Danger Beneath the Sea

November. 29,2001      
Rating:
4.7
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Trailer Synopsis Cast

Following a nuclear weapons testing accident in North Korea, the crew of a US Navy submarine experiences a communications breakdown. Believing that a nuclear war has started, the senior officers prepare for retaliation, but one man is not so sure.

Casper Van Dien as  Commander Miles Sheffield
Gerald McRaney as  Admiral Eugene Justice
Stewart Bick as  Lt. Commander Albert Kenner
Tammy Isbell as  Lt. Clare Holliday
Ron White as  CPO Pete LeCroix
Vince Corazza as  Lt. Commander Eric Watkins
Paul Essiembre as  Tony Martinez
Dominic Zamprogna as  Ryan Alford
Kim Poirier as  Lisa Alford
Shane Daly as  Lt. Commander Gary Reynolds

Reviews

CheerupSilver
2001/11/29

Very Cool!!!

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Reptileenbu
2001/11/30

Did you people see the same film I saw?

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Fairaher
2001/12/01

The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.

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Bumpy Chip
2001/12/02

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

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Grumpy Pheasant
2001/12/03

This is Crimson Tide. They used a clever trick to hide their misdeed: they replaced most mentions of "Russia" with "North Korea" and switched the roles between the captain and the first officer. Cunning little ones. Some scenes appear to be directly lifted from Crimson Tide and recreated shot-for-shot.That is, the "penny dreadful" version of Crimson Tide. How did they manage to make it so much worse?Well, the addition of a stockpile of corny dialogue helped. The characters aren't much short of just uttering "OMG, it's that deadly pass, the captain is so brave and ingenious and we nearly hit that wreck like, I could touch it, like!"As did the pointless manicheanism. The whole point of Crimson Tide was that all aboard were taking what they thought was the right course of action and that a nuclear conflict nearly arose because the US Navi protocols were inadequate. In this movie, it's hammered home quite clearly that the first officer and his men are just your usual "baddies". Their motivations are just nefarious.And let's not forget the pointless "action" scenes and their accompanying clichés. We're not even spared the terrible "oh! The gun fired between them! Who's dead, is it the baddie or the good guy? Lookie, it's the baddie!" scene. That was never an interesting scene, why do bad movies insist on reusing it ad nauseam?Don't watch this, watch Crimson Tide. Partly because it's objectively better in all respects (writing, acting, directing, effects) and partly because there's no reason to endorse blatant plagiarism.

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pszudzik-1
2001/12/04

Yes, I agree it was very predictable, no major surprises anywhere. Pretty sad acting by the majority, very stiff. A few of the good screen shots that I liked had nothing to do with the crew, that is, the submarine underway.Why the Navy would even allow this to be filmed is beyond me. It portrays nothing positive about either side here. The fact that they thought that this was a plausible scenario amazes me. The number of flashing lights I saw remind me of the old Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea stories.If you need a military flik to pass a boring Saturday, watch this... at least you don't have to pay attention to it to get the story.

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sol1218
2001/12/05

**SPOILERS** Leaving it's port of call, the US Navel base at Bangor Maine, and sailing out to the Pacific the US Nuclear Submarine USS Lansing is some ten miles off the coast of North Korea. It's then that the Communnist Koreans detonated a nuclear device short-circuiting it's electronic and communication equipment, as well as knocking out power in all the surrounding countries, leaving the ship totally in the dark to what's happening in the outside world.The Lansing's commander young Capt. Miles Sheffield, Casper Van Dien,tries to get in contact with the Pacific Fleet commander Admiral Eugene Justice, Gerald MacRaney, headquartered at Pearl Harbor but all communications are dead. This leads the second in command of the ship Lt. Com. Albert Kenner, Stewart Bick, to feel that the US is under attack. Kenner wants Capt. Sheffield to launch the Lansing's four nuclear-tipped Tomahawk missiles at either Communist China or the new Russian government in the former Soviet Union, whom he feels are at war with the United States. We've seen earlier in the movie that there's trouble brewing between the crew over the fact that Capt. Sheffield was put in command of the Lansing over Capt. Kenner who's more respected by many of those on board due to his much more experience in the underwater, or silent, service. With a total black-out to what's happening in the world above Capt. Sheffield tells the concerned, and almost hysterical, let. Com. Kenner that he'll have the Lansing surface to show him that everything on shore is all right and not to worry.Breaking on the surface outside the South Korean seaport of Ulsan it turns out that there's no sign of life at all with the entire town pitch black, this due to a power black-out not a nuclear attack like Let. Com. Kenner feels happened. Later when returning below it's discovered that both Sheffield & Kenner were contaminated by fall-out, from the North Korean nuclear blast.Kenner and his followers on the sub, seeing their chance, forcibly takes command of the Lansing from Capt.Sheffield who was suffering from a far more serious radioactive dose, as was not given the proper medication, that Kenner was. The new commander Capt. Kenner quickly has the four nuclear-tipped Thmahawk missiles armed and ready to be launched at cities in both China and Russia in retaliation for, what he thinks was, their attack on the US. With no way of getting in touch with the Lansing, and it acting erratically at sea, Admerial Justice reluctantly comes to the realization that it's in danger of igniting a world war. Admerial Justice sends out the US attack Submerine USS Mako to first communicate with the Lansing to stop it's unstable and dangerous actions or, if that doesn't work, sink it before it does.Exciting and heart-stopping ending with Capt. Sheffield and his crewmen retaking control of the sub and at the same time being tracked by the attack-sub Mako that's trying to sink it not knowing that Capt. Sheffield had the Tomahawks disarmed and stopped from being launched. Using evasive Maneuvers the Lansing Sails underwater through the very dangerous "Tin Can Alley", aptly named for the scores of sunken ships left there from the Russo-Japanese War, outside the Russian port-city of Vladivotok. The Lansing makes it to safety in Russian waters as the Mako withdraws from the chase not attempting to navigate through the hazardous ship graveyard. Surfacing the crew of the Lansing found out that there was indeed life in the city and that no world war broke out above sea and at the same time they didn't, unknowingly and tragically, start a world war from down below.

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daveb-15
2001/12/06

A sorry copy of "Crimson Tide" in my opinion. As each part of the film developed I just new what was going to happen next. Casper Van Dein has not been in anything nearly as good as "Starship Troopers" and it pains me to see him in this. The acting is wooden, the story predicable, give it a miss.Dave

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