Creature from the Haunted Sea


7:00 pm - 9:00 pm, Thursday, November 6 on KPVT YTA (2.3)

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About this Broadcast
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Roger Corman's burlesque of horror films concerns a sea monster that menaces a gangster party. Antony Carbone, Betsy Jones-Moreland, Edward Wain (pseudonym for screenwriter Robert Towne), E.R. Alvarez, Robert Bean. Charles Griffith scripted.

1961 English Stereo
Mystery & Suspense Horror Cult Classic Sci-fi Comedy Remake

Cast & Crew
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Antony Carbone (Actor) .. Renzo Capetto
Betsy Jones-Moreland (Actor) .. Mary-Belle Monahan
Edward Wain (Actor) .. Sparks Moran/Agent XK150/Narrator
Robert Bean (Actor) .. Jack
Sonya Noemi (Actor) .. Mango
Beach Dickerson (Actor) .. Pete Peterson Jr.
Robert Towne (Actor) .. Sparks Moran/Agent XK150/Narrator
Esther Sandoval (Actor) .. Rosina Perez
Sonia Noemí González (Actor) .. Mango Perez
Edmundo Rivera Álvarez (Actor) .. Gen. Tostada
Blanquita Romero (Actor) .. Carmelita Rodriguez
Jacqueline Ebeier (Actor) .. Agent XK-120
Kay Jennings (Actor) .. Spy at the Bar
Stanton Kaye (Actor) .. Cuban/Second Man Chasing XK150
Karl Lukas (Actor) .. Bartender
Charles Macaulay (Actor) .. Man with Walking Stick
Richard Sinatra (Actor) .. Man at Pay Phone

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Antony Carbone (Actor) .. Renzo Capetto
Betsy Jones-Moreland (Actor) .. Mary-Belle Monahan
Born: April 01, 1930
Died: May 01, 2006
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York
Trivia: Betsy Jones-Moreland is best remembered today as a statuesque actress and leading lady of the late 1950s and early 1960s, especially in the films of Roger Corman. Yet she was always a somewhat reluctant actress, even as she pursued a career in the field. Born Mary Elizabeth Jones in Brooklyn, New York, in 1930, she seems never to have considered a career in entertainment, or any particularly "public" profession, while growing up. She was an office worker and secretary, her sole contact with the entertainment business being the fact that the company she worked for owned the rights to several children's shows of the 1950s. She began taking acting lessons as a way of overcoming her basic shyness, and that led her to getting work as a showgirl, which resulted in her earning a role in a touring company production of The Solid Gold Cadillac. She ended up in Hollywood, starting with bit roles in major releases, such as The Brothers Rico and The Garment Jungle. She soon became part of Roger Corman's stock company, starting with The Saga of the Viking Women And Their Voyage to the Waters of the Great Sea Serpent (1957) and culminating with the title role in The Last Woman on Earth (1960) and the female lead in Creature From the Haunted Sea (1961). In between these quickie productions and some small-screen work, Jones-Moreland also appeared in one notable Western: André de Toth's Day of the Outlaw (1959). Her television appearances included episodes of Perry Mason, McHale's Navy, Have Gun, Will Travel, My Favorite Martian, and Ironside. Her most memorable television appearance was in the Outer Limits episode "The Mutant", in which she appeared as part of a space expedition that's endangered when one of their number encounters deadly radiation. Corman later used her in his first big-budget movie, The St. Valentine's Day Massacre (1967), and she followed this up with small roles in theatrical films such as The Hindenburg and Gable and Lombard. She closed out her career as a trial judge in a handful of episodes of the 1990s revival of Perry Mason.
Edward Wain (Actor) .. Sparks Moran/Agent XK150/Narrator
Robert Bean (Actor) .. Jack
Sonya Noemi (Actor) .. Mango
Beach Dickerson (Actor) .. Pete Peterson Jr.
Born: February 03, 1924
Roger Corman (Actor)
Born: April 05, 1926
Died: May 09, 2024
Birthplace: Detroit, Michigan, United States
Trivia: A former engineering student, Roger Corman entered the picture business as a messenger and ended up a producer/director after a stint as a story analyst and a brief detour to Oxford University. After returning to Hollywood, he saw an opportunity to make money and gain experience by making low-budget films to feed the drive-in and neighborhood theater circuits, which had been abandoned in large part by the major studios. Working from budgets of as little as 50,000 dollars, he quickly learned the art of creating bargain-basement entertainment and making money at it, producing and directing pictures for American International Pictures and Allied Artists. Five Guns West, Apache Woman, The Day the World Ended, It Conquered the World, Not of This Earth, The Undead, Attack of the Crab Monsters, Teenage Doll, Machine Gun Kelly, The Wasp Woman, and Sorority Girl were only a few of the titles, and they were indicative of their subjects. These films were short (some as little as 62 minutes) and threadbare in production values. (Reportedly, distributor Samuel Z. Arkoff used to look at the film footage at the end of each day of shooting and call Corman, telling him, "Roger, for chrissake, hire a couple more extras and put a little more furniture on the set!") But his films were also extremely entertaining, and endeared Corman to at least two generations of young filmgoers.During the early '60s, Corman became more ambitious, and made the serious school desegregation drama The Intruder. Adapted for the screen by his brother Gene Corman from Charles Beaumont's novel, it was the only one of his movies to lose money -- because few theaters would book it -- although it was one of the finest B-movies ever made. Corman also began working in color, most notably on a series of adaptations of Edgar Allen Poe stories starring Vincent Price that won the respect of younger critics and aspiring filmmakers alike. Corman also employed many young film students and writers during this period, including Francis Ford Coppola, Curtis Harrington, and author Robert Towne. His output decreased as his budgets went up, and Corman moved away from directing and into producing. In the 1970s, '80s and '90s, Corman was still producing exploitation films (such as Humanoids From the Deep), but his New World Pictures also distributed several important foreign movies, including Ingmar Bergman's Cries and Whispers and the groundbreaking Jamaican crime drama The Harder They Come.
Robert Towne (Actor) .. Sparks Moran/Agent XK150/Narrator
Born: November 23, 1934
Trivia: Robert Towne would prefer his appearance as the stick-like leading actor Edward Wain in the prententious Roger Corman post-apocalyptic effort The Last Woman on Earth (1960) be forgotten -- in addition to the film's screenplay, which was Towne's first. Despite this inauspicious beginning (and his follow-up starring appearance in Creature From the Haunted Sea [1961]), Towne appreciated the early opportunity afforded him by Corman, and remained with the producer/director to pen the screenplay for Tomb of Ligeia (1965) (two more scripts for Corman, A Time for Killing and Captain Nemo and the Underwater City, were heavily revised by others). From there, Towne could only go up, and this he did as script consultant for Warren Beatty's Bonnie and Clyde (1967) and as full screenwriter for Villa Rides (1967). After one more acting turn in Drive, He Said (1971), Towne made a good living as a screenwriter and troubleshooting script doctor. Towne's output ranged from the salty profanities of The Last Detail (1967) to the insightful glances at Nixon-era mores in Shampoo (1968) to the misty mysticism of The Natural (1984) to the dewy-eyed romanticism of Warren Beatty's 1994 remake of Love Affair. In 1974, Towne won a Best Screenplay Academy Award for director Roman Polanski's Chinatown. This film contained one of the few totally unhappy endings in the Towne canon -- for the most part, he prefers upbeat denouements, to the extent of overhauling the endings for the screen versions of Bernard Malamud's The Natural and John Grisham's The Firm. In 1981, Robert Towne made his directorial debut with Personal Best; more successful was the second Towne-directed effort, 1988's Tequila Sunrise.
Esther Sandoval (Actor) .. Rosina Perez
Sonia Noemí González (Actor) .. Mango Perez
Edmundo Rivera Álvarez (Actor) .. Gen. Tostada
Blanquita Romero (Actor) .. Carmelita Rodriguez
Jacqueline Ebeier (Actor) .. Agent XK-120
Kay Jennings (Actor) .. Spy at the Bar
Stanton Kaye (Actor) .. Cuban/Second Man Chasing XK150
Karl Lukas (Actor) .. Bartender
Born: August 21, 1919
Died: January 16, 1995
Trivia: Character actor Karl Lukas was most famous for playing "Lindstrom" opposite Henry Fonda in the Broadway version of Mister Roberts(1948). While he spent most of his four-decade-long career on stage, he also dabbled in television and the occasional feature film. Lukas made his screen debut playing the "inspector" in the Lucille Ball/Desi Arnaz comedy The Long Long Trailer (1954). His other film credits include The Watermelon Man (1970), The Shaggy D.A. (1976), and Memories of Me (1988). Lukas also guest-starred on such television series as Family Affair, St. Elsewhere, and Little House on the Prairie.
Charles Macaulay (Actor) .. Man with Walking Stick
Born: September 26, 1927
Richard Sinatra (Actor) .. Man at Pay Phone

Before / After
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