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The Shape of Revenge: Revenge of the Creature and The Shape of Water

Since the release of Guillermo Del Toro’s The Shape of Water (2017), much has been said of its ties to Jack Arnold’s Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954). An aquatic man-fish, the love of his for a woman, and the beauty of the Other – all aspects of Jack Arnold’s masterpiece that reappear, reinvigorated, in Del Toro’s fantasy. Del Toro’s famous love for monsters frames the homage his film pays to Black Lagoon, but little has been made of what followed.  

In 1955, Universal chased the success of Black Lagoon with Revenge of the Creature. The sequel is, arguably, not of the same quality or power of the first film, but it does carry its own merit and subtext. Despite the many elements that link Revenge of the Creature to what features in The Shape of Water – from its visuals to its themes – relatively little has been said of the threads they share. That The Shape of Water owes much to this seldom-discussed sequel prompts a consideration of what the film has contributed to a rich legacy. Let’s take a dive back into the depths of the Black Lagoon, to examine the oft forgotten Creature sequel.  

Revenge of the Creature sees the Gill Man captured from his Amazon home and taken to the Ocean Harbour Oceanarium in Florida. There, the Creature is put on display with the other denizens of the deep as our characters attempt to acclimatise him to commands and control. Revenge sees none of the core cast of Black Lagoon return other than the titular Creature himself. In fact, we only meet our new protagonists fairly late in the proceedings: animal psychologist Clete Ferguson (John Agar), and ichthyology student Helen Dobson (Lori Nelson).  

Even more than in his debut film, the Gill Man is horribly mistreated. His Amazon river home is blown up as a means to capture him. He’s essentially kidnapped and taken to an enclosed, alien world where he’s put in chains. In the name of teaching him, he’s repeatedly jabbed with an electric cattle prod. 

The Gill Man in chains.

Revenge of the Creature develops ideas about Man’s abuse of the natural world from Black Lagoon. Revenge sees the Gill Man crying out in pain when hit with the cattle prod. It’s impossible to watch such scenes and not feel a sense of injustice. It’s a testament to the performances of Ricou Browning (the Gill Man underwater) and Tom Hennesy (the Gill Man on land) that such emotion is projected from the Creature.  

That idea of removal from one’s home to a cruel, alien world is central to The Shape of Water. The Amphibian Man of Del Toro’s film is (in a doubtless nod to the Gill Man) said to have been hauled back from South America, and is now the test subject of Michael Shannon’s stone-faced Colonel Strickland. In an expression of Cold War paranoia, Strickland probes the Amphibian Man’s body for secrets which may prove advantageous over the Soviets.

The visual cues from Revenge of the Creature are unmistakable. Both creatures are subjected to electric cattle prod torture, both are kept in chains around their wrists and ankles, and those responsible for their confinement are both poster boys for the post-war all-American man – albeit with differing moral connotations.  

Michael Shannon’s Colonel Strickland tortures the Amphibian Man.

The cruelty to which the Amphibian Man is subjected is central to the audience’s engagement to him as a character. We feel for him because Del Toro mercilessly shows us what Strickland, and by extension, humankind, is capable of inflicting. The tortured cries of these aquatic characters breach boundaries of Self and Other. They cease to be monstrous. They cease to be Other. Pain, as a horrid tool of subjugation, bonds us with them. This kind of narrative framing is traceable to Revenge of the Creature, both in the physical tools of torture, but, importantly, in the visceral reactions of the Gill Man and the Amphibian Man to their oppression.  

Also traceable to Revenge is the concept of emotional connection between heroine and beast. Although the idea of a forbidden love is visually represented in Creature from the Black Lagoon (notably in the gorgeous underwater framing of Julie Adams’ Kay, unaware that the Gill Man swims beneath her), it isn’t explored in the dialogue. Kay Lawrence, the target of the Creature’s affection, has little sympathy for him. Indeed, a scene in which Kay casually tosses a cigarette into the Black Lagoon hardly constitutes someone who cares for the Creature’s wellbeing.  

Meanwhile, in Revenge of the Creature, Lori Nelson’s Helen Dobson openly observes, “you know, I pity him sometimes. He’s so alone. The only one of his kind in the world.” While the film sadly doesn’t delve further into this discussion, its inclusion is noteworthy. Here is a character who sympathises with the plight of the Gill Man, acknowledging that his situation is one to be pitied. Helen has made a connection on some level. It’s this emotional groundwork that Del Toro fleshes out in The Shape of Water 

The Gill Man watches Lori Nelson’s Helen Dobson.

Sally Hawkins’ Eliza doesn’t just sympathise with the Amphibian Man, she falls in love with him. Through her experience as a disabled woman living in a world that isn’t accommodating, Eliza recognises the denial of the Amphibian Man’s humanity. Through her understanding of Self, she understands Other. She expresses the ultimate act of love, not in her romantic attachment to the Amphibian Man, but in her acknowledgement of his being as worthy of respect, dignity, and humanity.  

In Black Lagoon and Revenge, we do not have a character who actively engages with the Gill Man. Helen Dobson expresses sympathy in Revenge but this doesn’t develop to become an active effort to understand or defend him. The Shape of Water takes that sympathy and uses it to frame its lead. Whereas before, we as the audience felt for the Gill Man, Eliza is a character who can act upon what we feel. She is able to defend and care for the Amphibian Man in ways that we wished we could have for the Gill Man. She sees the Amphibian Man’s pain and wishes it to stop. She also pines to know him. Del Toro fulfils the destruction of the barrier between Self and Other. Once that barrier is gone, we see a life, a being, a person, that is worthy of acknowledgement – and in Eliza’s case, love. As John Henry Newman put it, “heart speaks to heart.”  

Eliza holds her chained lover, the Amphibian Man.

None of this would be possible without that which Revenge of the Creature or Creature from the Black Lagoon began. Even without explicit dialogue telling us to sympathise with the Gill Man in Black Lagoon, and beyond the significant but minimal sympathy from Helen in Revengewe still connect with him because these films, in the truest expression of the visual medium, show us the Gill Man’s humanity. When he cries out or writhes in agony, we feel that pain. 

Consciously or otherwise, we enter The Shape of Water with a recognition of the beauty in Other. We remember the pain inflicted on the Gill Man. Del Toro recognises this (undoubtedly remembering it himself) and constructs a character who will act to defend his film’s monster out of compassion. This character trait makes her immediately endearing, even before Del Toro, writer Vanessa Taylor, and Sally Hawkins add depth. The result is one of his most emotionally-charged films, owing much to what began in the murky aquarium of the Ocean Harbor Oceanarium.  

What Creature from the Black Lagoon began, Revenge of the Creature developed, and The Shape of Water perfected.  

This article’s header image was created by graphic designer and friend of Our Culture Mag, Colm Norrish. Please visit his website for further examples of his great work.

Albums Out Today: Coldplay, Leonard Cohen, Beck, Billy Corgan

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In this series, we showcase the most notable albums out each week. Here are the albums out on November 21th, 2019:

Image result for coldplay everyday lifeColdplay, Everyday Life: Coldplay are back with a double album titled Everyday Life following 2015’s uplifting but underwhelming A Head Full of Dreams and its 2017 companion EP, Kaleidoscope. The first half is called Sunrise, while the second Sunset. The album was first announced in a letter to a fan signed by all for members, which the fan initially thought was fake. “For the last 100 years or thereabouts, we have been working on a thing called Everyday Life,” it wrote, adding that the record is simply “how we feel about things.” An unnamed “insider” also told the Daily Star the album would showcase their “experimental side”.

Image result for leonard cohen thanks for the danceLeonard Cohen, Thanks for the Dance: This is a posthumous release from the late Leonard Cohen, consisting of “sketches” left over from the sessions for his final studio album You Want it Darker. They were finished by Cohen’s son, Adam, who stated: “Had we had more time and had [Leonard] been more robust, we would have gotten to them. [We had] conversations about what instrumentation and what feelings he wanted the completed work to evoke — sadly, the fact that I would be completing them without him was given.” The album also features appearances from Beck, Jennifer Warnes, Damien Rice, and Leslie Feist.

Image result for beck hyperspaceBeck, Hyperspace: Aside from contributing to Thanks for the Dance, Beck also has his own solo release out today. His first since 2017’s ColoursHyperspace features co-writing and co-production from Pharell Williams, which indicates another pivot in style for the versatile musician. It also includes contributions from Sky Ferreira, Chris Martin, Terrell Hines, and Paul Epworth, which makes it the most collaborative effort in his 30-year-long career. “The meditation of the record is finding peace in the moment. I was thinking about music as a kind of escape,” he explained in a statement.

Image result for billy corgan cotillionsBilly Corgan, Cotillions: The Smashing Pumpkins frontman has returned with his latest solo album, the follow-up to 2017’s Ogilala (officially under his full name, William Patrick Corgan). The album also follows The Smashing Pumpkins’ 2018 comeback with SHINY AND OH SO BRIGHT, VOL. 1 / LP: NO PAST. NO FUTURE. NO SUN. “There is a reason I trust you, the people who support me day in and day out, to decide whether or not my efforts are worthy,” Corgan wrote in an Instagram post. “We live in a different world now, where an artist can speak directly to you without the filter of mass media shaping your heart and opinions before you’ve even had a chance to decide whether this music speaks to you. And this is absolutely an album from my heart.”

Other albums out today: Pluralone, To Be One With You; Hannah Diamond, Reflections; Omar Souleyman, Shlon. 

Pyramiden by Jonathan May

Jonathan May, a photographer based out of Australia, presented an intruiging series which focuses on a small abandoned Soviet mining town Pyramiden.

Writing about the series May stated: I’m fascinated by people living on the fringes of society, and the haunted, abandoned Soviet mining town Pyramiden has been on my bucket list for the past eight years. 

Standing in Pyramiden, perched on a glacier, with guns out for polar bear protection and overseen by the Northern most statue of Lenin (78.6561) is terrifying yet inspiring.  The isolation and the desolation of the place is unmatched, the power, beauty and the decay all wrapped up in one scent while the blistering 100km winds pound on your face reminding you winter is coming.”

Find more work by Jonathan May here.

Dead Emerson Releases ‘Cold Summer’

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Dead Emerson, an LA-based musician, just yesterday released his new single Cold Summer. The spirited vocals and meaningful lyrics drive the song, showcasing the true talents of Dead Emerson.

Cold Summer is the second release by Dead Emerson, the first being Fools Gold.

Talking about the song Dead Emerson stated: “I wrote this one about a situation-ship — not really dating, but hanging out to a point where you start to feel like you need the other person, even if you’re not super romantically involved. After the slow fade of the situation-ship, I was feeling like there was something that I could have maybe done better or differently and was still wondering if the other person with felt the same…. but never got that closure. Here’s to that.

Stream Cold Summer via Spotify here.

Unreal Spaces by Guim Tió Zarraluki

Guim Tió Zarraluki, a painter and artist, based out of Barcelona, Spain, released a magnificent series of paintings back in 2017 named Unreal Spaces. The series showcases just what makes Guim Tió such a fantastic artist, subtilty and consideration. The utilisation of space and colour create a distance from the core objects of the paintings, making the viewer an observer and profoundly absorbed in contents of the canvas.

Find more work by Guim Tió Zarraluki here.

Personal Work by Katherine Lam

Katherine Lam, an illustrator based out of New York, revealed some of her illustrations which explore metaphysical colours and distant spaces. The raw textures and framing of each illustration bring a sense of reflection.

Find more work by Katherine Lam here.

The Stranger I Know by Marietta Varga

Marietta Varga, a photographer out of Hungaria, presented a brilliant and thoughtful series named The Stranger I Know. In this touching series, Varga explores the personal objects of a couple of strangers that she had no connection with.

Writing about the series Varga stated: “A few months ago I had the opportunity to enter the home of a couple that I did not know. A couple that is not on this world anymore, two people I never met. Standing in their home, without their own permission, surrounded by their personal objects, I had such a paradoxical feeling.”

Find more work by Marietta Varga here.

Sound Selection 076: Prospa come back with ‘Control The Party’

Prospa Control The Party

After a series of successful releases including their single Prayer, the beloved Prospa released a four-track EP named Control The Party. The EP continues with the raw and absorbing energy that is present amongst the other tracks of Prospa. A must-listen for club goers.

Justin Christopher Have Had

Justin Christopher, a Memphis, Tennesse born artist, revealed a superb single named Have Had. In this majestic piece, Christopher delivers a wave of irresistible energy through dynamic vocals and a well-produced track.

Mikael Delta Avatarism

Finishing off our 76th Sound Selection is Mikael Delta with his brilliant progressive house track Avatarism. In this warm-synth piece, Mikael Delta explores melancholy through the use of progression and melody. The overall composition is stunning and comes from a twelve-track album named Elation.

Flowers of Abyaneh by Eliza Malkhasyan

Eliza Malkhasyan, a photographer out of Armenia, released an interesting and educational series named Flowers of Abyaneh. In this series, Malkhasyan explores one of the oldest villages in Iran, Abyaneh. Malkhasyan looks into the village’s connection to nature and the “embodiment of lone and silent elderliness.”

Find more work by Eliza Malkhasyan here.

Albums Out Today: Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy, Celine Dion, Lady Antebellum, Tindersticks

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In this segment, we showcase the most notable albums out each week. Here are the albums out on November 15th, 2019:

Image result for bonnie prince billy i made a placeBonnie ‘Prince’ Billy, I Made A Place: After a series of cover albums, singer-songwriter Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy aka Will Oldham is back with the first album of original material since 2011’s Wolfroy Goes to Town. “What else is a person to do except what he knows and feels, which for me is making records built out of songs intended for the intimate listening experiences of wonderful strangers who share something spiritually and musically?” Oldham said in a statement. “I started working on these songs thinking that there was no way I was going to finish them and record and release them. This was a constructive frame-of-mind that protected the songs until this frightening moment when we let go of them and give them to you.”

Image result for celine dion courageCeline Dion, Courage: This is the 12th studio album from the Canadian singer and her first English-language album in six years following 2013’s Loved Me Back to Life. After the release of that album, Dion postponed her showbusiness duties due to her husband and former manager René Angélil’s worsening health. René Angélil passed away in April of 2016. Later that year, she released ‘Recovering’, a song written by Pink to honour her husband’s death. “I think I went through a lot. And life had given me the tools… to find my inner strength, to find courage, and to keep going,” Dion said, explaining the title of the album. Courage also includes the singles ‘Lying Down’, which features David Guetta and Sia, and ‘Imperfections’.

Image result for lady antebellum oceanLady Antebellum, Ocean: Country trio Lady Antebellum have released their ninth studio album, Ocean, out now via Big Machine Label Group. It was produced by Dann Huff, who helped the band return to their roots, so much so that it “felt like we were making our first album all over again.” Hillary Scott explained in a statement: “Ocean stands for all of the things that we think and feel when we hear the word. It’s parallel with those feelings, much like the songs about barely keeping your head above water and others that make you feel like everything is smooth sailing.”

Image result for tindersticks no treasure but hopeTindersticks, No Treasure But Hope: Their first album in three years, Tindersticks have put out their 12th studio album, No Treasure But Hope, via City Slang. “I felt we needed to be able to make something meaningful,” frontman Stuart Staples said in a statement. “The last two albums were gradually built to a point of being finished in our studio from moments of playing and recording together. When we figured out how to present the songs live, different things happened to them. This time, we wanted to reverse that – to do something that was about being committed to a song together in a moment.”

Other albums out today: Lil Peep, Everybody’s Everything; Molly Burch, The Molly Burch Christmas Album; Pumarosa, Devastation; Fall Out Boy, Believers Never Die – Greatest Hits Vol. 2.