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Creature from the Black Lagoon

"From the Amazon's forbidden depths came the Creature from the Black Lagoon"

1954-03-05 Adventure 1hr 19m

When scientists exploring the Amazon River stumble on a “missing link” connecting humans and fish, they plan to capture it for later study. But the Creature has plans of his own, and has set his sights on the lead scientist's beautiful fiancée, Kay.

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Trailer
Amazon Video

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Creature from the Black Lagoon
Amazon Video

Watch on Amazon Video

Storyline

When scientists exploring the Amazon River stumble on a “missing link” connecting humans and fish, they plan to capture it for later study. But the Creature has plans of his own, and has set his sights on the lead scientist's beautiful fiancée, Kay.

  • Released
    1954-03-05
  • Revenue
    $1,300,000
  • Budget
    n/a
  • Runtime
    1hr 19m
  • Genre
    Adventure, Horror, Science Fiction
  • Status
    Released
  • Language
    English, Español
  • imdb-logo
    6.9
  • Production
    Universal Pictures, Universal International Pictures

Crew

Jack Arnold
Director
Harry Essex
Screenplay
William Alland
Producer

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Cast

Richard Carlson

Richard Carlson

Dr. David Reed
Julie Adams

Julie Adams

Kay Lawrence
Richard Denning

Richard Denning

Dr. Mark Williams
Antonio Moreno

Antonio Moreno

Dr. Carl Maia
Nestor Paiva

Nestor Paiva

Captain Lucas
Whit Bissell

Whit Bissell

Dr. Edwin Thompson
Ricou Browning

Ricou Browning

The Gill Man In Water (uncredited)
Ben Chapman

Ben Chapman

The Gill Man On Land (uncredited)
Art Gilmore

Art Gilmore

Narrator (voice) (uncredited)
Perry Lopez

Perry Lopez

Tomas (uncredited)
Sydney Mason

Sydney Mason

Dr. Matos (uncredited)
Rodd Redwing

Rodd Redwing

Luis (uncredited)
James Miller

James Miller

Old Man (uncredited)

Videos and Photos

Creature from the Black Lagoon
Creature from the Black Lagoon
Creature from the Black Lagoon
Creature from the Black Lagoon
Creature from the Black Lagoon
Creature from the Black Lagoon
Creature from the Black Lagoon

Movie Reviews

Reviews for Creature from the Black Lagoon
reviewer avatar

A Review by Dsnake1 7

Written by Dsnake1 on 2019-10-11

Creature from the Black Lagoon is a fairly straight-forward horror film, but even sixty-five years later, it still works. The movie play... read more

Creature from the Black Lagoon is a fairly straight-forward horror film, but even sixty-five years later, it still works. The movie plays on the fear of the unknown creature. Deep in the Amazon Rainforest, there might be some kind of ancient, half-fish-half-man horror that sets out to kill all humans who come into its territory. Maybe it even wants to steal away the women to continue living. That's a scary thought, in and of itself. When you add that to the movie's best quality, the score, it makes for some truly chilling, truly tense scenes. The whole film is well done, especially for 1954. The set design is fully believable, and the acting is solid all around. Julie Adams specifically does a great job. Even gill-man's costume was relatively well done, especially for the time.

reviewer avatar

A Review by John Chard 8

Written by John Chard on 2020-04-14

We didn't come here to fight monsters, we're not equipped for it. Out of Universal Pictures, Creature from the Black Lagoon is directed b... read more

We didn't come here to fight monsters, we're not equipped for it. Out of Universal Pictures, Creature from the Black Lagoon is directed by Jack Arnold, and stars Richard Carlson, Julia Adams, Richard Denning, Antonio Moreno, and Whit Bissell. The eponymous creature was played by Ben Chapman on land and Ricou Browning for the underwater scenes. The cinematography is by William E. Snyder and the score is composed by a trio of men, Henry Mancini, Hans J. Salter & Herman Stein. The story sees a scientific expedition at the top end of the Amazon encounter a Devonian Period amphibious creature. As the creature starts to defend its turf by attacking members of the expedition, in fighting begins to take a hold as the men argue about the best course of action to take. Should it be killed, or should it be captured for scientific research? Either way they need to act fast as the creature has taken a fancy to Kay, the sole female member of the expedition group. One of the better creature features that surfaced in the 1950s, Creature from the Black Lagoon was one of the film's made as part of the 3D craze that filtered out of Hollywood in 53 & 54. However, unlike many of those film's that were made in the format over those two years, this one has rightly managed to break away from its gimmicky beginnings to become regarded as a genre classic. There are many reasons why it is still well regarded and taken in appreciatively by newcomers. The story of course is nothing new, the old "beauty & the beast" theme can be traced back to the daddy himself, "King Kong". But much like Kong, Arnold's movie thrives within the endearing story by getting the audience to sympathise with the titular creature. He is after all only defending his territory, he was happy wallowing down in the depths, remaining undiscovered for many a moon. That he is fascinated by the considerable beauty of Kay Lawrence (Adams sexy and gorgeous), is no crime either. The amount of sympathy garnered for "Gill-Man" is helped enormously by the illogical actions of the humans; who in turn go diving and swimming where legend has it men get eaten! This coupled with their bickering about pro science or trophy hunting makes it easy to side with the amphibious one. It also helps that the film is pretty brisk and only runs for 80 minutes, there's no sags or pointless filler. Too many similar film's of its ilk labour until the monster shows up and all hell then breaks loose. But under Arnold's (It Came From Outer Space/The Incredible Shrinking Man) astute direction, atmosphere and unease is built up by ominous talk and sightings of the Black Lagoon-and only initial glimpses of the creature's scaly webbed claw; accompanied by the attention grabbing theme music. And when the creature finally reveals itself it doesn't disappoint for its an impressive creation. A half-man/half-fish creature covered in scales, resplendent with gills and with cold, dark featureless eyes. It also has great characteristics with a distinctive swimming style in the water, and a lumbering Frankenstein thing going on when on the land. A definitive monster that would be merchandised for ever after. There's also technical accomplishments away from the creature itself, notably with the memorable underwater photography by Snyder, who uses a portable camera to flow with the swimming sequences, while his shadow and light work down in the depths is memorably mood enhancing. The three tiered score is also one of the best to feature in a "B" movie schlocker, three different composers, three different emotional strands; nice. Then there's of course the definitive sequence, the sexy underwater flirting as "Gill-Man" swims below the shapely form of Kay, beguiled by her, it's love at first sight. He's not the only one beguiled, we all are, as was Steven Spileberg, who would homage the more dramatic part of the sequence in his opening for Jaws 21 years later. Whilst last but not least it should be mentioned that there are little asides to ecological issues in the piece, something Arnold was want to do. Two sequels would follow, Arnold would return for "Revenge Of The Creature" in 1955 and then the John Sherwood directed "The Creature Walks Among Us" would round off the trilogy in 1956. It's the original that still holds up today. 8/10

reviewer avatar

A Review by r96sk 8

Written by r96sk on 2022-01-01

<em>'Creature from the Black Lagoon'</em> is an entertaining flick from 1954. For a film made so long ago, it really does age nicely. Sur... read more

<em>'Creature from the Black Lagoon'</em> is an entertaining flick from 1954. For a film made so long ago, it really does age nicely. Sure some of the ways used to bring the creature to life look a little dorky in patches, but for the most part I felt the required creepiness - especially via the creature's face. It has the feel of a very well made production, which is little surprise given it's a Universal production of course. I also like how it has a sense of knowledge to it, who knows if it all adds up but it sounds the part at least. I enjoyed the cast, they all work well together onscreen. Richard Carlson, Julie Adams and Richard Denning are naturally the standouts, though I also found Nestor Paiva to be decent. Interesting to note that two people played the Gillman, with Ben Chapman on land and Ricou Browning underwater. The start of a trilogy, I'm keen to check out the two sequels.

Read Full Review (The thoughts and opinions expressed here are solely those of the reviewer.)
A Review by Dsnake1

Creature from the Black Lagoon is a fairly straight-forward horror film, but even sixty-five years later, it still works. The movie plays on the fear of the unknown creature. Deep in the Amazon Rainforest, there might be some kind of an...

reviewer avatar

A Review by Dsnake1 7

Written by Dsnake1 on 2019-10-11

Creature from the Black Lagoon is a fairly straight-forward horror film, but even sixty-five years later, it still works. The movie plays on the fear of the unknown creature. Deep in the Amazon Ra...

read more
reviewer avatar

A Review by John Chard 8

Written by John Chard on 2020-04-14

We didn't come here to fight monsters, we're not equipped for it. Out of Universal Pictures, Creature from the Black Lagoon is directed by Jack Arnold, and stars Richard Carlson, Julia Adams, Richa...

read more
reviewer avatar

A Review by r96sk 8

Written by r96sk on 2022-01-01

<em>'Creature from the Black Lagoon'</em> is an entertaining flick from 1954. For a film made so long ago, it really does age nicely. Sure some of the ways used to bring the creature to life look a...

read more