Directed by Roger Corman and written by Charles B. Griffith, Creature from the Haunted Sea is a 60-minute horror-comedy spoof released in June 1961 by Filmgroup, Corman’s own distribution company. It parodies Cold War spy thrillers, gangster flicks, and monster movies—especially Creature from the Black Lagoon—with a deliberately absurd tone and a famously ridiculous sea monster.
Plot Summary
American gangster Renzo Capetto (Antony Carbone) is hired to smuggle a group of Cuban loyalists and their gold out of the country following Castro’s revolution. Hoping to keep the treasure for himself, Renzo concocts a plan to kill his passengers and blame their deaths on a mythical sea creature.
Unbeknownst to him, the creature is real—and it’s hungry. As Renzo’s crew dwindles, Sparks Moran (Robert Towne, credited as Edward Wain), a bumbling American spy posing as a gangster, tries to uncover the truth while falling for Renzo’s moll, Mary-Belle Monahan (Betsy Jones-Moreland).
Cast Highlights
- Antony Carbone as Renzo Capetto
- Betsy Jones-Moreland as Mary-Belle Monahan
- Robert Towne as Sparks Moran / Agent XK150
- Beach Dickerson as Pete Peterson Jr. (and the creature)
- Edmundo Rivera Alvarez, Esteban de Cordoba, and Blanquita Romero in supporting roles
Trivia & Behind the Scenes
- Famously made from black garbage bags, ping-pong balls, and seaweed, the creature is one of the most laughable in film history—intentionally so.
- Corman filmed this back-to-back with Last Woman on Earth and Battle of Blood Island, using the same cast and crew to save money.
- Before writing Chinatown, Towne acted in several Corman films and contributed uncredited script revisions.
- Much of the film’s humor comes from ad-libbed lines, especially by Charles B. Griffith, who voiced the creature’s inner monologue.
- A 75-minute version was later created for television by Monte Hellman, who added 15 minutes of new footage and a theme song sung by Jones-Moreland.
- The film mixes gangster tropes, spy parody, and monster movie clichés, making it one of Corman’s most self-aware and anarchic works.
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