Up From the Depths | |
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Theatrical Poster
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Directed by | Charles B. Griffith |
Produced by | Jack Atienza Cirio H. Santiago |
Written by | Anne Dyer Alfred Sweeney |
Starring |
Sam Bottoms Susanne Reed Virgil Frye Kedric Wolfe Charles Howerton |
Music by | Russell O'Malley |
Cinematography | Ricardo Remias |
Edited by | G. V. Bass |
Distributed by |
New World Pictures Shout Factory (DVD) |
Release date
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Running time
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75 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | Unknown |
Up From the Depths is a 1979 horror film directed by Charles B. Griffith. The film, along with many natural horror films at the time of its release, was made due from the success Jaws and is even very similar to the latter film.
The staff and vacationers at a first-class resort on the island of Maui are beginning to mysteriously disappear. A biologist believes that an underwater earthquake has caused a giant and very hungry dormant prehistoric fish to be released from his slumber. Voraciously the fish helps himself to a tourist buffet. Now it's open season for the local fishermen to find the creature and kill it.
Charles B Griffith later called the film a "terrible experience".
We had it written by one of the typists or secretaries in the office who didn’t have any thoughts of becoming a writer. I think Roger did it to punish me, to send me out to The Philippines where I didn’t know what I was getting into. I was making an action picture, but The Philippines people were all so depressed, and they had made this goofy-looking fish with bug eyes. I told them that we’ll make it a comedy, and their eyes lit up! So I sent back a comedy on one plane, and I arrived on the next one. By the time I arrived, Roger had already cut 75 minutes out. As an editor would say, “That’s a set-up, that’s a payoff!”
I was hired by Corman's production company after the film was returned from the Philippines to add a few additional scenes to help salvage the film. This included shooting some B-roll fake shark monster footage off Seal Beach, CA. I was in the camera boat just out of the shot with my stuntman scuba diver who had a dorsal fin strapped to his back- that looked like a giant fin from the camera position on shore. My diver had just entered the water when suddenly there was a great thrashing in the water near the "fake" dorsal fin, and I heard on the walkie-talkie from shore, "Keep it up that thrashing and splashing it looks great!!" Whooaa!, a REAL seven-foot Thresher shark had suddenly appeared near the boat and was raising havoc in a school of baitfish near us on the surface! I decided not to tell my diver after he surfaced. (Ted Boehler, 2nd unit cameraman).
The film was released theatrically in the United States by New World Pictures in June 1979, and later followed onto VHS by Vestron Video in the 1980s.