5.7
In a tributary of the Amazon, a monster – half-man, half-fish – is captured and placed in a reservoir in a Florida national park to be observed by scientists.
John Agar
Prof. Clete Ferguson
Lori Nelson
Helen Dobson
John Bromfield
Joe Hayes
Nestor Paiva
Captain Lucas
Grandon Rhodes
Jackson Foster
Dave Willock
Lou Gibson
Robert B. Williams
George Johnson
Charles Cane
Police Captain
Loretta Agar
Woman on Boat (uncredited)
Bill Baldwin
Patrol Boat Dispatcher (voice / uncredited)
Jere Beery
Photographer (uncredited)
Ricou Browning
The Gill Man (in water) / Lab Technician (uncredited)
Diane DeLaire
Miss Abbott (uncredited)
Mike Doyle
Cop (uncredited)
Clint Eastwood
Jennings (uncredited)
Jack Gargan
Skipper (uncredited)
Charles Gibb
Cop (uncredited)
Brett Halsey
Pete (uncredited)
Don C. Harvey
Mac - Spotlight Party Leader (uncredited)
Tom Hennesy
The Gill Man (on land) / Marineland Diver (uncredited)
Don House
Diver (uncredited)
Robert F. Hoy
Charlie (uncredited)
Ned Le Fevre
Newscaster (uncredited)
Sydney Mason
Police Announcer (uncredited)
Robert Nelson
Dr. McCuller (uncredited)
Patricia Powers
Girl in Convertible
Bert Stevens
Search Party Member (uncredited)
Charles Victor
Policeman (uncredited)
Robert Wehling
Joe (uncredited)
James R. Wolfe
Man at Tank (uncredited)
Director
Jack Arnold
Screenplay
Martin Berkeley
Story
William Alland
July 3, 2020
5
_**Pedestrian retread**_
Released in 1955, "Revenge of the Creature" is an unimaginative reworking of the hit Universal film from the previous year, “Creature from the Black Lagoon.” The plot is the same: An expedition ventures to the remote backwaters of the Amazon and returns to Florida with a prehistoric man-fish, supposedly the last of its kind, but the ‘Gill-man’ and civilization don’t mix well. To make matters worse, the creature needs a whoa-man and sets its eyes on a lovely ichthyologist (Lori Nelson). The animal psychologist working with the creature (John Agar) assists authorities to save her and recapture the Gill-man.
Ms. Nelson makes for a quality substitute for Julia Adams with Ginger Stanley doing stunt work for both; meanwhile John Agar is suitable as the male protagonist. But this sequel feels hackneyed and lacks the hypnotic charisma of the original. I suppose it doesn’t help that the creature is revealed right away and displayed often, which hinders a sense of mystery and suspense. Still, if you like the first film, this is more of the same, just nowhere near as effective. The third in the trilogy, “The Creature Walks Among Us,” would come out the next year.
Interesting trivia: Clint Eastwood makes his film debut here in a cameo as a lab assistant.
The tedious film feels overlong at a short 1 hour, 22 minutes. It was shot in Florida (Marineland, Jacksonville, Silver Springs & St. Augustine).
GRADE: C
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$1,100,000.00