Rhedosaurus: Difference between revisions

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(Now with like 40% more Ray Bradbury! (This took way too long))
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|type1            =Steel
|type1            =Steel
|type2            =Machine
|type2            =Machine
|image            =Rhedobox.png
|altimage        =<tabs style="color:black; padding: 0px; margin: 0px;">
|caption          =Production picture of the Rhedosaurus model used in The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms
<tab name="TBf2KF">[[File:Rhedobox.png|300px|Production picture of the Rhedosaurus model used in The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms|alt=Production picture of the Rhedosaurus model used in The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms]]</tab>
<tab name="TFH">[[File:47621 lgjamesbingham.jpeg|300px|A painting depicting the sea monster's attack by James Bingham]]</tab>
</tabs>
|name            =''Rhedosaurus''
|name            =''Rhedosaurus''
|dt              =''Rhedosaurus''
|dt              =''Rhedosaurus''
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|roar            ='''[[The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms|1953]]''':[[File:Rhedosaurus Roar.ogg|center|180px|noicon]]'''[[wikipedia:Planet of Dinosaurs|1977]]''':[[File:PoDRhedo roar.ogg|center|180px|noicon]]{{More Roars}}
|roar            ='''[[The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms|1953]]''':[[File:Rhedosaurus Roar.ogg|center|180px|noicon]]'''[[wikipedia:Planet of Dinosaurs|1977]]''':[[File:PoDRhedo roar.ogg|center|180px|noicon]]{{More Roars}}
}}
}}
The '''''Rhedosaurus''''' is a giant fictional dinosaur who serves as the antagonist of the [[1953]] [[United States|America]]n [[kaiju|giant monster]] [[:Category:Films|film]] ''[[The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms]]''.
The '''''Rhedosaurus''''' is a giant fictional dinosaur who serves as the antagonist of the [[1953]] [[United States|America]]n [[kaiju|giant monster]] [[:Category:Films|film]] ''[[The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms]]'' and short story [[The Fog Horn]].
{{TOC|limit=2}}
{{TOC|limit=2}}
==Name==
==Name==
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==Design==
==Design==
The ''Rhedosaurus'' has a quadrupedal build, with a long tail and forelimbs noticeably longer than its hindlimbs. Its back is adorned with a single row of backward-facing spikes that continue from its scalp to its tail. Crocodilian scales line down its underside while bumpy, pebble-like scales cover the remainder of the body. Its snout is short with large nostrils and noticeable fangs.
The ''Rhedosaurus'' has a quadrupedal build, with a long tail and forelimbs noticeably longer than its hindlimbs. Its back is adorned with a single row of backward-facing spikes that continue from its scalp to its tail. Crocodilian scales line down its underside while bumpy, pebble-like scales cover the remainder of the body. Its snout is short with large nostrils and noticeable fangs.
In [[The Fog Horn]] it has a forty-foot long neck, a body covered in crayfish and other sea life, and a tail only barely seen. It is about 90-100 feet in all.<ref name="">{{cite book|title=R is for Rocket |last=Brabury |first=Ray |date=1974}}</ref>


In ''[[wikipedia:Planet of Dinosaurs|Planet of Dinosaurs]]'', the ''Rhedosaurus'' has a slimmer skull and a slightly longer neck. Its skin is brown.
In ''[[wikipedia:Planet of Dinosaurs|Planet of Dinosaurs]]'', the ''Rhedosaurus'' has a slimmer skull and a slightly longer neck. Its skin is brown.
==Origins==
==Origins==
In ''[[The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms]]'', the ''Rhedosaurus'' was the only surviving member of its species, buried beneath the ice in the Arctic for 100 million years until it was reawakened by a nuclear bomb test in the modern day.
In ''[[The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms]]'', the ''Rhedosaurus'' was the only surviving member of its species, buried beneath the ice in the Arctic for 100 million years until it was reawakened by a nuclear bomb test in the modern day.
==History==
==History==
===''[[The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms]]''===
===''[[The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms]]''===
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==Short stories==
==Short stories==
==="[[The Fog Horn]]"===
==="[[The Fog Horn]]"===
To be added.
In the short story The Fog Horn, which was adapted as [[The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms]], a large, dinosaur-like creature with a longer neck, but otherwise similar to the Rhedosaurus appears from the depths, attracted to a lighthouse and the sound of its fog horn.<ref name="">{{cite book|title=R is for Rocket |last=Brabury |first=Ray |date=1974}}</ref> The creature first appeared one year, only circling the light house, before leaving and a sunny day to occur soon after. Exactly one year later, the creature reappears and started calling out to the lighthouse. When the fog horn stopped calling back, the creature attacked and destroyed the lighthouse, never to return.
<!--Johnny and McDunn are working at a remote lighthouse one cold November evening. McDunn says he has seen a monster for the past three years, and this is the first time anyone else has been with him to witness it. He tells Johnny to wait and watch. Half an hour passes with little conversation. As McDunn begins his discussion of theories, he suggests it is the fog horn itself that beckons this thing to the lighthouse as it blows.
 
McDunn interrupts Johnny as he points out a mass swimming towards the lighthouse. Upon rising, it reveals a large head attached to a long-necked reptilian body. Johnny estimates that it is 90 or 100 feet tall. When he sees the beast, he is flabbergasted, exclaiming it is impossible. As the beast continues to swim, Johnny remarks that the creature is a dinosaur that should have died out long ago. McDunn retorts, saying "it is them who is impossible, for they have changed over millions of years while the beast has stayed the same." McDunn says the creature has been able to survive even in the deepest parts of the ocean.
 
Johnny asks what to do in a panic. He is told by McDunn that it is safer to work in the lighthouse than on a boat. As Johnny asks why this creature is here, the creature replies with the same cry as the fog horn. McDunn believes that the creature comes every year from the bottom of the ocean, possibly the last of its kind, and that it is attracted to the shore by the sound of the fog horn. He later speaks about the monster’s appearance the previous year. The creature swam around and around all night while coming close to the lighthouse. After leaving the following day, McDunn speculated that the creature went off to brood for a year.
 
As the fog horn blows again, the monster rushes towards the lighthouse. The beast was then stopped in its tracks as McDunn switched it off. Johnny demands that McDunn turn back on the fog horn out of frustration. He fumbles to switch it back on. As the fog horn blows again, the beast rears up and claws at the lighthouse. It returns a cry as it seizes the tower and gnashes at the windows, shattering them. As both men panic, they attempt to run downstairs to the lighthouse's cellar. As the beast crashes into the lighthouse, the fog horn suddenly stops. Johnny and McDunn are left with no choice but to kneel and hold on to each other as the tower collapses over them.
 
Through the night, both men listened to the monster's anguished cries of loneliness. The men were rescued the next morning. McDunn fabricates a more believable story of how waves caused the tower to collapse, pinching Johnny to make him comply with it.
A new lighthouse is constructed a year later. Johnny parks across from the lighthouse around the same time as last year. Johnny asks McDunn if the monster ever reappeared. The creature did not return this year, McDunn tells him, going back to the deepest parts of the ocean to wait for another million years. Johnny sits in his car, unable to see the tower or light, and listens to the fog horn, which reminds him of the sound the monster made.-->


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
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}}
}}
==Roar==
==Roar==
The ''Rhedosaurus''{{'}} roars are derived from the sound effects of a wild horse in 1952's ''[[wikipedia:The Lion and the Horse|The Lion and the Horse]]''.{{sfn|Neuhaus|Lederman|Zito|1998|p=53}}
The ''Rhedosaurus''{{'}} roars are derived from the sound effects of a wild horse in 1952's ''[[wikipedia:The Lion and the Horse|The Lion and the Horse]]''.
In the short story [[The Fog Horn]], its roar is like that of a fog horn.<ref name="">{{cite book|title=R is for Rocket |last=Brabury |first=Ray |date=1974}}</ref>
{{sfn|Neuhaus|Lederman|Zito|1998|p=53}}
{{videos|
{{videos|
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">VuAFT5dvhao</youtube>|The ''Rhedosaurus''{{'}} roars}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">VuAFT5dvhao</youtube>|The ''Rhedosaurus''{{'}} roars}}

Revision as of 20:41, 19 April 2022

Template:Ktab

Rhedosaurus
Production picture of the Rhedosaurus model used in The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms
A painting depicting the sea monster's attack by James Bingham
Name information
null
Alternate names DinosaurTFH, Rhedo, Rhedosaur,[1]
The Beast, Herman[2]
Subtitle(s) Atomic Monster
(原子怪獣,   Genshi Kaijū)[3]
Physical information
null
Species Dinosaur; extraterrestrial dinosaurPoD
Height ~90-100 feetTFH
Length ~200 feet[1]
Weight 500 tons[1]
Affiliation information
null
Place(s) of emergence Baffin Bay, the ArcticTBf2KF
Enemies Humans, Tyrannosaurus rexPoD
Real world information
null
Written by Lou Morheim, Fred Freiberger,
Ray Bradbury, Daniel James,
Eugène Lourié, Robert Smith
Designed by Ray Harryhausen[4]
Modeled by Ray Harryhausen,TBf2KF[4]
Stephen CzerkasPoD
Other information
null
First appearance Latest appearance
The Beast from
20,000 Fathoms
Planet of Dinosaurs
Roar(s)
1953:1977:More roars

The Rhedosaurus is a giant fictional dinosaur who serves as the antagonist of the 1953 American giant monster film The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms and short story The Fog Horn.

Name

According to Rhedosaurus creator Ray Harryhausen, the monster's name may have been devised by The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms producer Hal Chester or one of the film's writers. He went on to say that some people believe the first two letters of Rhedosaurus' name were inspired by his initials, R. H.[5] The beast has also been nicknamed Herman,[2] and is sometimes referred to as a "Rhedosaur."[1]

Development

Ray Harryhausen created a clay model of the Rhedosaurus based on sketches that he made for The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, but he and some of the staff working on the film felt that his model was "too kind and babyish."[4] Thus, Harryhausen returned to his workshop to make a stronger, more terrifying version of the model. The new model was tested, but Harryhausen felt that it still wasn't right, so he decided to rebuild the model once again after a discussion with the film's two producers, Jack Dietz and Hal E. Chester.[4] This model was ultimately used in the film. Harryhausen also designed and supervised most of the miniatures used in the film such as the lighthouse, the harbor landing stage, and sections of the Coney Island roller-coaster where the Beast is killed at the end of the film.[4]

A five-second piece of stop-motion animation of the Rhedosaurus cut from the film appeared in the trailer for The Black Scorpion, released in 1957.[6] The following year, Harryhausen repurposed parts of the Rhedosaurus model for the fire-breathing dragon in The 7th Voyage of Sinbad.[7][8]

For Planet of Dinosaurs, Stephen Czerkas constructed a new, smaller model that was used to battle, and ultimately be killed by, a Tyrannosaurus rex. According to animator Jim Aupperle, "Stephen and I both place the Rhedosaurus among our top favorite of Ray's myriad monsters. We felt that by giving the great Beast a cameo in our film we were acknowledging the immense debt we both feel to Ray. We had to make the Rhedosaurus more of a baby size because one as large as the original would have made a meal of our Tyrannosaurus instead of the other way around."[9]

Design

The Rhedosaurus has a quadrupedal build, with a long tail and forelimbs noticeably longer than its hindlimbs. Its back is adorned with a single row of backward-facing spikes that continue from its scalp to its tail. Crocodilian scales line down its underside while bumpy, pebble-like scales cover the remainder of the body. Its snout is short with large nostrils and noticeable fangs.

In The Fog Horn it has a forty-foot long neck, a body covered in crayfish and other sea life, and a tail only barely seen. It is about 90-100 feet in all.[10]

In Planet of Dinosaurs, the Rhedosaurus has a slimmer skull and a slightly longer neck. Its skin is brown.

Origins

In The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, the Rhedosaurus was the only surviving member of its species, buried beneath the ice in the Arctic for 100 million years until it was reawakened by a nuclear bomb test in the modern day.

History

The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms

Following a nuclear bomb test in the Arctic, a gigantic dinosaur known as a Rhedosaurus breaks free from its state of suspended animation in the ice and heads down the North American coast, destroying everything in its path as it makes its way to New York City, its original home. The Rhedosaurus wandered the streets, eating anyone who got too close to it. Attempts to kill it were complicated by an ancient disease it carried; spilling its blood freed the plague, which was almost as deadly as the reptile itself. The Rhedosaurus was eventually killed at Coney Island when a radioactive isotope was shot into a wound on its neck, both fatally wounding it and also neutralizing the disease. As the Rhedosaurus succumbed to the isotope, a fire it started by destroying the machinery of a roller coaster spread across the island. The Rhedosaurus burst free of the burning coaster and roared out defiantly, before finally collapsing to the ground, dead.

Planet of Dinosaurs

The Rhedosaurus in Planet of Dinosaurs

As a Tyrannosaurus rex began menacing Captain Lee's crew, Lee and Jim broke into an argument over who should be in charge of crafting a plan to kill it. To prove his resolve, Lee baited the Tyrannosaurus into chasing him away from the camp when the trap preparations were not yet ready. As he continued to run, he took shelter under a ledge, above which a car-sized Rhedosaurus appeared. It hissed at Lee but did not chase him as he continued running. The pursuing Tyrannosaurus came upon the Rhedosaurus and roared at it. The Rhedosaurus roared back, prompting the Tyrannosaurus to lunge at it and bite it on the shoulder, carrying it in the air for several seconds as the Rhedosaurus struggled and tried to fight back. The conflict was ended when the Tyrannosaurus set the Rhedosaurus on the ground and quickly bit into its head, crushing its skull and killing it before carrying the body back to its lair to feed on it, giving Lee enough time to return to his crew and plan the counterattack.

Abilities

Contaminated blood

The Rhedosaurus's blood contains a disease that can rapidly cause severe sickness and death in humans.

Physical abilities

The Rhedosaurus primarily relies on its sheer bulk and powerful limbs during combat, shown when it topples over a lighthouse and crushes a car like it was an insect underneath its metaphorical boot. Its jaws were able to kill and eat a human in one bite as well.

Durability

The Rhedosaurus' scales were thick enough to be unharmed by small arms fire, though heavier munitions were able to wound it sufficiently enough to be able to kill it.

Filmography

Short stories

"The Fog Horn"

In the short story The Fog Horn, which was adapted as The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, a large, dinosaur-like creature with a longer neck, but otherwise similar to the Rhedosaurus appears from the depths, attracted to a lighthouse and the sound of its fog horn.[11] The creature first appeared one year, only circling the light house, before leaving and a sunny day to occur soon after. Exactly one year later, the creature reappears and started calling out to the lighthouse. When the fog horn stopped calling back, the creature attacked and destroyed the lighthouse, never to return.

Gallery

Main article: Rhedosaurus/Gallery.

In other languages

Language Name Meaning
Flagicon Japan.png Japanese リドサウルス Ridosaurusu Transcription of English name

Roar

The Rhedosaurus' roars are derived from the sound effects of a wild horse in 1952's The Lion and the Horse. In the short story The Fog Horn, its roar is like that of a fog horn.[12] [13]

The Rhedosaurus' roars

Trivia

  • The Rhedosaurus, along with King Kong, was one of the main inspirations for Godzilla. During the production of the 1954 film Godzilla, its pre-published storyline was very similar to that of The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms and was actually titled The Giant Monster from 20,000 Miles Under the Sea (海底二万哩から来た大怪獣,   Kaiteinimanmairu kara Kita Daikaijū).[14] Rhedosaurus creator Ray Harryhausen considered Godzilla a "filch" of his own work.[15]
  • The Rhedosaurus is featured in posters for the 1953 3D science-fiction film Robot Monster, which was released to American theaters on June 10, three days before The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms was released.
  • A creature resembling the Rhedosaurus briefly appeared in the 1970 film When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth, though whether it is meant to be an homage to the Rhedosaurus is unknown.
  • The Rhedosaurus appeared in the sixth episode of the second season of the ABC TV improvisational series Whose Line Is It Anyway?.
  • Batman #104 (December 1956), in its third story (of three total) "The Creature from 20,000 Fathoms!", features a creature named Bobonga that pays homage to the Rhedosaurus, along with the story's title.
  • A dinosaur modeled on the Rhedosaurus appears in issues #2 and 4 of the 2013 5-issue comic book miniseries Dinosaurs Attack! by IDW Publishing. In issue #2, after manifesting in Italy, it battles a dinosaur modeled on the Paleosaurus from The Giant Behemoth (which also manifests in the same area) at the Leaning Tower of Pisa, where it is shoved through the tower by its rival. In issue #4, it appears alongside several creatures as part of a charge against the U.S. military forces, with some of them resembling dinosaurian characters such as Godzilla (who leads the charge), Rodan, the Paleosaurus, Gorgo, Reptilicus, and Gertie the Dinosaur, among others.[16]
    • The Rhedosaurus also appears together with the Paleosaurus in card #10 (of 55) of the Topps trading card series Dinosaurs Attack! (which was the basis for the above-mentioned miniseries), "Italy Under Seige [sic]!". The two dinosaurs are shown fighting each other at the Leaning Tower of Pisa in Italy.

See also

References

This is a list of references for Rhedosaurus. 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: [1]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Webber 2004, p. 50
  2. 2.0 2.1 Hankin 2008, p. 76
  3. "原子怪獣現わる [DVD]". Amazon. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Harryhausen & Dalton 2006, p. 74
  5. Harryhausen & Dalton 2003, p. 49.
  6. Berry 2005, p. 33.
  7. Berry 2005, p. 36.
  8. Webber 2004, p. 52.
  9. Harryhausen & Dalton 2008, p. 190.
  10. Brabury, Ray (1974). R is for Rocket.
  11. Brabury, Ray (1974). R is for Rocket.
  12. Brabury, Ray (1974). R is for Rocket.
  13. Neuhaus, Lederman & Zito 1998, p. 53.
  14. Kabuki 1998, p. 34-38
  15. Shaw, William (20 November 2005). "The Origin of the Species". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
  16. Dinosaurs Attack Homages.jpg

Bibliography

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