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How Fast Can You Swim?

1999




Deep Blue Sea (1999)  

Directed by 
Renny Harlin    
  
Writing credits (in credits order) 
Duncan Kennedy   and 
Wayne Powers (II)   & 
Donna Powers    
  
Cast (in credits order) 
Thomas Jane ....  Carter Blake  
Saffron Burrows ....  Dr. Susan McAlester  
Samuel L. Jackson ....  Russell Franklin  
Jacqueline McKenzie (I) ....  Janice Higgins  
Michael Rapaport ....  Tom Scoggins  
Stellan Skarsgård ....  Jim Whitlock  
LL Cool J ....  Preacher  
Aida Turturro ....  Brenda Kerns  
Daniel Rey ....  Glenn Kuhn  
Brent Roam ....  Dale Heather  
rest of cast listed alphabetically  
Mary Kay Bergman ....  The Parrot (uncredited) (voice)  
Ronny Cox ....  Executive  
Sarah Kelly ....  Shark Victim (uncredited)  
  
Produced by 
Bruce Berman   (executive)  
Akiva Goldsman    
Duncan Henderson   (executive)  
Robert Kosberg    
Tony Ludwig    
Patrick Lynn (II)   (associate)  
Don MacBain   (Special Venue 3-D Film)  
Thomas J. Mack   (associate)  
Alan Riche    
Jonathan B. Schwartz   (executive)  
Rebecca Spikings   (co-producer)  
  
Original music by 
Trevor Rabin    
  
Cinematography by 
Stephen F. Windon    
  
Film Editing by 
Derek Brechin    
Dallas Puett    
Frank J. Urioste    
  
Production Design by 
William Sandell    
  
Art Direction 
David Sandefur    
  
Costume Design by 
Mark Bridges    
  
Make-up Department 
Allan A. Apone ....  make-up artists for Samuel L. Jackson  
Jeff Dawn ....  make-up department head  
  
Assistant Director 
Thomas J. Mack ....  first assistant director  
  
Sound Department 
Eric Gotthelf ....  foley mixer  
Gregory H. Watkins ....  sound re-recording mixer  
  
Special Effects 
Ted Andre ....  visual effects compositor  
Jeffrey Arnold ....  visual effects compositor: Flash Film Works  
Thomas Boland ....  visual effects producer  
Alan Church ....  digital effects producer: Film Factory  
John Coates (II) ....  visual effects match move supervisor: 
Flash Film Works  
Walt Conti ....  effects supervisor: Sharks  
Jamie Dixon ....  visual effects supervisor: Hammerhead Productions  
Tim Donahue ....  lead matte painter: Flash Film Works  
Tim Everitt ....  visual effects animator: Flash Film Works  
Kelly Fischel ....  rotoscope artist: Flash Film Works  
David Fogg ....  visual effects compositing supervisor: Flash 
Film Works  
Lisa Garner ....  rotoscope artist: Flash Film Works  
Simon Giles ....  digital effects supervisor: Film Factory  
Greg Juby ....  technical director  
Lincoln Kupchak ....  visual effects editor: Flash Film Works  
John P. Mesa ....  visual effects co-supervisor: Flash Film Works  
Penny A. Mesa ....  visual effects production manager: Flash 
Film Works  
William Mesa ....  visual effects supervsior: Flash Film Works  
Donald Myers (I) ....  3D model supervisor: Flash Film Works  
Dan Novy ....  visual effects technical supervisor: Flash Film 
Works  
Jeffrey A. Okun ....  visual effects supervisor  
Bruce Pearson (II) ....  visual effects animator: Flash Film Works  
Sean Prusak ....  rotoscope artist: Flash Film Works  
John Richardson (II) ....  special effects supervisor  
John E. Sasaki ....  digital supervisor  
Kenny Stranahan ....  visual effects animation supervisor: Flash
 Film Works  
Etienne Terblanche ....  rotoscope artist: Flash Film Works  
Dan Walker ....  visual effects compositor: Flash Film Works  
Jason Wardle ....  CG sequence supervisor  
  
Stunts 
Randy Johnson (III) ....  stunts  
Ronnie Rondell Jr. ....  stunt co-ordinator  
  
Other crew 
William Apperson ....  construction foreman  
James Arrigo ....  construction foreman  
Beth Bajuk ....  art department co-ordinator  
Carrie Bauer ....  set costumer  
Gavin J. Behrman ....  assistant accountant  
Harald Belker ....  illustrator  
Dick Bernstein ....  music editor  
Gary L. Deaton ....  construction co-ordinator  
Trevor Engelson ....  staff assistant  
Damien Fitzpatrick ....  dive master  
David Gorder ....  assistant production office supervisor  
Paul Linford ....  score producer  
Doug Maxfield ....  personal trainer  
Phil Pastuhov ....  wescam operator  
Mark Ramsey ....  key grip  
Pete Romano ....  underwater director of photography  
Peter J. Silbermann ....  publicist  
Marc Spicer ....  camera operator  
Karla Stevens ....  assistant costume designer  
Gary Thomas (II) ....  storyboard artist  
James W. Tyson ....  costume supervisor  
Mark Jan Wlodarkiewicz ....  additional music editor  
  
 


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DEEP BLUE SEA (Warner Bros.) Starring: Saffron Burrows, Thomas Jane, LL Cool J, Samuel L. Jackson, Jacqueline McKenzie, Michael Rapaport, Stellan Skarsgaard. Screenplay: Duncan Kennedy and Donna Powers & Wayne Powers. Producers: Akiva Goldsman, Tony Ludwig and Alan Riche. Director: Renny Harlin. MPAA Rating: R (violence, profanity, adult themes) Running Time: 105 minutes. Reviewed by Scott Renshaw.

Steven Spielberg has said for years that one of the keys to the success of JAWS was technical failure. The mechanical shark affectionately nicknamed "Bruce" wasn't necessarily supposed to be a shadowy figure menacing the protagonists from the fringes of the frame -- he just didn't work right. Bruce's frequent unannounced work stoppages forced Spielberg to get more creative. The rest is a milestone in cinematic suspense history, further proof that real terror comes not from what we see, but from what we're afraid we're going to see.

It would be easy enough to scoff at DEEP BLUE SEA as a gloss on JAWS that just doesn't "get it," but that wouldn't be entirely fair. JAWS, whether intentionally or made necessary by technical limitations, was a suspense film; DEEP BLUE SEA is an old-fashioned monster movie. The killer predators here are experimental subjects in a floating research facility off the coast of Baja California, enhanced by Dr. Susan McAlester (Saffron Burrows) to promote her research into a shark-based cure for degenerative brain disease. An unfortunate side effect of her research is that the brains of her test sharks are now large enough to permit higher cognitive functions, inspiring such fishy thoughts as "I guess it's about time to destroy the facility and kill all the humans."

Thus begins a person-by-person chomp-fest through a cast that includes (not necessarily in order of consumption) Samuel L. Jackson (as a pharmaceutical company bigwig), Thomas Jane (as a shark diver with a checkered past), LL Cool J (as a religiously devout chef), Michael Rapaport (as the chief engineer) and Stellan Skarsgaard (as a vaguely eccentric research scientist). The genre conventions are all terribly conventional, but director Renny Harlin stages them with methodical effectiveness. There are a few solid scares and one magnificently effective shock, the kind that leaves an audience giggling nervously for several seconds. There's even some cautionary nonsense about scientific hubris, in the fine tradition of FRANKENSTEIN or THE FLY. It's what monster movies are supposed to do, and DEEP BLUE SEA uses its trio of toothy villains to deliver the requisite armrest-gripping.

If only anyone involved with the script had taken a second to go beyond the merely requisite. DEEP BLUE SEA is full of half-completed characters doing generally stupid things. Granted, the monster movie as we know it would not exist without people doing generally stupid things, but it's still frustrating to put up with them saying stupid things at the same time. The film gets even sloppier by positing not merely that the sharks have developed advanced intelligence, but that they have apparently studied physics and engineering, and had access to detailed schematic diagrams of the facility. There's only so far a film can involve you when it treats the viewers as though they're dumb and treats the characters as though they're chum.

DEEP BLUE SEA is, of course, following in some mighty big footsteps in the killer shark milieu, which makes it even more surprising that there are so many echoes of JAWS and its sequels. The opening sequence involves a night attack on some frivolous teenagers; one shark is dispatched with a bite on an electric cable (JAWS 2); another ends up raining down in bite-sized chunks. It's almost as though Harlin and company _want_ the film to be compared to JAWS, as though they think they've one-upped the ultimate shark film. In the press notes, Harlin says of JAWS, "It's 25 years later, and audiences, accustomed to animatronics and computer-generated imagery, need to see more." And perhaps he's right, but that still only makes DEEP BLUE SEA a technically-proficient monster movie. As character-driven suspense, it bites off much more than it can chew.

     On the Renshaw scale of 0 to 10 fins de siecle: 5.

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Have I seen this movie: Yes
And what did I think: I think this movie deserves a little more credit then what it is receiving. It's not that bad as some critics make it to be. I was expecting to see a cheap imitation of Jaws. From the dumb opening scene, it looked like it was going to be just that, but after that, it didn't show much similarity to Jaws, just that sharks were in this movie. The movie's premise is a little hard to swallow. a bunch of scientists in the middle of the ocean on a billion dollar underwater lab are creating sharks with giant brains they can study to help wipe out brain disease. The sharks then destroy the facility and proceed to eat the scientists while they are trying to escape. Sounds like a plot to a lot of other movies, and it is.... you won't find anything too new here. However, Deep Blue Sea does provide a number of chilling and suspenseful moments and will make you sit on the edge of your seat and jump a few times. The sharks look pretty real most of the time except for a few up close shots of them. There are some real nice special effects shots here as well too. Throughout the film I was making bets to see who would make it and who would die, like any other movie of this genre. I don't know if Deep Blue Sea is worth the price of a full ticket, since I just about saw it for free, but its worth renting when it comes on to video.

I give Deep Blue Sea 3 out of 5 stars
Review written August 16, 1999
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