The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms

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The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms

The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms DVD cover
Directed by Eugène Lourié
Produced by Jack Dietz
Written by Fred Freiberger
Eugène Lourié
Louis Morheim
Robert Smith
from a story by Ray Bradbury
Starring Paul Christian
Paula Raymond
Cecil Kellaway
Kenneth Tobey
Music by David Buttolph
Cinematography Jack Russell
Editing by Bernard W. Burton
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) 1953
Running time 80 min.
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms is a black and white 1953 science fiction film directed by Eugène Lourié. The film's shooting title was Monster from Beneath the Sea. When The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, a short story by Ray Bradbury was published in The Saturday Evening Post, the producers were reminded by someone that both works share a similar theme of a prehistoric sea monster, and a lighthouse being destroyed. The producers who wished to share Bradbury's reputation and popularity, bought the right to Bradbury's story and changed the film's title. The movie was promoted as being "suggested" by a Ray Bradbury story. Bradbury would eventually change the title of his story to The Fog Horn when it was eventually reprinted. The monster of the film looked nothing like the Brontosaurus-type creature of the short story. A drawing of the creature was published along with the story in the The Saturday Evening Post.[1]

Creature effects by Ray Harryhausen.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

As a result of an arctic nuclear test, a fictional carnivorous dinosaur known as the Rhedosaurus thaws out of the ice and starts making its way down the east coast of North America. It arrives in New York where it manages to destroy most of Coney Island before finally being killed.

Contents

  • While trying to identify the Rhedosaurus, Professor Tom Nesbitt goes through the dinosaur drawings of Charles R. Knight, a man whom Harryhausen claims as in inspiration. Charles R. Knight died in 1953, the year Beast was released.
  • The dinosaur skeleton in the museum sequence is artificial; it was obtained from storage at RKO Pictures where it had been constructed for Bringing up Baby (1938).

  • This was the first film to feature a giant monster awakened or brought about by an Atomic Bomb blast and to attack a major city. Due to its success it helped spawn the entire "Giant atomic monster on the loose" films of the 1950s. Producers Jack Dietz and Hal E. Chester got the idea to combine the growing paranoia about the Atom Bomb with the concept of a giant monster after the successful theatrical re-release of King Kong in 1952.
  • Some prints of this film were tinted in sepia (rather than Black and White). Others had the underwater scenes tinted in green.
  • At one point there were plans to have the Rhedosaurus snort flames, but this idea was dropped before production began due to budget restrictions. However the concept was still used in the films movie poster.
  • Some early preproduction conceptual sketches of the Rhedosaurus showed that at one point it was to have a shelled head and at another point was to be a beaked Dinosaur creature. [1]
  • This movie had a production budget of $210,000. It grossed roughly $5 million dollars at the Box Office.

  1. ^ Jeff Rovin. The Encyclopedia of Monsters. New York:Facts on File, 1989.

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