at John Miljan and cronies as spray soaks her flimsy blouse (revealing a pre-code absence of lingerie.)

    On the other hand, one is inclined to lay at Barrymore's door an embarrassing voodoo sequence, with Torres performing an unconvincing dance, and also the scene where she tries to vamp Bickford as he stolidly studies the Bible.

    The casting, as often in early sound films, mixes talents on the way up with once-eminent silent performers working out the end of their contracts; Charles Bickford and Boris Karloff among the former, Gibson Gowland (GREED), Nils Asther (WILD ORCHIDS)and Mack Swain (Keystone) the latter. George F. Marion parades another of his excruciating accents, a serious rival to his performance in ANNA Christie as Garbo's father.

    Considerable effort has gone into creating the manta ray "bat",a towed semi-submersible on the order of "Bruce", the shark in JAWS. More whale than ray, it spouts, and overturns boats. This impressive piece of physical special effects, as usual with early studio productions, is uncredited.
    reptilicus

    It would have made a great silent film.

    I suppose people turned out to see an early talkie which not only had lots of outdoor footage but also underwater photography. THE SEA BAT is a good film but I think it would have been better had they made it about 5 years earlier as a silent as the characterisations and plot complications come directly from the silent days. The giant manta ray (a Sea Bat) is making life rough for the sponge divers on the island of Portuga (where everyone claims to be of Spanish descent but talks with French accents). This would have been enough for a plot but throw in a minister (Charles Bickford) who won't preach any sermons and stumbles through a funeral service picking passages from the Bible at random. It is not revealing too much to say that this fellow is an eccaped convict who stole a ministers outfit to get off Devil's Island. Now about this being a silent style film? Well the idea that a former pirate who broke jail and is hiding behind a ministers collar reforming just because he reads a few verses from the Old Testament is something you'd expect from D.W. Griffith, circa 1920, yet that is just what happens. Also the scene where the latest victim of the Manta (Nils Asther, best remembered from OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS, 1928) is brought back to port is staged exactly as if this were a silent film. The cast is a joy to see. Watch for Gibson Gowland (GREED) as a Cockney seaman, former Charlie Chaplin comic foil Mack Swain as a bartender, and look fast for a still-unknown Boris Karloff in 3 scenes as a sailor referred to as "The Corsican". The damsel in distress is Raquel Torres, best remembered from F.W. Murnau's docu-drama WHITE SHADOWS IN THE SOUTH SEAS (1928). The scenes of the giant manta are well done and convincing.
    5Fred_Rap

    Sin! Salvation! Sea Bats!

    Half-Maugham, half-Melville and all hooey, this tropical potboiler is chock full of sin and salvation, with a giant sting ray tossed in as -- I kid you not -- a romantic deus ex machina.

    The setting is a West Indies island where a bunch of grimy sponge divers lust after barefoot temptress Raquel Torres, who only has eyes for the beautiful (and, with his thick Swedish accent, virtually unintelligible) Nils Asther. But when he dies in the clutches of the title monster villain, she turns her back on God and offers herself as reward to the man who destroys the beast. It's a decision she quickly comes to regret, and as the body count increases, the guilt-ridden Raquel flails her arms and pounds her breasts with the frenzy of a silent movie diva.

    As if this plot weren't febrile enough, Torres begins falling for newly arrived man of the cloth Charles Bickford, who does his damnedest to resist her overtures since he's actually an escaped convict from Devil's Island.

    This awesomely wacky nonsense was concocted by the radical left-wing screenwriter John Howard Lawson without a hint of the political agitprop that infused his later screen work. The film, however, is not without interest: the camera work by Ira Morgan is sensuous and inventive (particularly when underwater) and the cast of scurvy Island rats is populated with such compelling character types as John Miljan (in a departure from his usual urban smoothie), Boris Karloff (as the glowering Corsican), and silent film veterans Gibson Gowland and Mack Swain.

    Interesses relacionados

    Bruce Willis in Duro de Matar (1988)
    Ação
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasita (2019)
    Suspense

    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Although resembling a giant oceanic manta ray, the Sea Bat has a blow hole like a whale (a mammal). The Manta ray is a fish, it breathes underwater thanks to its gills.
    • Citações

      Maddocks: [aboard the schooner] I've worked sponge beds all over the world. But this here island is the rottenest hole I was ever dumped in!

      Maddocks: The black scum spend all of their time prayin', and the white scum spend all of their time sleepin'!

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      Intro: Strangest of all strange sea creatures is the Giant Ray, a deadly specie of devil fish, found in the mighty, warm waters of the West Indies.

      "....a huge, bat-like creature which uses its body fins as a bird does its wings....known to lift a whole ship, to the amazement and terror of the crew!" (National Geographic Magazine)

      PORTUGA ISLAND Through the night....the weird chant of Voodoo worship. Through the day....the weird industry of Sponge Diving.
    • Versões alternativas
      Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer also released this film as a silent, with the titles credited to Philip J. Leddy. He was not credited in the sound version.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Sharksploitation (2023)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Lo-Lo
      (uncredited)

      Music by Reggie Montgomery and George Warde

      Lyrics by Felix E. Feist and Howard Johnson

      Sung by Raquel Torres a capella

      Played in the score at the end

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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 5 de julho de 1930 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • O Monstro Marinho
    • Locações de filme
      • Mazatlán, Sinaloa, México
    • Empresa de produção
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 58 min
    • Cor
      • Black and White

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