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Olive (Anna Dawson) is an extremely ambitious explorer and fearless
diver, so it's only natural that she hooks up with Dr. Fletcher who needs
someone to go as far down as possible to maybe encounter the actual
origins of all human lives, traces of which he suspects on the Ocean
floor. But then something goes wrong, Olive is attacked by something loses
communications, and ... she's pulled back up just in time. But Fletcher
fires her on the spot, as she has ruined his diving suit and thus cost him
lots of money. Thing is, Olive has brought something with her from deep
down, something that resembles an egg, but that she hides from Fletcher as
well as everyone else. Being out of a job for the moment, Olive returns
to her suburban home, where she lives with her fiancé Matthew (Daniel
Thrace) and (temporarily) her vagabond sister Ellie (Michaela Longden),
and she puts up a lab in the basement where she starts investigating the
egg ... and soon sees it hatch to reveal an octopus-like being, but one
she despite her best efforts can't classify. She tries to feed the thing,
but soon notices it doesn't live on fish or maritime creatures but blood,
preferably human. And then Fletcher finds out she has pretty much stolen
the egg from his expedition and wants to claim the creature back - so
Olive has no choice other than to feed him to the creature. And there are
more humans that get in Olive's way and eventually end up part of the food
chain ... While Olive grows more and more absorbed by the thing, Matthew
and Ellie start to worry, but she blocks them off, and when once Ellie
enters the lab without permission (and finds nothing), Olive throws a fit
- also because she doesn't want her sister to end up meat for her
creature. Olive also starts to have weird visions about the creature she's
harbouring, and what it's true meaning might be - and all the while,
Matthew and Ellie grow closer and closer because of being shut out by
Olive - a dangerous combination indeed ... Quite obviously, The
Creature Below was inspired by H.P. Lovecraft's myths of the "Old
Gods" more than a bit, due to its blend of the monstruous and the
divine, and to prove that, a couple of Cthulhu
references can be found thrown into the film. But while the source
material might not be all that disguised, the approach to the story as
such is rather fresh, as despite it being a monster movie quite obviously,
and one that has a psycho thriller angle to it, too, it does have some
very lyrical moments to it that help one to identify with the film's lead
Olive, who admittedly totally loses it - but one does get her reasons for
it, she's not just some psycho bitch but also a caring mother, so one
can't blame her for being irritated at least. Sure she does wrong, but in
her head it's for the right reasons. And with the movie being carried by a
very competent cast and a solid and subtle directorial effort, one can
expect a pretty cool and rather unlikely monster movie.
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