The Sea Serpent (1985) Poster

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4/10
Spanish monster movie in which a huge , mutated serpent attacks fishers , tourists and a lighthouse
ma-cortes27 June 2013
Thrilling film in low budget plenty of chills , screams and lots of silly amusement . I admire creative effort to keep budget down , but this time is too little . It deals with an American Air Force jet carrying a atomic bomb is forced to drop it in the Ocean. Then , there takes place a nuclear detonation in the Atlantic that re-animates a giant sea monster . The creature terrorizes the Spanish coastline , capable of causing death and destruction . 1985 , Galicia , Spain , a sea captain , along with a seaman (Jared Martin) aboard a boat called ¨Alcantara¨ and set out in fishing when the strange monster attacks , being sunk and the crew devoured alive . Later on , the captain , whose ship was sunk by the monster , is condemned , but he escapes and join forces with an American tourist (Taryn Power , Tyrone Power's daughter) whose best friend was eaten by the monster in Estoril , Portugal . The couple goes to Lisbon asking for help a respected as well as likable professor (this film was Ray Milland's last theatrical feature) and both of whom team up to stop the beast .

"Hydra" is a humdrum adaptation based on monster movies from a story and screenplay by the same director , Amando De Ossorio . This is a middlingly entertaining European monster movie in the 50s style , though packs absurd situations and cheesy frames when takes place monster appearance , attacking swimmers, boats and lighthouses without mercy . ¨Sea serpent¨ is an atmospheric as well as eerie movie that contains bemusing scenes when appear the giant monster and take place his attacks in some ridiculously made scenes , including primitive special effects . The picture has numerous "older technique" FX such as transparency , miniatures , matte paintings, scale models , reverse-footage , trains and helicopter similarly to toys ; all of them were made by Amando De Ossorio and makeup artist Fernando Florido . It's a slight fun with professional make-up , naive special effects , functional art direction and passable set decoration by Jose Luis Galicia who designed several Paella Western . You will watch it and think it is either awful , hilarious, a masterpiece, or all three . It's a simple entertainment with embarrassing images , naive special effects , campy production design and evocative setting . Although critics do not appreciate much this picture ; however has a kind of loopy , Ed Wood quality that must be endured to be totally considered . The fable is mostly silly and laughable , though a few Naif effects and action are professionally made . Some illogical parts in the argument are more than compensated for the excitement provided by the monster appearance though some scenes are a little bit cheesy and ridiculous . While not a hit during its original run, the film has got a limited gossip , when reissued many years later considered to be one of the best worst monster films of cinema history .

"Hydra: Monster of the Deep" was lousily directed by Amando De Ossorio . Amando was a slick craftsman who began in films as a writer and assistant director and continued his career by making short films and industrial documentaries . He was one of the main directors of the Spanish horror boom in the 70s, specially for his quartet of films about the living dead Templars which started with his first great success and immensely popular ¨Tombs of the Blind dead¨ which to be continued by a trilogy : ¨Return of evil dead¨ , ¨Ship of Zombies or Blind dead 2¨ and ¨Blind dead 3 or The night of the sea gulls¨ . Amando owns his own studio and created and/or designed many of the simple special effects sequences you see in any of his many imaginative undertakings . Amando who recently passed away was a good craftsman who realized a lot of amusing as well as entertaining films . He displayed a varied career and specialized on all kind of genres as Western in "Rebels in Canada" and "Grave of the Gunfighter" , Monster movie as ¨Serpent of sea¨ and , of course, Terror as ¨Malenka¨ , The possessed¨ and ¨night of witches¨ . Ossorio also studied painting and photography , moreover, he also made his living as a painter of creepy images of the Knights Templar in his later years.
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5/10
Perfect for children of all ages ............
merklekranz23 July 2019
Hard to believe that "The Sea Serpent of Del Mar" is from 1985, as it easily eclipses present day C.G.I. monsters. I'd put this up against any Sci-Fi Channel movie. Here we have no green screen. Instead, prepare to be amazed as intricate toys and models are destroyed by the sock puppet serpent. The monster is clever, and victims meet a horrible death sliding down his throat, after carefully climbing into the creature's mouth. The toy boats, lighthouse, train, and helicopter, will seem familiar to kids everywhere. Not only that, this wonderful film contains no blood, no sex, and a script that a six year old can easily follow. The icing on the cake are the cartoons that follow the feature on the DVD. What more could a kids movie offer? - MERK
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4/10
Um... it was different. Kinda.
lost-in-limbo30 December 2018
A silly, yet lightly enjoyable low-grade Spanish sort of Jaws knock-off (even just listening to the rehashed John Williams' music score) that also provides shades of 1950s atomic monster films. How this sea serpent comes about, is presented in the dodgy opening set-up with some unintentionally amusing dialogue exchanges and over-the-top actions. The cause is that of a nuclear bomb being dropped in the Atlantic Ocean, where the radiation escalates the growth of an eel that goes on to terrorise the coast of Portugal. For some reason after hearing the witnesses trying to explain what they saw, I started to think of another possible outcome that maybe it laid dormant to be only disturbed by the bomb, but that being the case I don't think they would have made such a big deal that it was atomic.

"THE SEA SERPENT" (aka HYDRA) pretty much lives and dies on its goofy second-rate special effects, ridiculous plotting and ham-fisted performances (or better put dubbing). There's nothing subtle about it. Just look at those twirling beady eyes, as this hand-puppet serpent pops up from the sea?! Something which I wouldn't have associated director Amando de Ossorio, as he gave us the dread-induced, atmospheric "BLIND DEAD" films. Exotic coastal locations stick out, in spite most of the action occurring at night. When our titular squealing serpent isn't taking out its frustration on miniature models (the lighthouse being my favorite), or repetitively using flailing victims to floss its teeth - it can be fairly flat watching Timothy Bottoms (playing sea captain, and looking the part) trying to convince everyone of his monster story (even physically showing us in one sequence how this beast moves), although Ray Milland, when he does show up, evokes much needed stability.
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Hello coast guard, we are under attack by a sock puppet!
reptilicus3 June 2003
Just when you thought movies had stopped blaming nuclear radiation for evrything along comes this movie from Amando De Ossorio. Taking a break from the "Blind Dead" series Senior De Ossorio offers us science fiction with a touch of Cold War propaganda. An Air Force jet carrying a new type of atomic bomb is forced to jettison it in the Pacific. It explodes on contact (don't you HATE when that happens?) and quicker than you can say "Horror of Party Beach" a tiny fish mutates into the title character. He is a fearsome sight, huge white eyes, rudimentary wings, sharp teeth; he is as realistic looking as REPTILICUS . . .and that should tell you how realistic looking he is! Peoples reaction to hearing about the sea monster are pretty much the way people would really react. One man (Timothy Bottoms) loses his captains license when he reports his ship being sunk and his crew eaten alive. A woman (Taryn Power) who saw her best friend devoured, is put into a mental hospital! The two form an alliance (which in true tradition of movies turns into love) to prove the beast exists and talk a crotchety old professor (Ray Milland in his next to last role) into joining them. Watch for director Leon Klimovsky (VAMPIRES NIGHT ORGY) playing a Naval officer at a court martial. Actor Victor Israel (LA RESIDENCIA) shows up as a drunken night watchman long enough to get eaten. The action is great but don't expect eye popping special effects; miniatures are well done but obvious. The scene of the beast attacking a railroad bridge is still quite good, low budget or not. This is the sort of movie we used to go see on Saturday afternoon. Heat up some popcorn and watch this on a double bill with THE CRATER LAKE MONSTER and you will certainly have fun.
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1/10
If you like sock puppets
martoni6416 July 2007
and abysmal, over-the-top acting, you might enjoy this rubbish flick.Apparently atomic bombs makes life mutate in about a day or two (or according to other viewers, wake them up). Or so it seems. And apparently massive atomic explosions off the coast of Spain doesn't make anyone ask any questions at all. Coming to think of it, the plot doesn't make sense in any way whatsoever (why would evil sock puppets attack lighthouses?), so the nukes going off for no reason at all doesn't stand out too much.

OK, getting past this, and the fact that the "monster" is a glorified thing you make of socks in kindergarten, you may actually be able to stand this. But for once the complete lack of gore doesn't help, leaving the monster attacks in all their naked rock-bottom-budget "glory".

I doubt you'll be able to watch this though, so better stay well away.
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4/10
You're going to need a bigger boat!
sol-20 March 2017
'Hydra' -- better known as 'The Sea Serpent' or 'Serpiente de Mar' -- this low budget horror film involves an eel that mutates into a giant monster after exposure to nuclear radiation, terrorising locals boating off the coast of Lisbon. As one might imagine, the film has formed a cult following in Portugal as one of few horror movies filmed there, but the worth of the film is debatable. Firstly, the plot does not add up. The films opens with the Americans deciding to drop a nuclear bomb in the ocean to prevent Russia from realising they have one and retaliating, which is sort of logical; what isn't logical is them activating the bomb before dropping it (!), producing a giant mushroom cloud that the Soviet Union would have to notice! The film also features possibly the most blatant rip-off of the John Williams theme to 'Jaws' and the acting leaves a lot to be desired. Most vexing of all though is that the title creature is never very scary. When Timothy Bottom first sees the creature and shirks back, it is unclear whether he retreating in fear or simply shock at the second rate creature effects. For all its vices though, 'Hydra' is difficult to dislike a film with glow-in-the-dark fish and a local hospital that looks like a five-star hotel. The sardonic, near Kafkaesque dilemma Bottoms finds himself in also resonates, held responsible for sinking his ship as a result of being a soul survivor rather than acknowledged as a hero for warding off the beast. A scene where he wildly acts out the movements of the serpent in a hotel room (oops--hospital room) also needs to be seen to be believed.
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3/10
Good Badness #1: Sock Puppet From The Deep
Vomitron_G3 December 2009
This film has me seriously doubting again whether Armando de Ossorio was a good filmmaker or not... His BLIND DEAD films are praised by many fans. This I can understand. But wanna-be Gothic vampire trite like MALENKA doesn't show any signs from a gifted filmmaker. And that also goes for SERPIENTE DE MAR. It features horrible acting, a dumb plot, stupid events, a lot of other things you can expect from a bad monster-movie and also veteran actor Ray Milland, who does his best to mumble his way through this film while not having much of a clue about what he's doing in it. Apparently Milland was already very ill while shooting SERPIENTE DE MAR (his last theatrical feature) and going out with a ridiculous stinker like this, makes it all the more sad. One last appearance alongside Peter Cushing in a made-for-TV film directed by Roy Ward Baker (also in 1984) doesn't change much about it.

But the sock puppet/sea serpent is a hoot to behold. Watch it swirl up a lighthouse and crush it. See it destroy a harbour with miniature boats. Look at it demolish bridges and munch on charming miniature trains.

Good Badness? Yes. 3/10 and 7/10
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1/10
Note to the IMDB editor: Can I please give this less than a 1?
therealjohng6 January 2004
Warning: Spoilers
This is the worst movie I have ever seen. A movie that is about a stupid looking monster from the ocean that threatens a small town which has to be filled with the dumbest people on earth.

SPOILERS IF YOU EVEN CARE

They can't even kill the damn thing by the end of the movie. The movie ends and they're like, "Well, some day we'll have to kill it."

Avoid at all costs.
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2/10
Ray Milland didn't age well...and neither did this script
Vigilante-4073 March 1999
This has to be one of the most awfully scripted films I've ever seen. It's basically a remake of The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms (1953), but done with your standard snake-like puppet-monster instead of a sleek Ray Harryhausen creation. Combine the plot of that classic monster movie with the production qualities and acting level of The Creeping Terror and you have an idea of what this movie is like.

The movie is dubbed, although by the original actors (I think that the movie was originally dubbed in Italian for that countries audiences, then redubbed for US release), which just makes the movie seem weird...the sounds, like in a Japanese monster movie, just don't quite match properly to the action on the screen, even if the actors' lips are moving properly.

Poor Ray Milland...he's certainly come a long way down from The Lost Weekend or Dial M for Murder or any of the number of excellent movies he was in. Add this to his other sci-fi travesties (Panic in the Year Zero, X The Man with X-Ray Eyes) and you can see a once good actor fallen into a Boris Karloff syndrome...stuck doing really bad horror films in foreign countries just for the work.
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3/10
Beware: There Be Dragons Here - But Not The Exciting Kind. 1-2-Miss.
P3n-E-W1s312 October 2022
Greetings And Salutations, and welcome to my review of The Sea Serpent; here's the breakdown of my ratings:

Story: 0.75 Direction: 1.00 Pace: 0.50 Acting: 0.75 Enjoyment: 0.50

TOTAL: 3.50 out of 10.00.

I do love a good sci-fi creature-feature B-Movie. Regrettably, The Sea Serpent isn't one of them. However, it could easily have been - it has all the right ingredients; it was just undercooked.

The story Amando de Ossorio (writer and director) produces for the audience is your staple sea monster created by nuclear radiation. And as with all good sea serpents, it doesn't take the creature long to sink ships and gobble down seamen. Of course, in its haste for a quick mouthful, it leaves a few eyewitnesses around. One of which is a newly court-martialed captain, Pedro Fontan. Since he's reluctant to withdraw his account of the monster's attack on his fishing boat, they strip him of command and title. After securing the help of another survivor and beholder of the beast and an eccentric palaeontology professor, the threesome set off on the creature's watery trail. Will they be able to stop the beast? Capture it? Or eradicate it from the seven seas? So this should be an exciting adventure. It should, but it isn't. A primary cause is a meandering storyline and the horrid characters populating the narrative. They only aid in making it dull and unexciting. Even the two decent characters that pop up, the Professor and the Lighthouse keeper who plays cards with himself - a pretty humorous scene - cannot lift the tale from the treacherous waters of tedium.

Ossorio doesn't possess the skill to empower the story with his direction. If anything, it becomes more insipid. There's no pacing as such: He merely points the camera and shoots the scene. One of the worst segments is the court martial scenes. These are overly long: Had Ossorio cut it by a minute or two, the section's flow would've been smoother. Sadly, there are too many segments like this one. If he'd trimmed them all, the picture would've lasted only an hour or so, which in hindsight, probably would've been for the best. Another failure is the sea serpent itself. Even for 1985, the creature FX are poor, especially its ping-pong ball eyeballs. But I have to doff my cap to the effects crew because they deliver one of the best swimming serpents I've seen. The way it slithers snakelike through the ocean waters is respectable - nicely done, guys and gals.

Oh dear, what went wrong with the performers? The cast sports some top-notch names, and only Ray Milland and Jared Martin come across well. I even have a niggling feeling they dubbed Timothy Bottoms, as his voice doesn't sound quite right and misses most of the emotional slants. And the whole reading-a-shopping-list monotony pushes the film deeper into tedium's treacherous depths.

Therefore, I can't recommend The Sea Serpent for viewing - unless you're an insomniac looking for a quick cure. This wet water critter is one to stay away from - It Stinks!

Oh, bugger! The Sea Monster's sunk me boat and munched me crew. Who's gonna read my IMDb lists - Absolute Horror, The Final Frontier, and Monstrous now to see where I ranked The Sea Serpent?

Take Care & Stay Well.
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4/10
SEA SERPENT!
BandSAboutMovies30 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Also known as Monster of the Deep and Hydra, this movie is somehow from 1985 with a very 1955 concept: an American bomber drops a bomb into the ocean to keep it out of Russian hands and releases an ancient prehistoric monster. That beast destroys the ship of Captain Pedro Fontán (Timothy Bottoms) and his first mate Lemaris (Jared Martin), who refuses to tell anyone of the monster and cost Pedro his ship. While all that drama is happening, Margaret Roberts (Taryn Power) watches her friend Jill (Carole James) get eaten by the sea serpent and goes insane, but Pedro believes her and decides to break her loose because, well, look who am I to try and tell director and writer Amando de Ossorio how to make a movie? Oh, I didn't to ruin the secret, I mean Gregory Greens.

Ray Milland also plays a marine biologist, Jack Taylor shows up because it's a Spanish horror movie and then everyone just lets the Nessie swim off like no harm no foul. But hey - this has a giant water warm with big eyes headbutting a helicopter and if that doesn't make you smile, I have no real clue what will. You know how you will know that de Ossorio directed this? The monster screams every time it appears.

Director Leon Klimovsky shows up and somewhere along the line, you realize this is more Jaws than Godzilla. It's so ridiculous that you can't help but love it. I mean, most of the monster footage is a hand puppet. That's pretty great.
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10/10
Never dump nuclear residues into the sea...
f.gimenez6 December 2000
This strange horror/adventure film is worth watching it just for its main character... the sea-serpent. Yes, it´s a very realistic monster, at least to me. The actors are fine and the plot is quite intriguing. A nuclear bomb is the responsible for the giant serpent awakening and its rage... so never dump nuclear residues into the sea!!... that´s the lesson!!.
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7/10
Delightful 80's incompetence and cheese; "Hydra" be thy name!
Coventry13 December 2009
"Hydra – The Sea Serpent" is fantastic and downright brilliant entertainment. That is to say; at least if you're into stupid, cheesy, trashy, tacky and totally incompetent euro-Exploitation material. From the creator of some really great and highly respected European horror landmarks, such as "Tombs of the Blind Dead" and "The Lorelei's Grasp", comes this must-be-seen-to-be-believed piece of 80's incompetence that you simply cannot bring yourself to hate. The film begins with a really cheesy sequence of a military airplane, code name "baby", in contact with the radio base, code name "mother", and receiving the order to drop a nuclear bomb, code name "baby's bottle", in the Atlantic Ocean. The explosion instantly causes a regular-sized sea serpent, as the only living thing in the entire ocean, to mutate into a giant and radioactive monster. And yes, all this even happen before the opening credits! Even after the exhilarating opening sequence, the monster doesn't waste any time and promptly devours half the crew of a Spanish fisherman's boat and a female American tourist who thought it was a brilliant idea to go swimming in an unlit and unguarded area whilst completely drunk. Of all stupid people I ever watched dying in horror films, she deserved it the most! Her traumatized friend teams up with banished fisherman Pedro, but obviously nobody believes in the existence of a massive sea creature and they call in the help of the eminent professor Timothy Wallace; who actually should have been retired for at least two decades already.

"Hydra – The Sea Serpent" is indescribably entertaining for all the wrong reasons. Whenever the film attempts to be spectacular and terrifying, you'll find yourself practically laughing your lungs out. The monster is an adorably ridiculous sock-puppet who likes to twist itself around cardboard lighthouses and swallows entire mannequin dolls without even chewing. At a certain point in the film, the critter even manages to grab a helicopter out of the sky and munch it. Also, pay attention to the catchy but nevertheless knocked-off Jaws music whenever the monster threatens to pop its head out of the water. Okay, the film is too long in parts, especially since Amando De Ossorio insisted to provide the obligatory "let's-fall-in-love" montage and several more completely irrelevant sub plots, but overall "Hydra – The Sea Serpent" is the type of garbage I instantly fall in love with.
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A must see!
Paulo-1125 February 1999
I have a VHS copy of this lame film subtitled in Portuguese. It has some truly laughable scenes with a giant a sea Serpent engulfing a whole woman in the Tamariz beach at night...

On the underwater sequences the "monster" looks like a muppet!... A MUST SEE!!!
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8/10
Why such negative reviews on this film?
njt-6368711 December 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Unlike most of the other reviews, I personally enjoyed this classic 1980s film about a giant sea monster that, after awakening from an atomic bomb blast, goes on a rampage and begins attacking anything in its sight. It begins its attack on a sea vessel and sinks the captain's boat. He and a few of the crew manage to escape, but the rest of his crew is not so lucky.

He is under scrutiny from everyone who believes he was drunk for losing his ship due to other mishaps in the past. But, when a woman who witnesses her friend's death by the monster teams up with him, they set out to find someone who will believe them. Nobody does --- until they team up with a wise old professor.

The monster then attacks a lighthouse and kills the owner before turning its attention to a boat dock and kills the dockmaster. The man who witnesses the dockmaster's death is the captain's mate who now believes he was right all along and apologizes to him when he meets up with him later. The four of them now have to fight the monster.

With what? Flares. They don't intend to kill the creature...which is much better than other "monster movies" where it dies at the end...but, instead, they want to drive it away. When the monster returns, they put their plan into action, but not before it attacks a helicopter and kills the pilots inside. Then, it attacks a bridge and almost destroys a train in the process. The train manages to make it across, but the last car...a tanker car, I believe...becomes dislodged and explodes after splashing into the water.

The monster manages to escape and the professor assumes it may be heading for the United States. How I wish a sequel had been made showing it attacking some U.S. coastal communities. Anyway, the film ends on that note and the captain and the woman fall in love.

While this movie may not have the best special effects, it doesn't deserve the negative criticism it got. There's also a subplot where a survivor from one of the attacks is killed by some unidentified man who looks like a secret agent. He suffocates the survivor by putting a pillow over his face.

As far as I know, this film is either rated PG or PG-13 (depending on various sources). Considering the amount of violence and language depicted, I'd place my bets on the PG-13 rating.
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"Now, You're Here, Dumb With Shock! Just Great!"...
azathothpwiggins25 July 2021
After an atomic bomb is dropped into the sea, THE SEA SERPENT is created. While the monster is utterly preposterous, the true stars of the film are the inane dialogue and dreadful dubbing, making the proceedings seem almost dreamlike!

Timothy Bottoms plays a ship's captain who sees the creature, and Ray Milland has a throwaway role as Professor Wallace. All, while the monster eats people like anchovies, accompanied by its own JAWS-inspired theme music!

This joyfully wretched Spanish film is recommended viewing for all lovers of rock bottom cinema...
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The best thing to come out of Spain since the Armarda
sebpopcorn16 June 2010
Warning: Spoilers
When all four of the two engines fail on a jet there's big problems. The tombstone toothed pilot and his incomprehensible Jamaican co-pilot request advice from their air command, which has the threatening codename "grandmother". Grandmother orders them to drop their nuclear bomb into the sea creating a large explosion of stock footage. As any scientist will tell you this can only mean one thing - a giant monster on the rampage around the coast of Spain. This is all done in code so it sounds like "Grandmother here, calling baby, drop the bottle in the sea and return to auntie via brother-in-law". Apparently the Russians have cracked their code but I doubt anyone in the audience could. You get the jist of it though, big explosion and big funny looking monster biting the top off lighthouses and generally being a danger to shipping.

A sea captain who is constantly being asked if he's drunk and some woman set out to prove it's real, which is tricky because it's clearly a big glove puppet. My favourite scene was the courtroom case involving a 25ft fishing boat where even the clerk of the court was an admiral.

Funny from the first line onwards with masterful dubbing I give it 19/10 with a bonus point for every exploding rowboat taking it up to a respectable 30/10. The ending is especially good, take that Africa - one giant monster coming your way! Not our problem any more.
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Bland kiddie pic
lor_13 March 2023
My review was written in May 1986 after watching the movie on Lightning video cassette.

"The Sea Serpent" is a low-grade Spanish monster picture shot in 1984 in Portugal and Spain. Entry is aimed at youngsters who like watching miniatures (here in the form of boats, train, helicopter, lighthouse, bridge and monastery) and went directly to video cassette release Stateside.

Timothy Bottoms portrays Capt. Barrios, a seafarer given a second chance after an accusation of being drunk on a disastrous earlier voyage wherein the brother of Lenares (Jared Martin) was lost at sea.

In a prologue, a U. S. bomber in trouble drops an A-bomb in the sea, exploding it (stock footage of a mushroom cloud) so s to avoid the sophisticated weapon being retrieved by a nearby Russian boat. The explosion awakens a sea monster on the ocean floor, and said monster proceeds to destroy Barrios' ship.

At a naval hearing, disgruntled Lenares testifies that Barrios was drunk at watch again, and no one believes the captain's tale about a sea serpent. Stripped of his captain's license and subject to criminal proceedings, Barrios leaves Spain and heads for isbon after reading a newspaper story about a woman who reported seeing a sea monster there.

He finds her (Taryn Power) in a hospital and breaks her out, the tow of them traveling to a university to consult Prof. Wallace (Ray Milangd, in his final feature film) about the monster's legend.

After having seen the monster himself, Lenares turns over a new leaf and joins up with the heroes, the four of them going hunting. They singe the beastie when an oil car of a passing train falls on it and explodes, with the monster swimming away towards Africa, setting up (horror of horrors) the prospects of a sequel.

Since the monster is alternately hand puppet or a full-view Venus Flytrap-styled mouth for chewing hapless cast members, picture is obviously for smallfry only. Articulating in English but crudely dubbed, cast is bland and tech credits weak.
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