Creature from the Black Lagoon In
Creature from the Black Lagoon, the last known surviving member of a race of amphibious humanoids which flourished during the
Devonian age, the Gill-man (as christened by Dr. Thompson) dwelled in a
lagoon located in a largely unexplored area of the
Amazon rainforest. The creature was apparently known to the natives, as the captain of the boat
Rita mentioned local legends of a "man-fish". '' After having found the fossilized remains of another Gill-man, a
marine biology institute funds an expedition to the Amazon in order to find more remains. Though the Gill-man reacts violently to the intrusion, he develops a soft spot for the team's only female member, Kay, and repeatedly tries to abduct her, going as far as building a makeshift dam to prevent their boat from escaping. After having killed numerous members of the expedition, the Gill-man takes Kay to his underwater lair, where he is tracked down by the remaining survivors and riddled with bullets. The Gill-man tries to escape by swimming deep into the lagoon, but dies from his injuries.
Revenge of the Creature In
Revenge of the Creature, which is set a year after the events of the first film, the Gill-man is shown to have survived and is captured by different scientists. He is sent to the Ocean Harbor Oceanarium in
Florida, and quickly becomes a huge tourist attraction. He is studied by an animal psychologist and his
ichthyology student. The psychologist's attempts at communicating with the Gill-man are hampered by his attraction to his student. The Gill-man breaks free from his tank and escapes into the ocean. It is not long before he begins stalking the ichthyology student and kidnaps her at a boat party. The Gill-man is soon tracked down by police and again is shot multiple times, forcing him to flee into the ocean. He again tries to swim away and supposedly dies from his wounds.
The Creature Walks Among Us '', as portrayed by Don Megowan In
The Creature Walks Among Us, after living for a short while in a
Florida river, the Gill-man is found again, and after a vicious struggle is accidentally
immolated. The Gill-man's injuries are so severe that his scales and gills have been burned away, forcing his captors to perform surgery on him to prevent suffocation.
X-rays on the creature show that he has begun developing a land animal's lung structure, so a
tracheotomy is performed, opening an air passage to the lungs, transforming the Gill-man into an air-breathing, nearly human animal. Dressing him in a suit made of sail cloth, the Gill-man is taken to a
California estate, where he is imprisoned within an electric fence. Though they initially try to integrate the Gill-man into human society, one of his captors frames him for a murder. The Gill-man escapes, kills the real murderer (although severely wounded by gun shots), and ultimately returns to an ocean he can no longer exist in.
Cancelled remake Producer
Gary Ross said in March 2007 that the Gill-man's origin would be reinvented, with him being the result of a
pharmaceutical corporation
polluting the Amazon. In 2009, however, the proposed director,
Breck Eisner, dropped out of the project. , the proposed remake has not been made nor greenlit.
Reboot Creature from the Black Lagoon was one of many films featuring the
Universal monsters that would have received a reboot as a part of Universal Pictures'
Dark Universe. The series would have brought Universal's monsters into a modern-day setting, beginning with
The Mummy (2017).
The Creature from the Black Lagoon had a story written by
Jeff Pinkner and a script written by
Will Beall.
The Mummy alludes to the existence of the Gill-man when Nick Morton meets
Dr. Henry Jekyll at Prodigium's base in
London and one of the objects has the Gill-man's hand in it. However, Universal cancelled preproduction that had begun on
Bride of Frankenstein which was to be the next film in the franchise, and postponed all plans for the
Dark Universe slate of films. ==In literature==