Alien from the Deep (1989) poster

Alien from the Deep (1989)

Rating:

(Alien Degli Abissi)


Italy. 1989.

Crew

Director – Anthony M. Dawson [Antonio Margheriti], Screenplay – Tito Carpi, Producer – Gianfranco Couyoumdjian, Photography – Fausto Zuccoli, Music – Andrea Ridolfi. Production Company – Gico Cinematografica/Dania Film/National Cinematografica/VIP International Films/Reteitalia.

Cast

Daniel Bosch (Bob), Julia McKay (Jane), Charles Napier (Colonel Kovacs), Luciano Pigozzi (Dr Jaffrey), Robert Marius (Lee)


Plot

The environmentalist Jane and her cameraman smuggle onto a tropical island to investigate the activities of the E-Chem plant. They obtain video proof that shows that instead of decontaminating radioactive waste E-Chem is dumping it into the island’s active volcano. They are discovered and pursued by the company’s mercenaries. A mysterious snake venom farmer aids Jane in her flight. They are then witnesses as an alien emerges from the nearby lake and kills all as it heads to the plant, drawn to the nuclear waste.


Antonio Margheriti was a prolific Italian director, usually known under the Anglicised pseudonym Anthony M. Dawson. Margheriti moved through most of the Italian exploitation cycles – the giallo psycho-thriller, the continental Gothic of the 1960s, the sword and sandal cycle, the 1960s spy film fad, the cannibal film, the 1980s sword and sorcery fad and the Italian space opera – in a career that ranged from the 1950s to the 1990s. Margheriti was nearly 70 at the time he made this Alien (1979) ripoff, his second-to-last film before he died in 2002.

Alien from the Deep is routine in almost every conceivable way. What is perhaps surprising is just how dated it is. The script uses old hat explanations, some of which have not been in use for a good thirty years. The alien is a standard 1980s ripoff of H.R. Giger but this sits alongside atomic energy threat themes from the 1950s and 1970s ecological concerns. Margheriti maintains the film passably during the chase through the jungle but it is otherwise uninteresting. The alien, for instance, is never seen right up until the end as anything other than a giant claw.

The alien monster in Alien from the Deep (1989)
The alien monster

Many of the pitfalls of the Italian B-movie are also present. There is bad acting – most notably that of the unnamed person playing the missionary. The dubbing/dialogue provides a number of unintentional howlers – “Now we will have some singing,” the missionary announces to his native congregation; “Don’t you touch me, you snake squeezer,” the heroine tells Daniel Bosch at one point.

Antonio Margheriti’s other genre films are:- the space opera Assignment Outer Space (1960), the space opera Battle of the Worlds (1961), the Gothic The Virgin of Nuremberg (1963), the Gothic Castle of Blood (1964), the peplum Devil Against the Son of Hercules (1964), the peplum Hercules, Prisoner of Evil (1964), the Gothic The Long Hair of Death (1964), War of the Planets (1965), the space opera The Wild, Wild Planet (1965), the spy film Lightning Bolt (1966), the space opera War Between the Planets (1966), the space opera The Snow Devils (1967), the giallo The Young, The Evil and the Savage (1968), the giallo The Unnaturals (1969), the invisibility comedy Mister Superinvisible (1970), the Gothic Web of the Spider (1971), the giallo Seven Dead in the Cat’s Eye (1973), the gonzo Western comedy Whiskey and Ghosts (1976), the cannibalistic Vietnam Vets film Cannibal Apocalypse/Cannibals in the Streets (1980), the adventure film Hunters of the Golden Cobra (1982), the post-holocaust barbarian film Yor, The Hunter from the Future (1983), the adventure film The Ark of the Sun God (1984), Treasure Island in Outer Space (mini-series, 1987) and the sf/action film Virtual Weapon/Cyberflic (1997).


Clip from the film here


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