TSFO Octopus Arm: Monster from the Ocean Floor (1954)
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Dir.: Wyott Ordung
TC4P Rating: 4/9
Creatures: shark, octopus, and a monstrous octopus-like thing with a glowing eye.
Monsters, nuclear waste, girls in trouble, sharks... some of the essential elements of low-budget "B" movie thrills back in the 1950s. It helps even more if the girl is in a swimsuit and is wet half of the film, and if the monster is a giant octopus of some indeterminate species, and if the giant octopus has a single eye the size of a cargo hatch and the creature glows due to possible exposure to nuclear testing. And, oh yeah, sharks...
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Still, the filmmakers get a lot of mileage from several shots of lead actress Anne Kimbell's eyes freaking out behind her goggles when her tourist turned skin diver character encounters various creatures underwater throughout the film. Her character, Julie, is an odd one. She seems incapable of walking down the beach without fainting at the slightest provocation, but when no one believes that she has seen something out of the ordinary (especially the marine biologist who is obviously trying to get into her pants), she doesn't hesitate to go out diving by herself over and over again in dark, strange waters to find some evidence that she was right. I want to give Corman and Co. some credit for making their heroine so self-sufficient throughout most of Monster from the Ocean Floor, but then they keep reminding us they have her on the standard "fainting girl" leash, and tug her back to perform her required duties as a helpless blonde.
On one of these trips, she runs into a very large octopus -- not the monster of the title, though -- and her reaction at its sudden appearance jars her immensely. As the camera zooms in on her face, there is a drum roll on the soundtrack, and the camera cuts to a stock footage shot of a giant octopus, not really being menacing, just doing what it does in the water. But the camera cuts back to Julia's face mask and the sheer terror her eyes suggest behind it. Of course, she skedaddles, and when she reaches Steve on the surface, he tells her, "An octopus is the biggest coward in the sea." It is kind of cute, and unintentionally funny (I think) when he asks her how big the octopus is, and she just throws her arms out as wide as possible like a little child would.
After Julia finds out from the locals that the disappearances of villagers being attributed to an unknown creature off the shore begin in 1946, it doesn't take her (or us) long to connect the dots. However, what she doesn't realize is that she has become the focal point of the village's mob rule belief that the monster can be convinced to simply go away if the proper sacrifice is given. And Julie is that gift. While Julie wades into the water to begin a dive to find more information, Pablo runs into the surf, cuts his hand open, drips blood into the churning water, and then walks back to show with a satisfied grin on his mug. Since this is unlikely to do much in the way of bringing danger to the girl, it plays like a monumentally stupid scene.
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The shark appears to only be about five to six feet long, but it serves well as a momentary villain in the context of the film, even if all of the violence being attributed to sharks by the townspeople is really the work of the mysterious monster instead. Apart from the briefest of statements in Corman's book, I have yet to find any account of the filming of the shark diving sequence. If they were done in far more controlled circumstances such as in an aquarium or with safety glass, it might be more apparent, for it does appear they are truly in an ocean atmosphere. And that shark does invade Anne Kimbell's personal space more than once and quite clearly so. I find it surprising that they just decided to dive off of Catalina and waited to see what might appear and then use it in the film, but maybe this is the case. We are talking an ultra low-budget film here, and they probably just decided to shoot the works and see what they could get. If a shark molests the lead actress, then so be it.
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The cow scene leads right into the aforementioned shark scene. As I said, for a girl who faints at the sight of a cow, Julie has no qualms about diving in the waters of the Pacific Ocean unaccompanied, even when she has a burgeoning romance with a marine biologist who owns his own mini-submarine.
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A bit later, Steve and Julie go diving together, but of course, he is in the relative safety of his Aerojet while Julie swims along under her own power. This also means that as he showboats, he leaves his date all alone in the open ocean. This leads into the octopus scene, which awakens Julie's curiosity about what is going on this town.
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The creature starts to lurch its way towards Julie, who of course, is totally unable to swim away faster than the bumbling monster. He becomes trapped against a nook in the reef, and we get a closeup of the monster's head and eyeball as it peers in at Julie. Strange how the camera seems to be very clear as it points at Julie's panicked face, but even more foggy when trained on the monster. But here comes Steve in his rescue sub! His first pass at the monster gets waved off by a tentacle, but he turns the sub around and aims it straight at the giant head. He embeds the Aerojet fully into the monster's eye socket, and escapes out the top of the sub. Julie, and the village, are saved. The monster? Not so much.
Given the budget and varying talents at work, Monster from the Ocean Floor was far more involving than I expected. It's silly, the monster is even sillier, but I still rather enjoyed the experience of seeing it for the first time. (Until the other day, it was one of the few Corman fews I had yet to see.) And the shark scene was definitely better than I could have expected from such low-rent fare.
RTJ
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