The Deep Ones Are Women Now — and They’re Fabulous
If H.P. Lovecraft could see Izzy Lee’s Innsmouth, he’d probably need to be exhumed and reburied for rolling in his grave so violently. This 2015 short horror film doesn’t just reimagine The Shadow Over Innsmouth — it gleefully drowns it in feminist retribution, indie grit, and a faint whiff of sea brine.
Written and directed by Izzy Lee, and co-produced with Francesco Massaccesi, Innsmouth is a bold, weird, and wet little nightmare. It’s equal parts tribute and middle finger to Lovecraft’s xenophobic, misogynistic worldview. Where his works were defined by fear of the Other — the foreign, the feminine, the unholy hybrid — Lee’s film embraces the Other, gives her gills, and hands her the keys to the narrative.
In just eleven minutes, Innsmouth manages to do what many feature-length horror films can’t: make cosmic horror sexy, subversive, and wickedly fun.
Plot: CSI Meets Cthulhu
Detective Olmstead (Diana Porter) is called to investigate a crime scene that looks like a mashup between Law & Orderand a seafood buffet gone wrong. The victim’s body bears a bite wound and, more disturbingly, an egg sac attached to her back. (Note: this is probably the least appetizing pregnancy metaphor ever committed to film.)
Olmstead’s only clue is a photo of the victim with a mysterious woman. Her investigation leads her to the seaside town of Innsmouth — that cursed Massachusetts hamlet where good things go to die and come back with scales. There she meets Alice Marsh (Tristan Risk), a seductive, amphibious femme fatale who radiates danger, charm, and possibly plankton.
As Olmstead delves deeper, the case becomes less about evidence and more about seduction. The detective’s skepticism dissolves as fast as her sanity, and by the time the credits roll, you realize that the horror of Innsmouth isn’t just about monsters—it’s about becoming one, and liking it.
The Gender Reversal Lovecraft Deserved
Lovecraft’s original story was a fever dream of paranoia about interbreeding and corruption—his metaphor for racial impurity and fear of the Other. Lee gleefully turns that on its slimy head. Her version is a celebration of the Other, with a 98% female cast that transforms Lovecraft’s dread of women into their dominance.
This is not a world where women are victims or damsels; they are the architects of doom, the inheritors of forbidden power. If Lovecraft’s protagonists fainted at the sight of an eldritch creature, Lee’s characters would probably make out with it.
The reversal isn’t just thematic—it’s tonal. Lee injects humor and sensuality into the mythology. Instead of a terrified scholar muttering about “blasphemous hybrid spawn,” we get two women exchanging dangerous glances in a damp room filled with implications. It’s Lovecraft by way of Basic Instinct, if Sharon Stone had gills.
Diana Porter: Noir Nerves of Steel
As Detective Olmstead, Diana Porter channels the hardboiled energy of 1940s noir heroines, only with more tentacles and fewer cigarettes. She’s cynical, witty, and radiates exhaustion—the kind of woman who’s seen too much and trusts too little.
Porter’s performance is grounded in skepticism, which makes her gradual descent into Innsmouth’s underworld feel earned. Her chemistry with Tristan Risk’s Alice Marsh is palpable—half attraction, half impending doom. When she finally encounters the truth of Innsmouth, you can almost see her resolve melt into horror and fascination. It’s not just a case she’s solving—it’s a calling she’s answering.
Tristan Risk: The Siren from Hell
Tristan Risk, best known from American Mary, plays Alice Marsh like a myth come to life. She’s a creature of contradictions: seductive and sinister, playful and predatory. Every line drips with menace and mischief. She doesn’t just inhabit the role of a Deep One—she owns it.
When Risk smiles, you know it’s over. Not just for the detective, but for you, the viewer. She has that rare ability to make even the most grotesque implications seem alluring. She doesn’t just turn the tables on Lovecraft’s terror of women; she builds a banquet on them and invites you to dinner.
Izzy Lee’s Direction: Low Budget, High Weirdness
Izzy Lee is the kind of filmmaker who proves you don’t need a million dollars to make something disturbing—you just need nerve, vision, and possibly access to a fog machine. Her direction is tight, confident, and gleefully perverse.
The pacing is razor-sharp. The film wastes no time on exposition; it plunges you straight into the muck. The atmosphere—shot with grainy, aquatic hues by a cinematographer who clearly understands that dampness is a mood—feels authentic to the Lovecraft mythos while subverting it completely.
And that ending—oh, that ending. Without spoiling too much, let’s just say it’s part horror, part dark comedy, and part feminist mic drop. It’s the kind of finale that makes you want to stand up and applaud, or possibly gargle saltwater.
Production Design: Grime and Glamour
Despite its modest budget, Innsmouth looks great. The set design feels lived-in—every shadow and damp wall tells a story. The sound design hums with low, unsettling frequencies, like the ocean itself is whispering obscenities.
The practical effects, while minimal, are effective. The body at the beginning looks grotesque enough to make you wonder if seafood is still on the menu. The egg sac is gross in all the right ways—a tactile reminder that Lovecraft’s horror was always about the body betraying you.
And yet, there’s beauty in the grotesque. The film’s visual palette—muted blues, grays, and the occasional flash of flesh—evokes both decay and desire. It’s as if someone painted The Shape of Water with a hangover and a grudge.
The Humor: Laughing with Tentacles
Dark humor is the film’s secret weapon. While it plays its horror straight, there’s a sly wit beneath the surface. The gender-flipped premise is itself a running joke—a wink at Lovecraft’s misogyny and a reminder that maybe cosmic horror just needed more lipstick.
There’s irony in the detective’s seriousness, in the absurdity of investigating egg sacs with a straight face. And that final twist—both horrifying and hilarious—feels like a cosmic punchline. Lovecraft’s monsters whispered about mankind’s insignificance; Lee’s whisper, “Yes, dear, and yours too.”
A Feminist Curse from Beyond the Grave
At its core, Innsmouth isn’t just a parody or homage—it’s reclamation. It takes Lovecraft’s most toxic ideas and marinates them in feminist revenge. It says: we see your fear of women, Howard, and we raise you a cult of empowered sea goddesses.
It’s also a rare horror film that finds empowerment in transformation. Where Lovecraft saw mutation as corruption, Lee sees it as liberation. Becoming the monster is no longer damnation—it’s evolution.
Final Verdict: Wet, Weird, and Wonderful
In under fifteen minutes, Izzy Lee’s Innsmouth delivers more atmosphere, subtext, and feminist fury than most horror features manage in two hours. It’s witty, disturbing, and unapologetically strange—a love letter to cosmic horror and a breakup text to the patriarchy.
It’s the kind of short film that feels like it crawled out of the ocean just to smirk at you. If you’re a Lovecraft purist, it’ll make you clutch your pearls (and possibly your copy of Weird Tales). But if you appreciate horror that bites back—and then lays an egg on your spine—you’re in for a treat.
Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.5/5)
Innsmouth: Come for the Lovecraft, stay for the lady cult, and don’t forget your anti-fungal ointment.

