Ein ziviles Tauchteam wird angeheuert, um nach einem verlorenen Atom-U-Boot zu suchen und bei der Begegnung mit einer fremden Wasserart Gefahr zu laufen.Ein ziviles Tauchteam wird angeheuert, um nach einem verlorenen Atom-U-Boot zu suchen und bei der Begegnung mit einer fremden Wasserart Gefahr zu laufen.Ein ziviles Tauchteam wird angeheuert, um nach einem verlorenen Atom-U-Boot zu suchen und bei der Begegnung mit einer fremden Wasserart Gefahr zu laufen.
- Regisseur/-in
- Autor/-in
- Stars
- 1 Oscar gewonnen
- 9 Gewinne & 16 Nominierungen insgesamt
Captain Kidd Brewer Jr.
- Lew Finler
- (as Capt. Kidd Brewer Jr.)
Dick Warlock
- Dwight Perry
- (as Richard Warlock)
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This movie is extremely well made. Make sure you get the original director's cut, or Special Edition as they are calling it on the DVD. It includes the real ending, along with more than 20 minutes of additional footage. The morons from the studio in Hollywood decided that the public wouldn't want to see a nearly 3-hour underwater adventure, and forced James Cameron to cut it down and change the ending. The ending the studios insisted on is your typical boring old done-a-million-times happy ending, and does not work. It betrays the message of the film, and makes it nothing more than a good underwater shoot-em-up. This movie is much more than that. See the REAL ending to understand why it is so important to this film. As opposed to the canned studio ending, the REAL one makes you think. Well, what did you expect? Hollywood executives make movies for the common herd, they dumb them down to make sure every patron goes away feeling happy. God forbid that anyone actually may have to think a little. At the time, despite a few solid hits (such as the original Terminator), James Cameron wasn't enough of a power in La-La land to force the studios to release the movie as he wanted it to be. After Titanic, they will do whatever he says, so we can now expect some great Cameron films to look forward to, rather than having to wait for the REAL movie to come out years later on a Special Edition DVD.
I first saw this in the early 90s on a vhs.
Revisited the 171 mins version recently n completed the movie in one sitting.
Inspite of the runtime, the film is engrossing n visually breathtaking.
The dark trench and Ed Harris' character going down way below is more scary than most horror movies.
James Cameron is a genius n there's no doubt bah it but i am surprised that most fellas havent given credit to H. G. Wells, as he was the first to introduce the notion of a sea alien in his 1897 short story "In the Abyss".
Ed Harris n Michael Biehn both gave memorable performances.
Biehn's character is downright creepy.
The CPR scene is a bit far fetched n melodramatic.
Revisited the 171 mins version recently n completed the movie in one sitting.
Inspite of the runtime, the film is engrossing n visually breathtaking.
The dark trench and Ed Harris' character going down way below is more scary than most horror movies.
James Cameron is a genius n there's no doubt bah it but i am surprised that most fellas havent given credit to H. G. Wells, as he was the first to introduce the notion of a sea alien in his 1897 short story "In the Abyss".
Ed Harris n Michael Biehn both gave memorable performances.
Biehn's character is downright creepy.
The CPR scene is a bit far fetched n melodramatic.
There was a time, way back in the '80s - before James Cameron suffered head trauma and devoted his life to Avatar - when the man made blockbusters that had a humanity at their core; something instantly relatable despite the sci-fi setting. The Abyss is one of those, with Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio reconciling their failed marriage amidst mortal peril. Indeed, they're trapped miles beneath the ocean's surface, negotiating nuclear warheads, attacking subs and a hair-triggered Michael Biehn.
Cameron creates a realistic environment that still feels otherworldly, populates it with real people and ratchets the tension to unnerving heights. The effects are fantastic, ast are the performances and - as scary as this place is - I would easily come back to revisit.
Cameron creates a realistic environment that still feels otherworldly, populates it with real people and ratchets the tension to unnerving heights. The effects are fantastic, ast are the performances and - as scary as this place is - I would easily come back to revisit.
I saw "The Abyss" in the theater (Cinema City, Fresh Meadows, NY) and many times times since. I hadn't watched it in quite a while when I sat down to watch it last night. I won't wait that long to watch it again. "The Abyss" is a rock solid adventure. The action is edge-of-your-seat stuff. The emotional scenes are brutal to watch. The story moves well and the cast is very good. "The Abyss" is not as well known as most of writer/director James Cameron's other movies but it's one of his best.
I've never really heard of The Abyss except in Fox DVD commercials. When it came out, I was only 8 and not into sci-fi movies that weren't titled Star Wars. However, now I decided to check it out and was quite pleased with this solid sci-fi movie.
At first, I wasn't quite sure why this was considered sci-fi. It seemed pretty normal with the sinking of a nuclear sub and the hiring of an oil crew to save it. It wasn't for a while till we really got to meet the "extraterrestrial" creatures. The special effects for representing these characters were quite good, and I especially liked the water creature that toured around the rescue vessel. It's also neat to see that effect inspire a similar one used in Terminator 2.
As I said, the story took a little while to gain steam, but it was pretty interesting from then on. The acting was good too, most notably by Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio. The other actors didn't do anything really extraordinary but serve as solid supporting characters.
Overall, I wouldn't say The Abyss is the best sci-fi movie out there or that it will dethrone Star Wars anytime soon, but rather it's a solid addition for any sci-fi fan's collection.
My IMDb Rating: 8/10. My Yahoo! Grade: B+ (Memorable)
At first, I wasn't quite sure why this was considered sci-fi. It seemed pretty normal with the sinking of a nuclear sub and the hiring of an oil crew to save it. It wasn't for a while till we really got to meet the "extraterrestrial" creatures. The special effects for representing these characters were quite good, and I especially liked the water creature that toured around the rescue vessel. It's also neat to see that effect inspire a similar one used in Terminator 2.
As I said, the story took a little while to gain steam, but it was pretty interesting from then on. The acting was good too, most notably by Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio. The other actors didn't do anything really extraordinary but serve as solid supporting characters.
Overall, I wouldn't say The Abyss is the best sci-fi movie out there or that it will dethrone Star Wars anytime soon, but rather it's a solid addition for any sci-fi fan's collection.
My IMDb Rating: 8/10. My Yahoo! Grade: B+ (Memorable)
Director James Cameron, Ranked
Director James Cameron, Ranked
Avatar is the #1 movie of all time according to box office receipts, but how does it fare on our list of James Cameron movies ranked by their IMDb ratings?
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesEd Harris reportedly punched James Cameron in the face after he kept filming while he was nearly drowning.
- PatzerAt the depth the crew is diving, they would be breathing a mixture of gases to include helium. Regular conversations while breathing this mix of gases results in the typical "helium speech," like if you breathed in a helium balloon. Normal conversations during the entire film at depth would have been with helium speech, and not regular voices.
- Zitate
Virgil 'Bud' Brigman: When it comes to the safety of these people, there's me and then there's God, understand?
- Crazy CreditsIn the cast list, Super Seal Rover is credited as Big Geek and Mini Rover Mk II is credited as Little Geek. These are the actual models used for the unmanned submarines.
- Alternative VersionenThe end credits were famously shortened to run under 5 minutes in 1989 in order to hit a target runtime and maximize daily showings; doing so also made the crawl almost illegibly tiny and fast. The credits on the extended edition were almost 10 minutes, with a bigger and slower crawl, and extended/alternate music. Several home video releases of the theatrical edition on laserdisc and DVD actually use the newer credits, so they are not entirely faithful! One VHS tape (Fox Video Selections 1561), at least, uses the original short credits; though the tape is formatted for 4:3, the credits merely gain picture information above and below the intended window (which, for some reason, is very high up in the frame after the first few names). However the new HD master, which has popped up on a few HDTV broadcasts (like Cinemax) go back to the original shortened credits, plus is in the original theatrical aspect ratio, making it the most faithful version available.
- SoundtracksWilling
Written by Lowell George
Performed by Linda Ronstadt
Courtesy of CEMA Special Markets and Capitol Records, Inc.
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- El secreto del abismo
- Drehorte
- Cherokee Nuclear Power Plant, Gaffney, South Carolina, USA(two tanks - underwater scenes)
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 70.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 54.981.151 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 9.319.797 $
- 13. Aug. 1989
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 90.520.202 $
- Laufzeit
- 2 Std. 20 Min.(140 min)
- Farbe
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