Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, The
- Year:
- 1953
- 79 Views
This is Operation Experiment.
A secret base far north of the Arctic Circle.
Experiment was the code name for this
top-priority scientific expedition.
These men arrived here on X-day minus 60.
It has taken them the full
two months to get ready.
Today is X-day.
It is now H-hour minus 59 minutes.
There is less than an hour left.
The plane must arrive at its rendezvous
200 miles away in exactly 58 minutes.
There can be no margin for error.
There can be no second chance.
This is the rendezvous. The forward
observation post where scientists...
...and their aides double-check equipment
and wait for the plane's approach.
It is now H-hour minus 81 seconds.
At H-hour minus 75 seconds,
the radar antenna flashes the word.
There it is! Azimuth: 63 degrees.
Airplane sighted: 13 hours, 11 minutes.
Azimuth:
63 degrees.Speed:
Approximately 350 miles per hour.Professor Tom Nesbitt and Col. John Evans,
military liaison, tensely wait.
The timing is perfect, thus far.
It is now H-hour minus 56 seconds.
Every man here knows his job.
He does it quickly, efficiently, silently.
The men are ready.
The equipment is ready.
It is now H-hour minus 52 seconds.
Operation Experiment to Y-3-4-7.
Operation Experiment to Y-3-4-7.
Over.
Y-3-4-7 to Operation Experiment.
Now leveling off.
Ground speed:
360.Approaching IP.
The next 26 seconds will determine whether
these men have succeeded or failed.
Now we count the seconds.
Ten, nine, eight, seven, six...
...five, four, three, two, one.
Charlie, look!
Col. Evans, there's something
strange on the radar screen.
- What's the matter, Charlie?
- Right here, sir. A foreign object.
- It's gone.
- What's gone?
- I don't know, sir.
- It silhouetted like 500 tons, at least.
- Where is it, then?
- I don't know, sir.
- Are you sure we saw it?
- We saw something.
Maybe the shock tossed something in front
of the antenna. That must have been it.
Eight weeks of preparation,
and it's all over in a second.
Jack, when energy of that magnitude
is released, it's never over.
What the cumulative effects of these
atomic explosions and tests will be...
...only time can tell.
- You mean scientists can't tell?
The world's been here for millions of years.
Man's been walking upright for
a comparatively short time.
Mentally, we're still crawling.
This test will add to our knowledge.
Wouldn't you say so, Ritchie?
That's right.
Every time one of these goes off...
...I feel we're helping to write
the first chapter of a new Genesis.
Let's hope we don't find ourselves writing
the last chapter of the old one.
- You sound like a man who's scared, Tom.
- What makes you think I'm not?
Here are the figures, Tom.
We'll leave for the observation
post in about an hour.
- Good. Loomis?
- Yes, sir?
- Get the equipment ready.
- Yes, sir.
You gentlemen. The moment your Geiger
counters indicate heavy radiation, turn back.
Turn back? Colonel, we'll run back.
There isn't a hero in the crowd.
Post 16.
Shall we try to go around, sir?
No, wait here for us.
We'll go up on foot.
- What's your reading?
- 19.7. We'd better get out.
I'll check post 17. You take 18,
and I'll meet you back here.
Make it fast.
Sgt. Willistead.
What?
But they've gone on foot.
Okay.
What's the matter?
There's a blizzard coming up!
Tom!
Tom! Tom!
Tom!
Tom!
Tom, I can't move.
Something's wrong with my leg.
I'm coming down.
- Have they reported back yet?
- No, not yet. We're waiting.
Tom, Tom! Get out, Tom!
A monster!
- A prehistoric monster!
- Quiet, quiet. Don't struggle.
I'll get you out, George.
Don't worry.
Doc! Hey, doc!
Put him right over here.
- Give me my bag.
- Yes, sir.
And get some blankets
off those other beds.
How is he?
- Where's Professor Ritchie?
- Still missing, sir.
- What happened?
- We don't know.
We saw the flares and rushed to post 18.
The whole shore was breaking loose.
- We grabbed Nesbitt just in time.
Colonel, we have to get Nesbitt
to a hospital in the States.
- He's in a bad way.
- Right.
Get word to the main base.
Ritchie, I'll get you out.
I'll get you out.
The monster...
Hurry, it's coming!
Watch out, the monster!
The monster!
Hello, Professor Nesbitt.
How do you feel today?
Fine. Where is Col. Evans?
Did you reach Col. Evans?
He'll be here any minute now.
I'd like you to meet Dr. Ingersol.
He wants to ask you a few questions, if you
don't think it would be too hard on you.
- Questions?
- I'm a psychiatrist, Professor Nesbitt.
get to the bottom of this.
My story may sound fantastic, but...
Throughout history, people have claimed
that they've seen monsters.
There was the famous Loch Lomond
monster, you'll probably recall.
Then the green serpents
off the shores of Ireland.
But not one of them was ever caught
or even photographed.
I'm not inclined to let my imagination
run away with me. I'm a scientist.
All right.
Then it shouldn't be inconceivable to you...
...that the mind can withstand
just so much pressure.
The shock of seeing your friend dead,
your own predicament...
...was too much to bear. So that you
momentarily lost contact with reality.
It's a phenomenon which was
But Ritchie wasn't dead when
I got to him. He tried to warn me.
Two people don't share
the same hallucination.
Hello, Tom. How are you?
- Thawed out?
- Jack, I'm glad you're here.
I'm having a hard time convincing
them that I'm not an idiot.
I was in Washington making my report.
I was...
What did they say about the animal? I want
to be in on any expedition going after him.
Tom, I didn't tell them about the animal.
Why not?
It should've been in the report.
I went back to Post 18. I tried
to reconstruct what happened out there.
I couldn't find a thing.
No tracks. Nothing.
Nothing?
I'm sorry. I wish
I could say I saw something.
The blizzard.
There was a blizzard, remember?
The snow must have blown over
and covered everything.
- Check me out of here.
- You are in no condition to leave.
It's imperative that you have rest.
- How can I rest?
- I've encountered this sort of thing before.
You've undergone a tremendous shock.
You've got to stay in bed.
I see. And that makes it official?
I'm afraid it does.
So long. You do what the doctor says. We'll
get together when you're on your feet.
That won't be too long.
What about that sound I heard?
In your condition, it could have been
anything. The wind. Anything.
No wind ever made a sound like that.
Captain. Captain!
Are you daft, man?
- Good morning.
- Good morning.
What's going on
Oh, death and politics. The comic page
is the only thing that makes sense anymore.
I take it, then, that you advise
a dose of it after each meal?
- You quote me exactly.
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