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Deep Blue Sea (1999) [Blu-ray]
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Rated: |
R |
Starring: |
Thomas Jane, Michael Rapaport, Saffron Burrows, Jacqueline McKenzie, Samuel L. Jackson, Stellan Skarsgard, LL Cool J. |
Director: |
Renny Harlin |
Genre: |
Action | Sci-Fi | Thriller |
DVD Release Date: 10/12/2010 |
Researchers on the undersea laboratory Aquatica have genetically altered the brains of captive sharks to develop a potential cure for Alzheimer's disease. There is one unexpected side effect. The sharks are getting smarter. Which could mean trouble for
the researchers. And lunch for the sharks. You can swim but you can't hide when a tropical storm floods Aquatica, plunging Samuel L. Jackson, Saffron Burrows, Thomas Jane, LL Cool J and the rest of the crew into a harrowing battle of wits against sleek
killing - and thinking! - machines.
Renny Harlin (Cliffhanger, Die Hard 2) directs, squeezing nerve-jangling suspense and thrills from a film that's a monster movie, a chase movie, a movie that snaps hold and won't let go. Dive in.
Storyline: A businessman sinks $200 million into a special project to help fight Alzheimer's disease. As part of this project, medical biologist Susan McAlester rather naughtily figures out a way to genetically enlarge shark brains, so that
disease-battling enzymes can be harvested. However, the shark subjects become super smart and decide they don't much like being cooped up in pens and being stabbed with hypodermics, so they figure a way to break out and make for the open sea... Written by John Smith
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman on October 11, 2010 -- Nature can be lethal, but it doesn't hold a candle to man.
Renny Harlin seemed poised for a major breakout after he directed the entertaining Die Hard 2: Die Harder and the exhilarating Cliffhanger in the early 1990s, but alas, his career stagnated with a string of mediocre big-budget Action movies.
Harlin's films suffer not from a lack of technical proficiency -- he can be counted on to craft a nice-looking and energetic movie -- but instead an absence heart and purpose, two key ingredients even in the Action genre. His films seem to settle for a
big scope, loud violence, and plenty of adrenaline, but such attributes can only take a movie so far, and Harlin's become something of an anomaly as a filmmaker with one excellent film (Cliffhanger) under his belt and a bunch more that could have
been so much better had they found more drama and emotion to counterbalance the overload of action. He's kind of a Michael Bay-lite, a director who knows both the nuts-and-bolts and the finer points of the Action movie better than most, and like Bay, his
films rarely seem to excel beyond the basics. Deep Blue Sea is perhaps Harlin's most generic picture, a "smart shark" movie that's packed with high energy moments but that's lacking anything else to solidify it as something greater than a
coherently-assembled string of action scenes. In other words, it's typically Harlin, a fine movie from a technical perspective but one that doesn't really resonate the way it should.
The cure for Alzheimer's may lie inside the bodies of sharks; the sea-dwelling creatures show no signs of memory loss as they age, and scientist Susan McCallister (Saffron Burrows, The Bank Job) believes that with enough money, a few cooperative
sharks, and a stable research facility, she can discover a cure for the terrible disease that could be administered in but a single pill. She solicits the world's wealthiest man, a pharmaceutical magnate named Russell Franklin (Samuel L. Jackson,
Sphere), to spend the weekend at her isolated lab in the middle of the ocean where she's on the verge of a major breakthrough. With the help of shark wrangler Carter Blake (Thomas Jane, The Mist), she secures her shark and the experiment
goes as planned, with the extracted material demonstrating its ability to counter Alzheimer's. Unfortunately, the shark giveth, and the shark taketh away. Just when a celebratory mood has taken over the room, terror strikes: a scientist's arm is torn off
by the jaws of an angry shark, and the facility is quickly besieged by several angry -- and abnormally intelligent -- Makos. The survivors struggle to survive both the crumbling facility and the deadly sharks, all the while trying to discover why the
sharks are showing signs of heightened awareness, intelligence, and aggression. It's only a matter of time before the team is picked off one by one or drowned in the unforgiving environment deep below the ocean's surface.
Deep Blue Sea is a generically entertaining movie that's best suited for a lazy watch with expectations lowered to zero and the brain left at the door. Cliché, yes, but so is Deep Blue Sea, a movie constructed around a flimsy premise and
hedging its bets on little more than a few shocking moments amidst an otherwise tedious and very wet 105 minutes. Indeed, Deep Blue Sea is basically setup, then a shark attack, then characters trying to escape, then a shark attack, then characters
trying to escape, then a shark attack, then characters trying to escape, and so on, as the number of survivors is reduced by one every 15 or 20 minutes until only a few are left to try and make it through to the bloody end. There's no purpose to the film
other than as basic escapist entertainment and a showcase for some horrific gore and a few cheap thrills; that's all well and good as not everything can be some deeply profound Criterion Collection-worthy piece of artsy cinema, but that doesn't mean that
Deep Blue Sea couldn't have used a bit more feeling to put it over the top and into the realm of better-than-average. All that really saves the movie as it is Harlin's technical proficiency. His movie looks and sounds good -- even if the special
effects haven't held up very well -- but even his spit-and-polish simply cannot save an otherwise trite and forgettable picture.
Even Deep Blue Sea's relatively strong cast seems wasted on a generic script and the resultant tone-deaf film. Thomas Jane brings some energy to the picture, but even the venerable Samuel L. Jackson seems to be doing little more than cashing the
proverbial paycheck. There are several jarring instances where it seems the cast is content to monotonously recite their lines -- to literally scene-destroying effect -- and the listless performances only reinforce that film's overall generic tone. The
characters are obnoxiously one-dimensional and typically none-too-bright, making it all the easier to root on the sharks, even if they do manage to sever a few limbs and devour unsuspecting people with grisly and occasionally nauseating effect. Gore
fiends will love Deep Blue Sea for its arm-severing shot, though they'll likely be disappointed by the absence of some additional violence, most of which seems lost in the middle of some poorly-realized CGI effects. As with the rest of the picture,
the special effects seem forced rather than natural; even Jaws -- a movie almost a quarter-century Deep Blue Sea's senior -- features far superior visual effects, not to mention a story built around characters rather than visuals. Deep
Blue Sea might have been a better-than-average film with some TLC and less emphasis on what are some shoddy effects, but as it is, it's little more than a forgettable Action/Horror movie with no real value over any other movie of its kind, making it
merely another footnote in Renny Harlin's textbook mediocre career.
Good cast, bland movie. Deep Blue Sea by its very nature was never destined for greatness, but the film could have benefited from a little more purpose beyond being merely a showcase for one shark attack after another. Deep Blue Sea works
well enough in a vacuum; as mindless entertainment it does the trick, but more demanding fans might want to look elsewhere for their Action/Horror movie entertainment. Warner Brothers' Blu-ray release of Deep Blue Sea features a quality technical
presentation and a few extras, but the quality of the movie relegates this one to a recommendation as a rental only.
[CSW] - Deep Blue Sea is one of those films that you simply cannot take seriously or you will go out of your mind with annoyance because... The Sharks ate the plot. It is not that "Deep", just fun and entertaining.
Cast Notes: Thomas Jane (Carter Blake), Saffron Burrows (Dr. Susan McCallister), Samuel L. Jackson (Russell Franklin), Jacqueline McKenzie (Janice Higgins), Michael Rapaport (Tom Scoggins), Stellan Skarsgård (Jim Whitlock), LL Cool J (Preacher),
Aida Turturro (Brenda Kerns), Cristos (Boat Captain), Daniel Rey (Helicopter Pilot [as Daniel Bahimo Rey]), Valente Rodriguez (Helicopter Co-Pilot), Brent Roam (Helicopter Winch Operator), Eyal Podell (Boy #1), Erinn Bartlett (Girl #1), Dan Thiel (Boy
#2).
IMDb Rating (07/31/14): 5.7/10 from 83,432 users
IMDb Rating (08/09/11): 5.6/10 from 50,002 users
Additional information |
Copyright: |
1999, Warner Bros. |
Features: |
• Commentary By Director Renny Harlin And Samuel L. Jackson
• 2 Featurettes
- When Sharks Attack (480p, 15:02)
- Sharks of the Deep Blue Sea (480p, 8:19)
• Five Deleted Scenes with optional director commentary (480p, 7:59)
• Theatrical Trailer - Deep Blue Sea (480p, 2:22).
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Subtitles: |
English SDH, French, Spanish, German SDH, Portuguese, Bulgarian, Croatian, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Hebrew, Korean, Norwegian, Romanian, Swedish |
Video: |
Widescreen 2.40:1 Color Screen Resolution: 1080p Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1 |
Audio: |
ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
FRENCH: Dolby Digital 5.1
SPANISH: Dolby Digital 5.1
GERMAN: Dolby Digital 5.1
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Time: |
1:45 |
DVD: |
# Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1 |
UPC: |
883929118670 |
Coding: |
[V4.0-A4.0] MPEG-4 AVC |
D-Box: |
No |
Other: |
Producers: Akiva Goldsman, Tony Ludwig, Alan Richie; Directors: Renny Harlin; Writers: Donna Powers, Wayne Powers, Duncan Kennedy; running time of 105 minutes; Packaging: HD Case. Rated R for graphic shark attacks, and for
language.
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