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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Gorgo_(film)Gorgo (film) - Wikipedia

    Gorgo is a 1961 British [1] science fiction monster film directed by Eugène Lourié and starring Bill Travers and William Sylvester. The story of Gorgo is about a ship's captain and his pearl diving crew who, with other fishermen on an island and an orphaned boy, discover and capture a gigantic amphibious sea creature and take it to London for public exhibition.

  2. www.imdb.com › title › tt0054938Gorgo (1961) - IMDb

    Gorgo: Directed by Eugène Lourié. With Bill Travers, William Sylvester, Vincent Winter, Christopher Rhodes. Greedy sailors capture a giant lizard off the coast of Ireland and sell it to a London circus, inciting the wrath of the creature's much-larger mother.

    • (4.3K)
    • Horror, Sci-Fi
    • Eugène Lourié
    • 1961-03-29
  3. Gorgo (1961) - London, England, UK. Release Calendar Top 250 Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top Box Office Showtimes & Tickets Movie News India Movie Spotlight

    • Plot
    • Development
    • Production
    • Alternate Titles
    • Theatrical Releases
    • Adaptations
    • Technical Specifications
    • Video Releases
    • Trivia
    • References

    Captain Joe Ryan searches for a treasure off the coast of Ireland until a volcano erupts nearby. This damages his ship, so Ryan and his first officer and friend, Sam Slade, go see harbor master Mr. McCartin for repairs. The two sailors meet Sean, an orphan who serves McCartin. The boy shows them his collection of ancient Viking relics, and Joe gets...

    After the great success they had distributing Rodan in the United States in 1957, the King brothers sought to produce a giant monster film of their own. With Gorgo, director Eugène Lourié strove to atone for his first dinosaur film, The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, as the death of the Rhedosaurus had made his daughter cry.From the earliest stages of ...

    Gorgo was filmed at the MGM-British Studios in Borehamwood, a town in Hertfordshire. Location photography took place in London and Coliemore Harbour, an Irish port near Dublin. Production notes included on the VCI Entertainment Blu-ray show that the London scenes were being filmed in September 1959 and the Coliemore Harbour scenes in November 1959....

    Monster Gorgo (怪獣ゴルゴ,   Kaijū Gorugo, Japan)
    Gorgo: The Sea Monster (Gorgo: Havets Uhyre; Denmark)
    The Monster from the Abyss (Potwór z otchłani; Poland)
    Gorgo in the Footsteps of King Kong (Gorgo Auf den Spuren des King Kong; West Germany)

    A 141-page paperback tie-in novelization of Gorgo was published by Monarch Books in 1960 and was written by Bruce Cassiday under the pseudonym Carson Bingham. Charlton Comics also published a 23-issue Gorgo comic book series from 1961 to 1965. While the first issue was an adaptation of the film itself, subsequent issues revolved around the adventur...

    Shooting format: 35mm Eastman Color Negative, type 5250(spherical)
    Lab work: Technicolor (U.S.) (prints)
    Distribution format: 35mm Technicolor dye-transfer print (spherical)
    Aspect ratio: 1.66:1 (soft and hard matte)[a]

    VCI EntertainmentDVD (2000) 1. Region:0 2. Discs:1 3. Audio:English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono) 4. Subtitles:None 5. Special features: "Gorgo: Behind the Scenes" featurette (10 minutes), cast and crew biographies, photo gallery, theatrical trailer, unrelated trailers, liner notes by Tom Weaver 6. Notes:Aspect ratio is 1.66:1. VCI EntertainmentDVD (200...

    Numerous scenes that were outlined in the screenplay and novelization were cut from the film, likely for runtime and budgetary concerns. These include Sam and Joe being menaced by an octopus and a...
    Like King Kong in his debut film, Gorgois billed by the Dorkin Circus as the "8th Wonder of the World."
    Gorgo was featured on season 9 of the movie-mocking television series Mystery Science Theater 3000, with the unfortunately-named Dorkin Circus, the omnipresent radio reporter at the end of the film...
    Gorgo vs. Godzilla was one of several 40-minute films directed by John Carpenter in the 1960s, prior to the start of his professional career.Carpenter has never allowed these films to be screened o...

    This is a list of references for Gorgo (film). These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this:

  4. Feb 18, 2018 · 23/27 Great Winchester Street [NB this address is derived from the Planning Site Number (0700) and not captured from the Register] Erection of a 9 storey office building next London Wall with a 6 storey return next Great Winchester Street at 26 & 27 Great Winchester Street & 73 London Wall ("The Crown & Cushion" P.H.) Decided.

    • Where was Gorgo filmed?1
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  5. The Gorgo suit (the infant and adult are identical) is for the most part well-executed, although the jaw tends to flop open and the glowing red eyes, meant to look menacing, always look like electric light bulbs and not an organic feature. The thickness of the neck, needed to run wires and controls to the head, means Gorgo can never turn her head, but first-time viewers are unlikely to notice.

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  7. The film had its London Premiere on 27 October 1961 at the London Pavilion, the theater seen in the scene where Gorgo is being driven through Piccadilly Circus, and was double-billed with My World Dies Screaming. It went on its suburban London release on the ABC circuit on 27 November 1961.

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