today
8:30 a.m. Audubon Society Field Trip See Event Description
read >9 a.m. Arcata Farmers' Market Arcata Plaza
read >9:30 a.m. Discovery Walk: Unknown Waterfront See Event Description
read >9:30 a.m. Manila Dunes Restoration Manila Community Center
read >10 a.m. Manila Dunes Guided Walk Manila Community Center
read >10 a.m. Library Book Sale Humboldt County Library
read >10 a.m. Dia de los Muertos and Mexican Folk Art Sale Private Eureka home
read >10 a.m. Final Arcata Farmer's Market Arcata Farmers' Market (off the plaza)
read >11 a.m. Donlin Foreman Dance Workshop Dell'Arte
read >2 p.m. Humboldt Coastal Nature Center Draft Trails Plan Walk Stamps House
read >5 p.m. Bati Zado and Show Redwood Raks World Dance Studio
read >6 p.m. The Tumbleweeds Chapala Cafe
read >6 p.m. Ali Chaudhary (jazz duo) Libation
read >6:30 p.m. Not Evil, Just Wrong Humboldt Area Foundation
read >7 p.m. Guitar Stan (country) Old Town Coffee & Chocolates
read >8 p.m. Guitar Orchestra of Barcelona Arkley Center for the Performing Arts
read >8 p.m. Stones in His Pockets Arcata Playhouse
read >8 p.m. A Christmas Carol North Coast Repertory Theater
read >8 p.m. Donna Landry Swing Dance Moose Lodge
read >8 p.m. North Coast Wind Ensemble Fulkerson Recital Hall at HSU
read >8:30 p.m. The Last Minute Men (international) Cafe Mokka
read >9 p.m. Ian McFeron Band (folk rock) Six Rivers Brewery
read >9 p.m. The Michael Paul Band WAVE @ blue lake casino
read >9 p.m. The Generatorz (classic rock) Central Station Cocktail Lounge
read >9 p.m. Taxi Bear River Casino
read >9 p.m. VJ Itchie Fingaz Pearl Lounge
read >9 p.m. Jack Ruby Presents + Blue Street + Acufunkture (DIY rock) Jambalaya
read >9 p.m. 2nd Annual Scorpio Bash The Red Fox Tavern
read >10 p.m. Music by DJ Sidelines
read >10 p.m. DJ Icy Hot Aunty Mo's Lounge
read >10 p.m. Jemimah Puddleduck (rock) Humboldt Brews
read >10 p.m. White Manna + Midday Veil + The King Salmon Duo (rock) Jambalaya
read >11 p.m. Radio Moscow (psychadelic blues) + Mosquito Bandito (one-man surf/garage) The Alibi Lounge and Restaurant
read >previous columns
July 10, 2008
What Remains: The Life and Work of Sally Mann
Director/Producer: Steve Cantor Stick Figure Productions/Zeitgeist Films/HBO Documentary Films “It’s ...
read >July 3, 2008
Helvetica
Directed by Gary Hustwit Plexifilm A documentary where a bunch ...
read >June 26, 2008
Get Awkward
Be Your Own Pet. Universal/Ecstatic Peace. This just in: Record ...
read >Photos
Creature From the Black Lagoon: The Legacy Collection
By William Kowinski
Universal
Has there yet been a remake of a genre classic that’s better than the original? Now they’re trying it with Creature From the Black Lagoon, slated for release next year. Do yourself a summertime favor and see all three Creature features from the 1950s, on this nifty two-disk set from Universal’s Legacy Collection series.
Radio actor (The War of the Worlds) and movie producer William Allard was at a dinner party with Orson Welles where someone told the story of a prehistoric man with gills like a fish who emerged from the Amazon River once a year to take a village maiden. Allard created the gill-man, and Universal released three films about him in rapid succession from 1954 to 1956 to take advantage of the short craze for 3-D. Now they’re preserved in glorious black and white as icons of a 1950s monster genre, and as still-fascinating movies for an age just as roiled in conflicts of humanity and nature, and the role of scientists between them.
Creature from the Black Lagoon was directed by Jack Arnold (the most cerebral and creative in ’50s genre films) and starred Richard Carlson as the Good Scientist and Julie Adams as the Girl Scientist. On the basic level, it’s a thrilling monster movie, which these ’50s directors at their best knew how to make — how to pace, how to reveal, use music and so on. And the gill-man is a unique creature still.
Knowing it would use the footage for more than one film, Universal splurged on underwater scenes, and these remain mesmerizing. Arnold returned to direct Revenge of the Creature, with a different long-legged beauty, Lori Nelson.
Even at the time, Allard and Arnold were aware of the mythic and even political dimensions of the underlying themes in these films. Though Richard Denning plays Carlson’s human rival for the girl in Black Lagoon, the main sexual tension is between the creature and the lovely Julie Adams. The film’s most famous scene is an extended water ballet with Adams swimming on the surface in a bathing suit that accents her long legs, and the monster matching her movements underwater. It’s Beauty and the Beast as a watery King Kong, in the depths of desire.
Another enduring theme of special interest in the Bomb-conscious ’50s was the proper role of science and scientists. In the first film, Carlson wants to study the creature in its habitat, while Denning wants to capture it and make money. In the second film, the creature is captured, and amidst the mayhem at a Florida marine park, this film accelerated an almost subversive examination of the dark sides of science. Conditioning the creature becomes tantamount to torture, and the monster finally rebels. Though the third film, The Creature Walks Among Us (directed by Jack Sherwood), is pretty low-budget and almost entirely recycles underwater scenes from the previous two, the story and acting are very edgy. There’s even a subplot of spousal abuse. The gill-man is again captive, and eventually is altered surgically to save its life. But with its gills removed, it can’t return to living in the water, while it’s still a monster on land.
The two themes — science and the darker depths of the human unconscious — come together at the end of the third film, when one scientist comments on human overreaction to the creature with the observation that, “We’re not so far from the jungle after all.” But Rex Reason, another perennial Good Scientist in ’50s films, adds: “We’re not so far from the stars, either. The way we go depends upon what we’re willing to understand about ourselves.”
The DVD extras are fun — the gill-man has quite a cult. The Black Lagoon commentary by film scholar Tom Weaver is the most informative, but Julie Adams and Lori Nelson have some interesting things to say.



















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