An adventurer hunting for treasure in Greece accidentally frees a monster that forces local villagers to sacrifice virgins.An adventurer hunting for treasure in Greece accidentally frees a monster that forces local villagers to sacrifice virgins.An adventurer hunting for treasure in Greece accidentally frees a monster that forces local villagers to sacrifice virgins.
- Sherry Grice
- (as Mary-Louise Weller)
- Dionysis
- (as Spyros Papafrantziz)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAccording to Mary Louise Weller, the people working on the film had to deal with uncomfortably hot temperatures (115-125 degrees), lack of shade, lack of water, lack of electricity, and lack of screens to keep out swarming insects. There was only one small restaurant in the local area. People making the movie attempted to stay cool by sitting in the ocean.
- GoofsWhen the boat appears to hit something and may be damaged, Frye jumps in the water to check the propeller area, and the ocean is clearly visible (10-15 ft. depth). When he surfaces, Neil says the depth sounder says they are in 300 ft. of water.
- Quotes
Frye: You crazy old devil. What *new* evil are you tryin' to conjure up now?
Nereus: Mr. Frye, there is no such thing as "new" evil. Evil is old, and has always been with us. And far from conjuring it up, the small ritual which you are witness to had its origins thousands of years ago and was designed to ward off, to placate evil - the same evil that you, Mr. Frye, have disturbed and aroused from its ancient sleep.
- Alternate versionsThe actual running time of the film is 87 mins. Many of the public domain VHS and DVDs only have the running time of 82 mins., with grainier quality. The 4K (Blu-ray) edition has the film completely restored from its original negatives with the original 87 mins run.
- ConnectionsEdited into FrightMare Theater: Blood Tide (2017)
The monster itself is hardly seen. Mostly we encounter it via point-of-view camera-work. When it is seen briefly, it doesn't in all honesty look that bad but I guess the film-makers thought otherwise. There are a couple of gory attacks in the water and a massacre of nuns at a monastery, while the chopped up remains of a victim are found on the beach. But mainly, this is a slow burner with little visceral material. I thought the plot strands about the ancient drawings that are found in the monastery that depict the monster was quite good as well and added a decent level of interest.
It never escapes the fact that it's obviously hampered by a low budget though but the exotic Greek location does add some worthwhile production value. And it also has James Earl Jones at its disposal too; seemingly he did the film in order to get a paid-for holiday. But much better is Deborah Shelton as the enigmatic woman who ultimately offers herself as a virginal sacrifice to the beast; she was very beautiful and added a welcome sensual aspect that didn't do the film any harm at all.
- Red-Barracuda
- Mar 13, 2014
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