Dagon (film)

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Dagon
Directed by Stuart Gordon
Produced by Julio Fernández
Brian Yuzna
Written by Short Story:
H. P. Lovecraft
Screenplay:
Dennis Paoli
Starring Ezra Godden
Francisco Rabal
Raquel Meroño
Music by Carles Cases
Distributed by Lions Gate Films
Release date(s) October 12, 2001
(Sitges Film Festival)
Running time 98 min.
Language English
Galician
Spanish
Budget $4,800,000
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Dagon is a 2001 horror movie directed by Stuart Gordon and written by Dennis Paoli. Despite the title, the plot is actually based on H. P. Lovecraft's novella The Shadow Over Innsmouth (1932) rather than his earlier short story titled "Dagon" (1919).

Contents

[edit] Plot

Two young American tourists, Barbara and Paul, seek help in a small town called Imboca on the coast of Galicia in Spain after their boat becomes shipwrecked. However, the inhabitants turn out to be far from friendly, and, as they discover, not even human, apart from a drunken tramp named Ezequiel. This latter (played by veteran Spanish actor Francisco Rabal - in what turned out to be his last role), tells Paul how the denizens of the town have overthrown Christianity in favour of the fish god Dagon, who has brought them wealth from the sea. Since that time they have mutated into fish-like forms and are in obedience to the beautiful mermaid-like Uxia. Eerily she has appeared to Paul in his dreams even before they meet and she saves him from being murdered by the locals. However, her plans for him, and for Barbara, unleash horror beyond all imagination.

[edit] Cast

  • Ezra Godden - Paul Marsh
  • Francisco Rabal - Ezequiel
  • Raquel Meroño - Barbara
  • Macarena Gómez - Uxía Cambarro
  • Brendan Price - Howard
  • Birgit Bofarull - Vicki
  • Uxía Blanco - Ezequiel's Mother
  • Ferran Lahoz - Priest
  • Joan Minguell - Xavier Cambarro
  • Alfredo Villa - Captain Orpheus Cambarro
  • José Lifante - Desk Clerk
  • Javier Sandoval - Ezequiel's Father
  • Victor Barreira - Young Ezequiel
  • Fernando Gil - Catholic Priest
  • Jorge Luis Pérez - Boy

[edit] Details

The plot presents several differences from Lovecraft's original story, such as:

  • The number of characters is increased.
  • The villagers in Lovecraft's story are the offspring of human breeding with sea creatures called Deep Ones. In the movie, their origin is vaguely explained. Also, in Gordon's version, the appearance of the creatures is quite exaggerated when compared to the original story, as they have additional tentacles or have them as replacements for their limbs.
  • The villagers skin and wear their victims' faces; while Stuart Gordon based this habit on research he had done about the ancient worshippers of Dagon, who wore fish heads, this doesn't occur in the original story.
  • Dagon itself doesn't appear in The Shadow Over Innsmouth; it does in the homonymous short story, even though it is only vaguely described. Its appearance in the movie seems to be inspired by another creation of Lovecraft, the tentacled Cthulhu.

Dennis Paoli wrote the screenplay back in the '80s, but he and Stuart Gordon never managed to get the movie off the ground. In early 2000, Brian Yuzna founded the Fantastic Factory division of Filmax and called them back to finally shoot the movie. The original draft was more faithful to Lovecraft's short story, being based in New England.

[edit] External links

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