Fish-Man Films (Genre)
Summary
This page lists films about "gill-men" or "fish-men"; a tremendous number of low-budget films of this type have been made since the original "Creature of the Black Lagoon", one of the earliest and most successful examples of the genre which would set many of the standard "tropes" for the sub-genre: typically, the Fish-Man lives in harmony with nature, undisturbed for aeons, before being discovered by modern science and industry, prompting the monster to rampage against bikini-clad beach babes. The genre sometimes borrows from The Island of Doctor Moreau, with mad scientists playing god by turning back the clock of evolution on modern man with fish- or lizard-serums and/or hypnotism. The success of Jaws (1975 film) injected some "tropes" from from that film and its clones into the Fish-Man subgenre, including greedy tourism bureaucrats and local businessmen taking the place of scientists and industrialists, and trying to cover-up the Fish-Man's killings and rapes on profitable luxury beaches and vacation spots, while working-class fishermen, rogue-cop rangers, and other 1970s anti-heroes try to stop the monster and save lives, and the 1980s would see such films begin consciously adopting less-subtle Green-friendly messages about Fish-Men heroes striking back on behalf of the environment against hunters, polluters, rednecks, capitalists, and other usual suspects....
Details
- TVTropes: (Fish People)
Film List
- The Mysterious Island (1929 film)
- Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954 franchise)
- The She-Creature (1956 film) (IMDB) - A mysterious hypnotist reverts his beautiful assistant back into the form of a prehistoric sea monster that she was in a past life.
- Swamp of the Lost Souls (1957 film) AKA Swamp of the Lost Monster (IMDB) - (Mexican) A disappearing body leads a detective and his sidekick into an encounter with a gill man.
- The Monster of Piedras Blancas (1959 film) (IMDB) - When a sea monster's appetite outstrips a lighthouse keeper's ability to serve it, bloodless and decapitated corpses start to show up.
- The Alligator People (1959 film) (IMDB) - A woman in a hypnotic state recounts to two doctors the details of a horrific experience from her past life that began with the mysterious and sudden disappearance of her husband.
- War-Gods of the Deep (1965 film)
- The Horror of Party Beach (1965 film) (IMDB) - Sea creatures created from radioactive sludge terrorize a beach community.
- Curse of the Swamp Creature (1966 film) (IMDB) - Geologists in the Florida Everglades stumble upon a mad scientist's secret lab and his experimental man-beasts.
- Creature of Destruction (1967 film) (IMDB) - A hypnotist is able to predict murders by a terrifying sea monster. In reality, he causes the murders through his lovely assistant, who is the reincarnation of the monster.
- Octaman (1971 film)
- Zaat (1971 film) (IMDB) - A mad scientist transforms himself into an aquatic killer.
- The Loreley's Grasp (1973 film) (IMDB) - "Loreley lives for centuries beneath the river Rhein and hunts humans during the full moon. When several girls from a boarding school are killed, a hunter is hired to kill the monster." Review at The Terror Trap (2.5 Stars) (Link) Review by Mitch Lovell at The Video Vacuum (3 Stars) (Link) Review by Gabriel Powers at DVDActive (Link)
- Spawn of the Slithis (1978 film) (IMDB) - A nuclear leak creates a mutant Slithis sea monster, which terrorizes the variety of pets, winos, and hippies who hang around Venice, California.
- Bog (1979 film) (IMDB) - Dynamite fishing in a rural swamp revives a prehistoric gill monster that must have the blood of human females in order to survive.
- The Island of the Fishmen (1979 film)
- Humanoids from the Deep (1980 film)
- Rana: The Legend of Shadow Lake (1981 film)AKA Croaked: Frog Monster from Hell (IMDB) - A young man returns to the scene of a childhood trauma involving an amphibious monster.
- Demon of Paradise (1987 film) (IMDB) - Hunters become the hunted when illegal dynamite disturbs the age-old slumber of a carnivorous lizardman.
- Leviathan (1989 film)
- House by the Lake (2017 film)
- The Shape of Water (2017 film) (IMDB) - At a top secret research facility in the 1960s, a lonely janitor forms a unique relationship with an amphibious creature that is being held in captivity.
- Cold Skin (2017 film) (IMDb) - A young man who arrives at a remote island finds himself trapped in a battle for his life. (Review1), (Review2), (Review3), (Review4)
"Lovecraftian" Analysis
Generally, the only link between these movies and Lovecraft will be in a superficial resemblance between the Fish-Men and Lovecraft's Deep Ones, and perhaps themes of interbreeding between Fish-Man and Bikini-Girl that, perhaps, are best not examined too closely. The main difference between Fish-Man and Deep Ones will usually be that the Fish-Man is more symbolic of nature, disturbed by blundering modern, civilized man, where Lovecraft's Deep Ones are typically more of a primordial corruption lurking just beneath the surface of everything Lovecraft held to be civilized, sane, clean, pure, honest (and, ultimately, Anglo-Saxon, aristocratic, conservative, asexual, and atheist in background and outlook....)
Associated Mythos Elements
- setting: typically locations where the interests of civilization, science, industry, and progress meet the savage beauty of nature's wilderness, in tropical islands, remote beaches, unexplored swamps, isolated lakes in the mountains, etc.
- race: "Deep Ones" - after a fashion
- race: "Serpent People" - after a fashion
- The following "tropes" are rarely (if ever) actually present in this subgenre, but might add a "Lovecraftian" twist to the basic story:
- organization/cult: Esoteric Order of Dagon, Cult of Cthulhu, etc.
- deity: Cthulhu, Dagon, Mother Hydra might be suggested as some likely suspects
- location: Atlantis, Mu, or other legendary "sunken city"
- location: Innsmouth or other corrupt, sea-side town
See also:
- Southern Gothic: (and more unusually its parent subgenre Gothic Horror) for related themes of watery, primeval genetic corruption that might be exhibited in the form of "degeneration" into fish, lizard, snake, or amphibian forms.
- Lovecraft's "Shadow Over Innsmouth (fiction)" is perhaps one of the more well-known examples of the use of "Fish-Men" in Gothic literature
Keeper Notes
- Keepers might get more mileage from subverting the themes and plots of these films by having a Lovecraftian theme (Man-vs.-Unknown, Man-vs.-Awful Truth, etc.) hidden behind the standard Nature-vs.-Man themes of the Fish-Man genre.
General Notes
Comments, Trivia, Dedication
Synopses (SPOILERS)