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Movies - The Abyss


The Abyss is an award-winning science fiction film from 1989, written and directed by James Cameron, starring Ed Harris
, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio
, and Michael Biehn
. There is a cinema version (140 minutes) and a Director's Cut version (171 minutes).

Underwater scenes were filmed in the containment building of an unfinished nuclear reactor in Gaffney, South Carolina, in the United States. It took 26.5 million litres (seven million gallons) of water to fill the tank to a depth of 13 metres (40 feet), making it the largest underwater set ever. The depth and length of time spent underwater meant that the cast and crew had to go through decompression.

There is a novelization written by Orson Scott Card.

Plot

In the beginning of the film, USS Montana, a fictitious American Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine sinks near the edge of the Cayman Trough after an accidental encounter with an unknown object. As Soviet submarines head to the area, and with a hurricane moving in, the quickest way to mount a rescue is for a SEAL team to be inserted on to an experimental underwater oil platform, and to mount operations from there, enlisting the skills of the resident oil workers living on the platform to help in the operation.

If bad weather and international tensions escalating toward war aren't enough, the SEAL team is accompanied down to the rig by the platform's designer, Lindsey Brigman (Mastrantonio). Her estranged husband, Virgil "Bud" Brigman (Harris) is the foreman of the platform. Unbeknownst to anyone, the SEAL leader, Lt. Coffey (Biehn), has developed High Pressure Nervous Syndrome, and is losing his ability to reason as he sinks slowly into a paranoid state.

As the oil workers and SEAL team investigate the wreck of the sub, the oil workers encounter an alien, but are uncertain what to make of it. The SEAL team recovers one of the nuclear warheads from the submarine, and plan to destroy the sub (and the rig) if salvage is impossible or the strained relations between the Soviet and American governments result in outbreak of war.

Tension mounts as an accident on the surface ship leaves all aboard the underwater rig stranded and cut off from the surface. At this point, the aliens decide to explore the rig and in doing so, make contact with the stranded workers. They clearly mean no harm, but the now totally paranoid Coffey doesn't see it this way, and prepares to send the warhead to the bottom of the trench, set on a timer to explode. After a brief battle between Lindsey and Bud (in one submersible) and Coffey (in another), Coffey is killed and the bomb is accidentally released. This leaves Bud and Lindsey stranded several hundred meters away from the platform in their slowly flooding sub. With time running out, Lindsey sacrifices herself so Bud can use the sole SCUBA unit to swim them both back aboard the rig. Although being clinically dead, the team barely manage to revive Lindsey once she's back aboard.

Realizing that they're the only ones able to stop a nuclear attack on a sentient race, Bud dons a suit incorporating a liquid breathing system to dive to the bottom of the three-mile-deep trench and disarm the warhead. He does so, but his team is shocked to learn that he doesn't have enough breathable liquid to return, and that even though he knew that the journey was suicide, someone had to take the responsibility. He transmits a final message to Lindsey saying that he loves her.

At the bottom of the trench, the aliens find Bud and bring him into their underwater city. There, the aliens show him the message that he sent, and return him and the platform to the surface, unharmed.

In the director's cut, the aliens, responding to man's warlike tendencies (displayed to Bud as news footage showing man's barbarism), are preparing to destroy all coastal regions of the world by giant megatsunamis and freak waves. The aliens relent when they examine Bud's final communication to his wife, realizing that mankind still has the potential for good. This ending is very similar in style, but with far more emotional impact, to the ending of The Day the Earth Stood Still
.

Awards

The Abyss won the 1990 Oscar for Best Visual Effects. It was also nominated for Oscars for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Best Cinematography and Best Sound. The studio also tried hard for Michael Biehn
to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for The Abyss ]



Some related entries: Mount Gushmore | Black sitcom | Patrick Pewterschmidt | Bernard Quatermass | Lethal Weapon | Johnny Mnemonic | WKAQ-TV | Pépé le Moko | Pool Sharks | The Living Planet | John McClane

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article The Abyss; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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