There is a documentary about the making of this movie. It is well worth a watch and really shows how far a crew is willing to go to make a movie.
@jordan38r9 ай бұрын
that documentary is on youtube also
@darktake12349 ай бұрын
Yeah watched it on KZbin- tremendous
@hadoken959 ай бұрын
also how insane a director can be
@Apethantos9 ай бұрын
"how far a crew is willing to go" You mean how far a director is willing to go, and the rest have to follow and fucking hate it lol No disrespect to Cameron and his vision(s) though, some of my favorite directors, despite making masterpieces, were assholes tbh
@andrewforbes14339 ай бұрын
I think it also shows a more balanced perspective on Cameron, in that he is pushing people only as far as he pushes himself. He’s not sitting in a chair on the surface barking orders. He’s in it too. Unlike a director like Kubrick, who would actually play psychological games with his cast, Cameron is just pushing everyone including himself. He also apologized to Mastrantonio for not gauging the extent of her distress. This is not to say that he couldn’t have approached some scenes differently, but I’ve always found the legend of Cameron the Asshole to be misguided.
@steve7169 ай бұрын
Can't believe I never put this together before: Michael Biehn plays a character named "Coffey"... Coffey Biehn!
@WillShakes4238 ай бұрын
That's not even a Dad Joke. That's more like a Dad Observation. Props to you.
@vladyvhv95798 ай бұрын
@@WillShakes423 At exactly what point did people start calling puns "dad jokes"? It's a pun. And a good one.
@jp38138 ай бұрын
@@vladyvhv9579 Well, there's a video where they had Christopher Judge read some dad jokes in the voice of Kratos, and many of them were puns.
@onefooted83429 ай бұрын
I saw this movie in a crowded theatre, and when Bud threw his wedding ring into the toilet the entire audience whooped, cheered, and applauded - they HATED Lindsay. But when she drowned, and the crew couldn’t revive her, the audience was deathly silent, everyone was utterly horror-stricken. It’s one of the most powerful audience reactions I’ve ever seen. Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio simply doesn’t get the props she deserves for her performance in this movie.
@CEngelbrecht6 ай бұрын
Just don't ever ask her about this film.
@nicholascross35579 ай бұрын
I always loved the tiny, tiny detail that Ed Harris' hand remains blue for the rest of the film.
@monsoon12345678909 ай бұрын
Imagine the mental toll of having to blue your hand like that for all the filming when you already hate the movie you're making. I bet James Cameron made him do it even in the suited scenes!
@AlanCanon22229 ай бұрын
@@monsoon1234567890 Imagine you did a bunch of takes and then found out you forgot to dip you hand that morning.
@LezArtist5iG9 ай бұрын
Epic continuity
@28starwarsfan9 ай бұрын
There was no digital film when this was made. They filmed this at the bottom of a silo that was filled with water and covered at the surface with black floating beads to block out sunlight.
@karlmoles65309 ай бұрын
Michael Biehn is such a fantastic actor, you love him as Kyle Reese and Corporal Hicks and absolutely hate his guts in this. And let's not forget Johnny Ringo in Tombstone
@mitchellmelkin40789 ай бұрын
@karlmoles6530, I definitely agree about his chops, though I didn't hate the character (even if he turned into the antagonist). While the character was shown to be naturally overbearing, his personality was simply nuked by the psychosis of what he experienced while he was just trying to carry out his mission, so....
@danterengiil44485 ай бұрын
YASSSSSS I WISH HE WAS IN MORE MOVIES...the only other movie I've seen him in was the Robert Rodriguez Planet Terror 😅
@PeterWhoHasNunchuks9 ай бұрын
From IMDb: During underwater filming, Ed Harris almost drowned. While filming a scene where he had to hold his own breath at the bottom of the submerged set, Harris ran out of air and gave the signal for oxygen. Harris' safety diver got hung up on a cable and could not get to him. Another crew member gave Harris a regulator, but it was upside down and caused him to suck in water. A camera man came over, ripped the upside down regulator, and gave him one in the correct orientation. Later that evening, Ed broke down and cried.
@nodak819 ай бұрын
I heard he punched Cameron in the face after that as well. Not sure if it's true. *edit* just saw the end of the video where they confirm it.
@TukaihaHithlec9 ай бұрын
In an interview he said he was mad at himself for being weak and fearing he might die, which is crazy to me
@spextrekid94109 ай бұрын
No wonder he doesn't wanna talk about that movie.
@maybeitsyou13179 ай бұрын
Yeah no way that is true, he can't say what he really want or he wouldn't work again. @@TukaihaHithlec
@johnirving59499 ай бұрын
@@ProtossWannabe1984His crews wear tshirts that say "You can't scare me, I worked for James Cameron!"
@James_Ford48159 ай бұрын
Ed Harris ''fight fight'' scene was one of the greatest acting performances ever
@ferchrissakes9 ай бұрын
Masterful. So much so it was hard for the other actors to shoot because it affected them too on set
@SeanBlader9 ай бұрын
The real amazing trick about that scene is that he was performing that to a hole in the floor with a camera in it. I haven't seen the scene in like 10 years and can still feel the moment.
@-J.P.Thomas9 ай бұрын
Denzel Washington's punishment (whipped for desertion) scene in Glory. Most powerful scene in a movie I've ever seen
@scottpoyer56789 ай бұрын
I haven't watched this in years and it was surprising how emotional it made me.
@kebernet9 ай бұрын
This is probably as close to "hard scifi" as we got in the 80s. The fluorocarbon breathing liquid was brand new at the time. The drowning bit, though, reminds me of the thing they say in Antarctica: you're not dead until you are warm and dead. People have survived SHOCKINGLY long times with stopped hearts if their body temperature is low enough.
@TinFoilHatConspiracy9 ай бұрын
Yup. Kids in particular tend to have a higher survival rate with this for whatever reason. They’ve been able to revive people up to an hour after drowning from freezing cold water. Never give up too soon.
@josefstalin96789 ай бұрын
Didnt the whole "warm and dead" thing become medical standard practice after some lady froze to death but was recovered and brought back?
@aimmethod9 ай бұрын
That revival/resuscitation scene is the best in cinematic history.
@questionablehumor28009 ай бұрын
@@aimmethodthat whole sequence wrecks me every time.
@robertcampbell80709 ай бұрын
Where I live they instituted a "no low temperature/no time limit" for trying to revive people, especially children, from being frozen, due to two specific cases of young children being brought back after 5 hours or more.
@jamielandis43089 ай бұрын
In the book it’s explained that Bud’s wedding band is titanium, reflecting the strength of his love. When the crane went over the edge, it was trailing almost two thousand feet of cable, weighing many tons. It’s like when, in “Die Hard,” McClane almost gets pulled out the window by the wheel and fire hose. Several underwater movies came out at the same time: “The Abyss,” “Deep Star Six,” and “Leviathan.” Also, Enya’s album, “Watermark,” came out around then. To this day any of the above give me flashbacks. The resuscitation scene is iconic. Everyone has parodied it.
@ianstopher91119 ай бұрын
I had my wedding ring made of titanium and gold specifically because of Bud's ring. I keep waiting for a time I need to keep a door from closing.
@Tullaryx9 ай бұрын
The Abyss pretty much began the love affair Cameron had with filming underwater as much as possible. Watching The Abyss you can see some of the early techniques he would use for later films such as Titanic and Avatar: The Way of Water.
@noirangel64169 ай бұрын
Or visiting the Titanic.
@christermyrberg36619 ай бұрын
Piranha II - The Spawning 😁
@KlooKloo9 ай бұрын
@@christermyrberg3661It's funny but that ain't a joke. The underwater shots in that movie are the only good part.
@christermyrberg36619 ай бұрын
@@KlooKloo I can understand that but to me it has always been a fun guilty pleasure 😁
@mdpetty539 ай бұрын
My friend Mikael Saloman was the DP/Cinematographer on The Abyss. He's told me a lot about filming this picture...and yes the technological innovations in shooting were incredible. Lot's of KZbin vids on that. But what was really hard was being in tanks 12 hours a day...and getting chlorine poisoning, having all your hair bleached white and total freaking exhaustion getting one shot in the can. And yes it was shot on film.
@Johnny_Socko9 ай бұрын
Oh wow, Mikael Salomon is such an accomplished cinematographer. I would love to hear stories from him...but only if were not too traumatic for him to re-live them!
@rbrtck9 ай бұрын
@@Johnny_Socko Ask him about running out of film while shooting the resuscitation scene. It's a good thing Mary didn't have anything sharp and metallic on her. 😱 I guess everyone is allowed one "Battery, Aziz" moment in their career. 😉
@Johnny_Socko9 ай бұрын
@@rbrtck I commented elsewhere that running out of film during a take is not something that I would have expected on a James Cameron set, since he seems to be detail-oriented to the tiniest degree.
@dneill84939 ай бұрын
After this film came out I read the novelization by Orson Scott Card (Ender's Game). It was based on the special edition which I didn't know about at the time and I kept thinking "I wish this had of been in the movie". I was so happy when I finally saw the Special Edition. But there was one scene in the book which i think is the same in the movie but hard to pick up on. When Coffey is in the sub, just before it falls to his death, he looks at them and the HPNS is gone briefly and he has a moment of clarity about his situation and what he has done. Then the sub falls.
@fusionaddict9 ай бұрын
"This movie must have been a nightmare to film." You have *no idea.* Ed Harris said he had to pull over on the way back to the hotel one day during filming because he burst into tears in the car from the stress. Multiple members of the cast and crew were diagnosed with PTSD and most of them swore off ever working with James Cameron again. James Cameron and his brother, who is a camera tech developer, created special waterproof cameras that minimized lens distortion. The movie was shot in the water tank of an unfinished nuclear plant in South Carolina. The water had a large amount of chlorine in it to prevent algae growth and it ended up bleaching some of the cast & crew's hair, irritating their eyes, and giving them mild chemical burns. There were also a handful of near-drownings.
@marcquestenberg83859 ай бұрын
Yes!
@captbunnykiller1.09 ай бұрын
The Abyss aka The Abuse
@jculver16749 ай бұрын
Making it doubly impressive that Michael Biehn came back to work with Cameron again after that ordeal.
@captbunnykiller1.09 ай бұрын
@@jculver1674 I don't think he did though. Which movie are you referring to?
@jculver16749 ай бұрын
@@captbunnykiller1.0 Terminator 2. He filmed a dream sequence for it that was ultimately deleted. He also was planning to be in Avatar, but ended up getting replaced by another actor.
@rbrtck9 ай бұрын
At this depth, everyone was at ambient pressure. That's why they could have a moon pool, which is just a big hole in the bottom of the rig. The inside air (actually a special gas mixture) is at the same pressure as the ocean at this depth, so the water doesn't rise any higher into the rig. This was why we were shown Lindsey and the SEALs adjusting to the much higher pressure when they came down. It takes minutes/hours to adjust to higher pressure, but hours/days/weeks to adjust to lower pressure, depending on the depth. Going from high to low pressure too quickly gives you the "bends" (decompression sickness), which is gas bubbling out of your blood. You have to give your body enough time to adjust or else you could die. Being at a higher pressure than normal gives some people pressure-induced psychosis. This was why Coffey's hand kept shaking, and why he went even nuttier than he normally would. This is a metaphor for figuratively being under pressure. Up to a point, no special hard suit is needed for people to live and work, because everything is at the same pressure. Only a special gas mixture that has no nitrogen (helium is one of the best substitutes for it) and just enough oxygen must be used. Humans can only take so much pressure, though, even with everything equalized. Eventually compression will become an issue for the lungs, which is why they had to switch to fluid (liquid) breathing for Bud when he had to go really *deep* . It's because that stuff, unlike gases, is incompressible.
@RustyDust1019 ай бұрын
Absolutely correct. Nitrogen narcosis is a thing at certain depths, and these guys would DEFINITELY have been at the depths depicted in the movie. So it was highly probable that they breathed a low nitrogen mix. Trained tech divers have had experience over and over with the feelings associated with it. While Navy SEALS are incredibly trained, they don't perfom at such depths USUALLY. It takes loads of training to become accustomed to it, or so I have heard. All of this is done from the surface as well, with the so-called tech divers. They are often seen with three, or even four pressure bottles holding the respective mixtures they need for certain stages, as well as the required amount for the decompression stage. It truly is a science to calculate dive depths, lengths, mixtures, etc so nothing to do on a whim and a moments notice. Any significant pressure changes at depth can and probably will result in extreme physicological as well as psychological consequences, right up to death. The decompression times really take insanely long. Here's a story from my diving instructor for a mere 70m (roughly) tech dive he saw. My diving instructor took us to Hemmoor in Germany and told us quite a few stories of the very early days when the maximum depth in Hemmoor's ex-strip mine, now become lake was around 73m depth. This was a reason why so many tech divers used it either for training dives, or even just for fun. There's an underwater ledge that is almost perfectly flat slopping very, very gradually to the cliff edge where it suddenly plunges down almost 65 meters today, but back then it went to 73m. His diving buddy and him had done a standard dive there to more normal depths, roughly 30 meters, and they rose along the cliff up to the edge slowly for their ascent and safety stop. They popped over the edge, and my diving instructor came face to face with a tech diver, lying on his side, underwater, sleeping. The ledge was perfect for them to lie down onto as it was nearly perfectly at 10m depth, the perfect resting spot without having to really take care not to bob up or down much. Another two sat there playing with laminated cards, another one was sucking food through a straw from a sealed package. All of them waiting for their decompression to end. He found out later the tech divers had another 2 hours to decompress. So, kiddos, never ever take decompression lightly cause the gases in your blood (and joints) will KILL you if you don't take it seriously.
@douglaspatient71129 ай бұрын
Great comment and good explanation. I was going to explain this but this comment beat me to it. Seems , not surprisingly, that many people who see this movie don’t quite grasp how things have to work when at this depth. This is sci-fi obviously but the concepts are all based on real cutting edge science. Not sure how the movie could explain this without a huge exposition dump that would take you out of the movie. Great comment!
@mitchellmelkin40789 ай бұрын
@@douglaspatient7112, Well, our new friends provided the physiological magic for the crew. No explanation really needed.
@gabedamien9 ай бұрын
The CG water tentacle was groundbreaking. Arguably the first photoreal CGI in film.
@evilscary9 ай бұрын
They *invented* photoshop to create it. That's not even hyperbole.
@YagiChanDan9 ай бұрын
Corridor Crew did a good breakdown of this recently.
@synaesthesia20109 ай бұрын
@@evilscary They made use of the earliest form of Photoshop, but they didn't create it. Photoshop was developed in 1987 by the American brothers Thomas and John Knoll, who sold the distribution license to Adobe Systems Incorporated in 1988. Cameron used the earliest version while it was still in its development phase, but it wasn't created because of the movie, John Knoll just happened to be working at ILM (and still does) so Cameron would have access to whatever they were working at with the time. It explains this on Adobe's website
@J4ME5_9 ай бұрын
Watch the corridor crew episode about this, the pbotoshop elements are nothing compared to the cgi breakthrough made here
@spirittammyk9 ай бұрын
It was done before The Abyss, in Disney's "Flight of the Navigator".
@dubiumguy9 ай бұрын
38:56 The reason everyone told you to watch the Special Edition over the theatrical cut is that bigger message was completely stripped from the theatrical cut. And whilst the theatrical cut is a decent movie, The Abyss Special Edition is one of my favourite movies. Its also easily James Cameron's most technically accomplished movie because of the new techniques they had to develop before they could even start filming such as the full re-breather face masks which didn't exist before Cameron needed diver underwater dialogue and had to work with divers to invent the gear.. However its also notorious for quite possibly being the toughest shoot in movie history with those working on the movie nicknaming it 'The Abuse' amongst other nicknames. Amongst trivia you didnt mention are the fact that both James Cameron and Ed Harris almost drowned making it and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio walked off set during the resuscitation scene and was intending to abandon the rest of the shoot until convinced to return by her agent. Also, since the water was sort of murky prior to shooting meaning they couldn't film anything they had to add so much chlorine to the water to clarify it that everyone's hair started bleaching and many developed minor skin burns. Many of the actors refuse to talk about the movie to this day because of the trauma involved. But damn, Cameron made an excellent Sci-fi! And also fun fact, the rat scene was heavily cut for us British audiences so all we got to see was the actors faces. It wasn't until 30 years later when i sailed the high seas and commandeered an uncut copy that i got to see the scene in full.
@goldenageofdinosaurs71929 ай бұрын
I wasn’t a big fan of the Special Edition over the years, but I have started to come around to it lately.
@Clyde__Frog9 ай бұрын
always watch the special edition.
@Johnny_Socko9 ай бұрын
And the specific reason why Mastrantonio walked off the set during the resuscitation scene was because the camera ran out of film during a take, and the prospect of having to do another take of such an emotionally intense scene (especially because of an avoidable technical reason) was just too daunting. Honestly, getting into a situation where the camera runs out of film seems very unlike the *notoriously* detail-oriented James Cameron...
@ccdecc66509 ай бұрын
That's exactly why the Special Edition is the inferior movie. Its preachy and clumsy with it.
@JStrange139 ай бұрын
@@ccdecc6650 Thanks for saying that! I feel that way too. The theatrical cut I thought made the point beautifully with a hopeful ending. The SE just pounds you over the head with it.
@PaulLoh9 ай бұрын
I love this movie so much. Michael Biehn's family are personal friends of ours. First time I met him, I asked him to sign my copy of the novelization of this film. After all the good guys I'd seen him play, it was great to see him play a villain. He's so good in this! And back in the 80s, I was totally crushing on the actress who played Lindsey. She was also in Robin Hood.
@canman879 ай бұрын
She was also in Scarface!
@kieronball89629 ай бұрын
The Abyss... A complete and utter nightmare to make. The Abyss: Special Edition... One of the greatest movies ever made. Simone and George reacts to The Abyss: Special Edition... Superb!
@DanLyndon8 ай бұрын
It's got a decently written script with a lot of stupid shit and Cameron's signature wacky, over the top villains. We aren't talking about a great work of art here, but a very impressive one all the same, like a very average painting made upside down on a 50 foot canvas. Basically like most of Cameron's films these days.
@thormelsted9 ай бұрын
The drowning/resuscitation scene. I was 17 when this came out in theaters, so while it was an intense scene, Ed Harris' incredibly powerful and emotional acting didn't quite hit me until I watched this years later having met my wife. The pain and desperation in his voice gets me every damn time. Just extraordinary. EDIT: Spelling
@emeraldmaiden639 ай бұрын
I still get emotional when I watch that scene. And when she breaks down talking to him later.
@jculver16749 ай бұрын
The behind-the-scenes story of this movie is absolutely insane. What Jim Cameron put his cast and crew through was unbelievable, and left them scarred for life. Ed Harris refuses to talk about the movie to this day, and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio essentially walked away from mainstream filmmaking after finishing her next couple of movies.
@captbunnykiller1.09 ай бұрын
MEM almost walked off the set for good during the resuscitation scene because she had been lying there for hours and hours half naked in the cold with everyone standing around her, because Cameron didn't think it was perfect enough. When she threatened to quit, he said to try one last time and that was the scene. One has to give more credit to the actors and the crew, they did an exceptional job, what a beautiful piece of art. I just wish it did not have to be that hard on all of them.
@Mugthraka9 ай бұрын
Well Cameron is a workalohic and he asks as much of his crew and cast as he does with himself. The man also nearly drowned one night cause he was checking the underwater set and was nearly caught under some piece of the set that fell off while everyone was out of the studio with him alone under water. Everyone got PTSD after this movie.
@snowdenwyatt62769 ай бұрын
I think MEM is the one that refuses to talk about it to this day. Harris didn't talk about it for a few years but is featured talking about it in the 1993 doc four years later. I'm sure it's not one of his favorite memories or topics though.
@bigdream_dreambig9 ай бұрын
@@Mugthraka If true, that's sure to have been against the safety regs. "No one in without a buddy" is a fairly common rule in dangerous environments.
@captbunnykiller1.09 ай бұрын
@@Mugthraka Yes, workaholics like him should not be given free range like that. It is harming them and others. They need reminding that they are tearing everyone down with them.
@TheOli4D9 ай бұрын
Haha yeah of course this was filmed on film George! The movie is from 1989!! Digital was not a thing in movies until the early 2000s.
@SleepingGiant779 ай бұрын
Came here to say this. I remember it because The Phantom Menace is the first and only one of the prequels to be filmed traditionally. The rest were filmed digitally
@Cadinho939 ай бұрын
Fun Fact: Real oxygenated fluorocarbon fluid was used in the rat fluid breathing scene. Dr. Johannes Kylstra and Dr. Peter Bennett of Duke University pioneered this technique and consulted on the film, giving detailed instructions on how to prepare the fluid. The only reason for cutting to the actors' faces was to avoid showing the rats defecating from momentary panic as they began breathing the fluid. Now, the breathable liquid scene was just filmed with Ed Harris holding his breath for brief windows of filming. Also, the Special Edition version contains 17 extra minutes that was trimmed out of the theatrical release by the studio against James Cameron's wishes. These scenes are key and totally explain the alien's real agenda. Glad to see you guys doing this version because the director's cut of this film has additional footage that makes the story so much better.
@nt78stonewobble9 ай бұрын
I seem to remember the US navy doing actual human trials on fluid breathing, but it required so much effort by the divers to move the fluid in and out of their lungs to do any sort of work, that they would literally bruise and break their ribs. So it's not a practical solution for diving. It might be if the people could be on essentially ventilators.
@brianegendorf20239 ай бұрын
Also, if you have a chance, read the book, cause it gives a lot more information about the aliens and from the point of view of the aliens.
@TheDaringPastry13139 ай бұрын
They talked about this at the end, read it word for word.
@Interesting709 ай бұрын
Real: My buddy is a retired navy diver
@-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.-9 ай бұрын
It's not animal abuse. It's just animal torture.
@rbrtck9 ай бұрын
Bud's hand is in various slowly fading shades of blue for the entire movie. 😂
@raycole28229 ай бұрын
When Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio are alone together in the little submersible and it's slowing filling with water--that scene is both the most personal and the most desperate "desperate plan" scene I have ever seen. It is horrifying and beautiful and haunting all at once. The acting is so good: the initial clear-headedness, then the worry rising along with the water level until the final terrifying moment of total submersion. Wow.
@vladtepis43169 ай бұрын
The fictional company that runs the oil rig, Benthic Petroleum, is the same company that owned the abandoned gas station in T2 where John, Sarah, and Arnold hide out in after breaking out of the mental hospital.
@rcrawford429 ай бұрын
Nice.
@cyberingcatgirls70699 ай бұрын
It's also a Benthic Petroleum tanker truck that explodes in front of Bill and Jo in Twister.
@Trepanation219 ай бұрын
@@cyberingcatgirls7069 Really?! I love that. Also, that Earth is really going through it, huh? lmao
@cyberingcatgirls70699 ай бұрын
@@Trepanation21 Either that or Benthic is branching out into the multiverse!
@gippywhite9 ай бұрын
Niiiiice!!!
@kilroy9879 ай бұрын
The Abyss and True Lies will get 4K bluray releases in March!
@DonDuracell9 ай бұрын
Finally! But I'm also thinking "Please, please don't screw this up!" 🤞
@NmDPlm319 ай бұрын
@@DonDuracellVery true. We do know for a fact that they color graded the film differently. All the deep blue hues of the original have been shifted to teal. For some reason, 4K remasters have all been getting rid of the original beautiful blue tones and opting for teal shades. I won’t have a full opinion on it until I see it, but I’m not much of a fan of that kind of thing. And word from some people who have seen True Lies already say it is filled with DNR that ruins it.
@warrengday9 ай бұрын
@@NmDPlm31 Why change things, don't they want us to buy them!
@SliderFury19 ай бұрын
Yeah, but not the special edition as far as I know. I hope I'm wrong.
@Trepanation219 ай бұрын
@@warrengday To be fair, some things have to be tweaked and adjusted for 4K because the new level of detail inherently jeopardizes some original choices that suited the tech of the time. Whether or not this regards the blue/teal situation, I have no idea. But generally speaking, it does need to be curated.
@donovanlindaman4219 ай бұрын
They filmed this in an old decommissioned nuclear reactor silo. They flooded it then put thousands of black rubber beads to block the light to simulate the darkness of the deep ocean 😊
@karlmortoniv29519 ай бұрын
The nuclear facility was in North Carolina, if memory serves. They converted the tank and a lot of the buildings into a studio with a nice big underwater tank and places for wardrobe and art department, dressing rooms and so on. The state gave the production massive tax breaks and other incentives because they thought they were going to end up with a nice, shiny new filming facility that would bring revenue to the state but Cameron and the crew basically left the place completely trashed when they finished the movie and it would have taken millions of dollars to clean it up and prepare it for another production so for years the place just sat there rotting. Wonder if anything changed? I lost track of it years ago. 🙁
@mitchellmelkin40789 ай бұрын
@@karlmortoniv2951, It's actually in South Carolina. I wish I could tell you the site was converted into something which generated income, but I just don't recall the history.
@Gidono9 ай бұрын
The part where he slaps her and tells her to fight as he is giving her CPR, probably the best acting I've seen from anyone. I remember this movie vividly I've watched it so many times since it came out in the 80's, that scene still makes me cry.
@TinFoilHatConspiracy9 ай бұрын
I honestly think one of my favorite things about that woman’s revival after drowning was how happy everyone was about it, not just her ex. Everyone all movie seemed to hate her but they were honestly relieved that she didn’t die. So they didn’t hate her nearly as much as they claimed to 😂
@GeoffCano9 ай бұрын
To the subject of problematic filming conditions; it really is hard to reconcile this being one of my favorite movies with how the cast and crew were treated. Simone is spot on, "I hate that I love this movie". At the end of the day all I can do is appreciate the art for what it is and support productions that treat all with respect.
@Wuffskers9 ай бұрын
I said in another comment, honestly I think it would be worse if the end product had been shit, imagine going through all the hell just for a movie to not even be good, so I think it being a good movie and enjoying the movie is probably the best silver lining to come out of it
@rickastley23089 ай бұрын
Underrated performance by Michael Biehn. Coffey and Ringo, two best bad guys in his career.
@jsharp31659 ай бұрын
“Hippie, stay off my side!” is a line I love to employ. Nobody gets it except my wife. Which makes it even better. This is my favorite Cameron movie btw.
@RideAcrossTheRiver9 ай бұрын
Poor Hippy. He actually had all the saving details but everyone despised him.
@jsharp31657 ай бұрын
@@RideAcrossTheRiver Well people died because he went back for his rat instead of closing the hatch. The only thing the rat was good for was helping the SEAL demonstrate the breathing liquid.
@RideAcrossTheRiver7 ай бұрын
@@jsharp3165 How did you come up with that?
@jp38139 ай бұрын
I'd love for you to wear heart monitors while watching suspense thrillers like Crimson Tide (1995). Most of this film's visual effects were done in the late 80s, but the tidal wave sequence was completed for the special edition two years after Terminator 2.
@PriceFamPrime9 ай бұрын
I gotta say, this movie has one of the best on-screen punches I've ever seen when Catfish clocks Coffee right in the face and sends him nearly head over heels. Love it!
@kevb0449 ай бұрын
The scene with the rat in the fluid is why The Abyss has a tricky release history in the UK as it was deemed cruel as the rat wouldn't have known what was going on and that there is an inherent risk of lung damage associated with the fluid breathing. The fact that all the rats that were used in different takes had no long lasting health issues is besides the point because the production company didn't know that would be the case at the time of filming. The scene was trimmed for early theatrical and home releases but the new 4k version hasn't been granted a release as the studio doesn't want to trim the scene again and the BBFC (UK film ratings board) won't change their stance either
@ballymenabob9 ай бұрын
When Channel Four showed the TV premiere of The Abyss they "accidentally" showed an uncut version which included the rat breathing liquid scene. I was happy to finally see the scene in full but many more people were not happy. Not happy at all.
@kevb0449 ай бұрын
Well, I mean clearly the rats were not having a great time, to the point of pooping themselves due to being distressed. I mean, I'm not a fan of censorship, but at the same time the filmmakers need to be responsible with what they are doing and what they subject their cast (human or otherwise) to
@gswithen9 ай бұрын
Rats are considered vermin, pests. They are not protected animals. There would be no reason to remove this scene in the UK or anywhere else.
@baronnuuke78219 ай бұрын
@@gswithen even if it's legal to kill them it doesn't mean it's morally acceptable to publish a movie with a rat being tortured. They are creatures that can feel pain, fear and distress after witnessing a friend death.
@GilraenTook7 ай бұрын
@@gswithen This is a domestic rat. Hope you've never taken any sort of medication in your life because most of it is tested on those vermin, pests. There's a HUGE difference between a domesticated lab animal and the animals that invade people's homes, carry diseases, and drive local animals/plants to extinction in areas they've become invasive in.
@MrGpschmidt9 ай бұрын
Underrated and epic in every way. One of Cameron’s finest hours. I saw this opening day at NYC’s late, great Ziegfeld Theatre (one of the city’s last movie palaces) in all its glory and the resuscitation scene always makes me cry - very powerful and poignant.
@MikeTaffet9 ай бұрын
When George looks long at pizza, the pizza does not look back because it will be devoured
@tj_27019 ай бұрын
Interesting fact about James Cameron, he took on film projects with the goal of advancing film making technology and build the credibility to be able to one day be capable of making his dream project. And he eventually was able to when he made Avatar.
@joshschleh81199 ай бұрын
You said you'd love to see the behind the scenes for this movie...if you can find it watch "Under Pressure: The Making of the Abyss" it is incredible. I believe no other film was ever more complicated to make. Several people came so close to dying. The actors were put through hell. Mary Elizabeth had to hold her breath and be carried all that way; Ed Harris was dragged by a cable sideways over and over for that descent into the abyss, and the liquid breathing was just him holding his breath in regular water and pretending to "breathe" And James Cameron would be underwater directing for so long he had to go through decompression to surface again. It's seriously the best behind the scenes documentary I've ever seen.
@eliserichardson88149 ай бұрын
I was so overwhelmed back then at the cinema. Breathtaking, stressful, and just wonderful. I was totally knackered when I left the cinema and physically drained. And it's been one of my favourites since
@brycedyck84509 ай бұрын
Water: We can't live without it, nor can we live within it😊
@adamskeans25159 ай бұрын
sure we can. With the proper gear.
@KronnangDunn9 ай бұрын
@@adamskeans2515 Not permanently...
@KronnangDunn9 ай бұрын
You know, Women and Water begin with the same letter....
@adamskeans25159 ай бұрын
@@KronnangDunn with enough of the right gear, sure we can
@KronnangDunn9 ай бұрын
@@adamskeans2515 Be my guest...
@erictaylor54629 ай бұрын
There is a film from a body recovery team sent to remove the crew from a sunk tug boat off the African coast. It looked like this, but with even more trash floating around. You can see a hand in the water inches away and the diver grabs the hand to pull the body out, then the diver screamed when the had squeezed back. He had found a survivor, trapped in a small pocket of air. They had to quickly plan and mount a rescue, but they saved the man's life. At first the survivor wanted nothing more to do with the sea, but he changed his mind later and became a diver himself. He made his first professional dive with the man who had rescued him. Touching story.
@CEngelbrecht9 ай бұрын
Your body wouldn't get crushed by the increasing water pressure in itself at something like 2,000 feet (~600 meters = ~60 bars of pressure). Most of your body is fluids and solids (blood and bones, etc.), and they don't compress as readily as gasses do. Your concern does start with the gasses you have in your body, ie. the air in your lungs and your cranium. With open-air regulating systems, e.g. SCUBA or the helmets the divers use in the film, as long as you can breathe air at the same elevated pressure as the water around you, you won't get crushed. If there's a difference in pressure between the two, that would easily cause crushing. This also applies to the air inside The Rig, where everything takes place. That air is also kept at the same pressure as the water around it, otherwise the differences in pressure between outside and in would violently implode The Rig, as we see it happen to Michael Biehn's character in the mini-sub. However, diving deep is also severely limited by the way gas compounds interact with the human body at increased pressure, and at these perceived depths, they'd have to employ advanced saturation diving methods. Meaning that they have to change the composition of the internal air on The Rig and the air fed to the divers sporting the helmets. Our normal atmospheric air of ~80% nitrogen (N2) and ~20% oxygen (O2) is no good. If you'd breathe that at 60 bars, it... would kill you. A partial pressure of oxygen higher than 1.6 PO2 is outright poisonous for the human body. Shorthanded that means that you couldn't breathe pure 100% oxygen deeper than 1.6 bars = 6m/20f, before the PO2 would kill you. Atmospheric air with 20% would reach 1.6 PO2 around 70m/230f. (For increased safety, tourist scuba classes teach you to never go higher than 1.4 PO2, usually on 20% O2 natural air.) The big guy had that seizure early on, because the oxygen percentage in his breathing mix got switched to too high and he slipped into an extended coma from oxygen toxicity. Me, I have no idea what exactly the air mix might be inside The Rig, but it's probably at a lower O2 than 20%, and they probably would do away completely with nitrogen and replace it with some other gas, 'cause there's also a separate issue of nitrogen narcosis at extreme pressure (past 100m/330f, say). So maybe there's, like, argon mixed in instead of nitrogen, but I have no idea. It wouldn't be helium (which is otherwise common for saturation diving), 'cause the actors' voices don't sound funny. (EDIT: Some have since suggested to me it might be a hydrox mix with 1% oxygen and 99% hydrogen. That's how little oxygen there'd need to be in the mix at such extreme pressure. I still haven't found any references to what Cameron might've intended the mix to be.) In the film they talk at length about decompression; just to get down into the U/W rig, the group from the surface in the beginning has to sit for 8 hours in their vessel attached to The Rig, while the pressure is gradually increased and their breathing mix is changed to the one internally in The Rig. And to ever get back from that depth after their extended stay (except for the "Deus Ex Machina" switch with the ending), The Rig crew would have to decompress back to lower pressure over a really long time (do they say two weeks, I forget?) also just sitting on their a... and wait. This is because if you breathe air at depth for an extended time, you absorb more of the gasses in your blood per millilitre. SCUBA classes teach you about the dangers of decompression sickness (aka. "the bends"), where you need to return slowly from even shallow depths like 20m/65f, because breathing compressed air at those 3 bars for, say, 20min. on a tourist dive has dissolved more nitrogen in your blood than otherwise at surface pressure, and going straight back to the surface risk having this "residual nitrogen" turn from dissolved in the liquid of your blood to suddenly form gas bubbles in your blood stream, and that... can kill you too. If you return to lower pressure gradually, your body can keep up and wash out the residual compounds just by you breathing normally. For the finale, where Ed Harris' character has to dive much deeper than 60 bars, James Cameron came up with using the fluid breathing tech, which exists in real life in a lab. For those depths, it would be impossible to do it with gasses in your lungs no matter what the mix, but you can (theoretically!) do it with a liquid in your lungs feeding your blood and cells the oxygen instead, again because liquids don't compress as readily as gas does even at insane water depths. There's a lot of really good diving science hidden inside James Cameron's story. He knows his s**t.
@michaelturner91549 ай бұрын
You deserve a thumbs up for your detailed response. Even if I knew all this stuff, I'd be too lazy to share it. Good on ya.
@CEngelbrecht9 ай бұрын
@@michaelturner9154 🙏
@chrisn43159 ай бұрын
I used to be such a geek like George when it comes to _behind-the-scenes_ stuff. Since I found out about all that trouble that occured during the shooting of this movie, I consider that now a double-edged sword. But here's a fun fact: At the beginning, calling Lindsey "the queen bitch of the universe" was James Cameron's hint to his last movie Aliens (II).
@Johnny_Socko9 ай бұрын
And the Lindsey/Bud relationship was based on Cameron's own relationship with his ex-wife, Gale Ann Hurd.
@michelle63379 ай бұрын
This is my favorite James Cameron movie. Back in the day of cable TV, I would always stop to watch it when flipping through the channels. Which is rough because it's such a long movie. I love the characters. I love the story. That CPR scene traumatized me as a kid. Ugh, now I have to go watch it again.
@aquapuppy98389 ай бұрын
19:50 I used to scuba dive a lot, and up to 100m deep, you don't need anything special to resist the water pressure to breathe comfortably, or in this case, for that suit to stay seemingly loose. The compressed air you take with you in tanks gets further compressed by the water pressure to precisely the depth you're at, even though the tanks themselves do not compress. When you breathe in the highly compressed air, it presses outwards against your lungs at exactly the same pressure as the water pressing against the outside of your lungs, meaning that it feels like you are breathing normally at sea level, one atmosphere of pressure. You do, however have to continually breathe as you change depths to ensure the air in your lungs and blood system are being constantly saturated with air that is at the same pressure as the water around you, and if you don't your lungs can crush as you descend too quickly, or explode if you ascend too quickly. One atmosphere of pressure change (10m of vertical water) is enough to double or halve the volume of air. You can also get the bends, where the gas in your blood hasn't had time to equalize with the pressure around it, and you end up with nitrogen instead of oxygen in your blood (I think? it's been several decades), which is why every 30m or so you take a break from ascending or descending to equalize, and also at 5m before resurfacing. This means that the suit shown to be loose at that depth must contain air that is as pressurized by the water around it as the air the divers are breathing, and isn't getting crumpled against the diver's body. However, to be more realistic, they'd have to be breathing in air from a closed pressurized system, and breathing out into the suit, or vice versa, because I'm pretty sure rebreather systems wouldn't be able to keep up with such a large open system like this in order for them to reliably breathe in recirculated air and not exhaled air. Rebreather systems are also notoriously unreliable, although this is scifi, so... y'know. Edit: Haven't seen the movie, and just got the end of your vid... idk anything about breathing liquids lol, just air.
@donsample10029 ай бұрын
The ring was titanium.
@smavtmb21969 ай бұрын
I'm so happy this movie is amazing because the cast and crew went through alot to make it. Atleast their efforts were not wasted. This movie is an emotional roller coaster. I get emotional/cry everytime I see the scene where Lindsay drowns and Virgil works so hard to save her. It's so intense and Ed Harris acting/emotion is so believable and moving that he should have won an Oscar for it. Of course this is a James Cameron movie. Even Michael Biehn aka Kyle Reese from Terminator stars as the unhinged villain. Also this is the first movie at the time to use a new CGI technology to create the water tentacle mimicking Lindsay's face . Yes George that CGI technique was later used to create the T-1000 in Terminator 2.
@ethanholgate25129 ай бұрын
The Abyss is my favourite James Cameron movie you don't know the half of it guys when it comes to the making of this movie the documentary is insane with how they got this movie made it's on KZbin I recommend it as its just crazy one big thing that was invented by Jim Cameron in this movie was how to direct light underwater they used all these tiny plastic balls so when they directed the underwater sequences they wouldn't get screwed up from the light above he used this exact same method on Avatar 2
@ssj4megaman9 ай бұрын
Remember this was in 89. All film baby, no digital recording. The water digital effect though, was extremely early "cgi" and what turned into the effects for the T-1000 in Terminator 2. Cameron basically said that this was the prototype effect to see if the T-1000 would be possible.
@kingbrutusxxvi9 ай бұрын
I saw this in the theater when I was in medical school and to this day I don't think I've seen anyone play a more realistic dead body than Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio. The pallor and blank stare are still chill-inducing. Not the kind of thing she probably wants to be known for but really impressive. Cheers.
@soloCRPG9 ай бұрын
The CG water tentacle was the first such use of the tech, it was the first time we had a material that was refractive and realistically integrated into the environment. If you look up the "The Abyss-CGI making of (1989)" they go over the tech and how it revolutionized everything. They used Alias PowerAnimator (grandfather to Autodesk Maya) running on Silicon Graphics workstations running IRIX, a flavor of Unix. I had a chance to use both Silicon Graphics Indigo's (in grabber purple!) and O2 workstations (grabber blue!) when I was in the industry, with the Indigo running a 32-bit R3000 RISC CPU @33MHz. Back then the thing was a beast, and cost over $75000 for a single Indigo workstation. There was a reason all of the computers in Jurassic Park were Silicon Graphics workstations, and it was not just set dec. ;)
@lawrencejones15179 ай бұрын
What they were doing was something called saturation diving. It's where you pressurize the divers to a given depth and all you really need is protection from abrasion and cold. It doesn't take very long for a human body to adjust in pressurizing, but depressurization could take up to two weeks on depending on depth. That was one thing that the movie doesn't make clear. Not everyone adapts to being pressurized, and symptoms can include uncontrolled shaking and paranoia. Basically Michael Biehn's character is having this problem. And Ed Harris' character's wedding ring is made from titanium, because his wife was an engineer specializing in designing underwater equipment, and titanium is a really good material for constructing pressure hulls for deep submersibles, and because of the symbolism of titanium being mostly unbreakable.
@geraldherrmann7879 ай бұрын
This was the first time morphing was used ... then followed by T2 and Jurassic Park ... you just saw the birth of CGI-morphing = the waterfinger squirming and forming a face.
@tremorsfan9 ай бұрын
Morphing was used a year earlier for the transformation scene in Willow.
@Trepanation219 ай бұрын
@@tremorsfan Shoutout Willow! Man, this era of filmmaking really was "magic" 🤩
@jerryward33119 ай бұрын
@@Trepanation21Industrial Light and 'Magic' actually. ILM pioneered this technology.
@rbrtck9 ай бұрын
Not all subs are massive, but the ones that carry dozens of nuclear missiles are. The reason they are cramped on the inside is that their volume is for the weapons they carry, leaving as little as they can get away with for the crew to live in. It's the same on every military vessel, even humongous aircraft carriers. They squeeze the crew into tight quarters, with many sleeping in tiny bunks in hallways, to make as much space as possible to support like 100 aircraft (on the US super-carriers) of various types, fuel for the aircraft, nuclear power plants for the ship, and enough ammo to sink a small island.
@WUStLBear829 ай бұрын
Ohio-class SSBNs as seen in the movie were pretty sweet, though, compared to the previous US SSBNs and Los Angeles-class SSNs. As a civilian tool of the Reagan era military-industrial complex I got to deploy on subs for several weeks several times a year while conducting various tests of things we were developing and the Ohio-class had more creature comforts (eg, much nicer "heads" and galleys), and carrying additional personnel was less disruptive to the crew. On an LA-class SSN the lowest-ranking seamen were already hot-bunking (sharing bunks in shifts) and I always felt bad about displacing a crewman from his regular berth.
@cpob20139 ай бұрын
I've heard soviet akula subs are spacious, largest in the world
@rbrtck9 ай бұрын
@@cpob2013 They were so huge because they carried extra-large missiles. And because the crew size was about the same as that of the American Ohio-class ballistic missile subs, I suppose it's possible that there was more space left for crew comfort. I don't know that for a fact, but I've heard that, too. If true, then it would be an exception to the rule, though, because more empty space means less supplies and ammunition.
@brom009 ай бұрын
Great film! My favorite film from Cameron. The behind-the-scenes footage is fascinating, Cameron and crew conxieved a lot of firsts with underwater communication while filming.
@GorgeousRandyFlamethrower-9 ай бұрын
9:40 I'm sure that the feeling of drowning must conjure up such a primal state of panic that it wouldn't really matter if you were a rat or a human. Once that feeling of "gotta take a breath" starts everything else but "BREATHE!" goes out the window and you think you're gonna drown, hyper-oxygenated breathing fluid or not
@AnonEyeMouse9 ай бұрын
I've been through it, twice, as a kid. It is not good. Both times due to 'pranks' by friends. Both times had to be rescued by passing strangers. Gave me a lifelong appreciation for good samaritans.
@bigdream_dreambig9 ай бұрын
@@AnonEyeMouse You need new friends. 😕
@ericc87059 ай бұрын
According to several sources, the wedding ring worn by Bud (Ed Harris) which saves his life by preventing the hydraulic door from shutting is a custom made ring made out of titanium
@TechnologicallyTechnical9 ай бұрын
Digital wasn't a thing when this was made, so indeed it was all filmed on actual film. If something looked nearly impossible or extremely dangerous to pull off, that's because it was. It's a miracle no one died making this movie. Even Cameron nearly drowned at one point on set.
@peartree83389 ай бұрын
"This movie must've been a nightmare to film" Ohohoho like you wouldn't believe George. 😁
@earthien9 ай бұрын
In fact, don't EVER ask Ed Harris to talk about this movie -- he won't!
@christieyoung12729 ай бұрын
They should find the documentary and do a reaction to it, that’s a worthy story in itself.
@brycealthoff80929 ай бұрын
Literally production Hell.
@shawnmiller47819 ай бұрын
Cameron bears most of the blame
@AllegedlyElPresidente.6 ай бұрын
The two water tanks used in the filming of The Abyss were specially constructed to hold large amounts of water. The first tank, based on the abandoned plant's primary reactor containment vessel, held 7.5 million US gallons of water and was 18 m deep and 70 m across. At the time, it was the largest fresh-water-filtered tank in the world. Additional scenes were shot in the second tank, an unused turbine pit, which held 2.5 million US gallons of water. As the production crew rushed to finish painting the main tank, millions of gallons of water poured in and took five days to fill. The Deepcore rig was anchored to a 90-ton concrete column at the bottom of the large tank
@triangle_of_jesus9 ай бұрын
To this day Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth mastrantonio refused to talk about making this film the shoot was that hellish. Ed Harris used to have emotional break downs at the side of the road on the way home, after shoots and punched James Cameron once.
@andreraymond68609 ай бұрын
Bud's ring is made of Titanium. In the bookco-written by Orson Scott Card and Cameron they explain that Bud designed and made their wedding rings out of titanium to symbolized the indestructible permanence of their love. When he throws his ring into the toilet and then goes back to get it he actually saves his own life. A nice touch is that for the rest of the movie Ed Harris has a blue hand from the chemicals from the toilet.
@MrZeek15199 ай бұрын
BTW, I LOVE the "Heart Monitor" idea for scary or intense movies!!! Another one of James Cameron's "BLUE" movies. The man has an infatuation with filming with the color blue... The Abyss, Terminator 2: Judgement Day, the Avatar movies, Titanic, Aliens, Strange Days, and True Lies. Whether it's film lenses or digital coloring, the guy definitely has a style and mood he prefers.
@alyxgriffen50739 ай бұрын
That drowning scene (and the subsequent resuscitation) was the very first part of this movie that I ever saw; I was channel surfing, and came across it on HBO, right when those two were discussing their options. (I immediately WTF'd at what I was watching.) This whole sequence is one of the most terrifying things I've ever watched.
@cliveklg77399 ай бұрын
The camera housing units they used to film this, almost look like mini-submarines themselves. They filmed at in never finished nuclear planet. Some of Ed Harris's best work is in Westworld.
@flashgordon62389 ай бұрын
Saw this in the theaters many times. A super intensive movie with heart racing scenes as you experienced. The scene with her drowning had audience members gasping for air including myself (former lifeguard).
@nrgspike9 ай бұрын
9:10 Unfortunately the rat scene is why the UK 4K release has been cancelled. The ratings board here requested it be cut or edited on grounds of animal abuse, while Disney was happy to make the cuts, apparently Cameron refused - even though it had been edited in earlier DVD/VHS releases.
@la_beatrice9 ай бұрын
Many commenters already mentioned the documentary on how this was filmed and also the tough conditions, but if you want another perspective, Michael Biehn was in Michael Rosenbaum's podcast a few weeks ago and talked about it. I'd say he likes James Cameron a little more than Ed Harris does 😂
@CEngelbrecht9 ай бұрын
You guys watch the films I grew up with. I remember this as the most accurate drowning and resuscitation scene in cinema history. And animal rights groups really hated the S out of this movie for the rat breathing liquid scene. 'Cause that was actual oxygenated liquid that the critter was actually breathing. (Ed Harris just held his breath.) And yes, this was a nightmare shoot that is legendary in Hollywood. Everybody lost their damn minds. And all caught on stock film, this is like ten years before the digital breakthrough. And much of the specialized equipment was designed by James Cameron himself. He's a life-long under water nerd, which is why this film was his baby. James Cameron the movie director was the third human being to reach the bottom of the Challenger Deep in a bathyscaphe of his own design in 2012. Try and catch "The Right Stuff" for Ed Harris' big break years before this one.
@quibblegaze9 ай бұрын
0:42: ⚓ Exploring the underwater world in a sci-fi movie with unknown depths and mysteries. 5:11: 🌊 Mysterious invitation for a high-risk diving mission in a submarine with unknown incident causes and potential for danger. 9:45: 🎥 Exploring the depths of a massive submarine in a movie reaction with commentary and awe at the filming logistics. 13:50: 🌊 Mysterious underwater encounter leads to speculation of new species or aliens, triggering international tension. 18:46: ⛈️ Military personnel face consequences for disobeying orders during a chaotic situation in a cold environment. 22:54: 👽 Discovery of mysterious creature leads to speculation of its intentions and potential danger. 27:58: ⚓️ Intense underwater scene unfolds as characters face imminent danger and struggle to survive. 32:43: 🌊 Exploration of deep sea diving, encountering nightmarish creatures, and overcoming challenges in the abyss. 38:09: 🌊 Exploration of deep ocean survival, camaraderie, and unexpected twists in a captivating movie. Timestamps by Tammy AI
@DevSolar8 ай бұрын
On submarine sizes: You need to distinguish between the *type* of submarine pictured. There's a world of difference between a German Type VII ("Das Boot", 66m), a US Los Angeles class (pictured here, 110m), or a Russian Typhoon ("Hunt for Red October", 175m with two pressure vessels alongside each other). That's why Cpt. Ramius has a cozy cabin for his own and the officers have a dining room, while the officers of U96 were dining squeezed around a table the size of half a bookshelf and the crew took turns using the cots...
@rbrtck9 ай бұрын
The guy with the crab crawling out of his mouth is Mike Cameron, James Cameron's brother. He's an engineer (their whole family are scientists and engineers, with Jim being the black sheep, since he's a filmmaker, but then again he is also sort of a scientist, too), and he has designed a bunch of the equipment his brother has used for underwater shooting. He did that for _Titanic_ (1997), and probably did that work for this movie, too.
@Hortonfantastic49 ай бұрын
11:10 dude this was ‘89 which means he worked on it after Aliens. Not a lot of digital going on yet. Although if the tech was available Cameron definitely would be using it.
@Demane699 ай бұрын
Yes indeed. This movie is considered to be one of the most difficult movies to film both technically and on the crew and actors. I believe they made t-shirts saying they survived it.
@briancox27219 ай бұрын
The liquid breathing is real, and it really works to prevent the bends. Also, you don't have to cough it up, it will evaporate over a short time as you breath normally. But it isn't used in deep sea diving today because it washes the natural lubricant out of the lungs, making them very suseptable infections and pneumonia. But it is occasionally used to help premature babies breathe while their lungs are developing.
@Algee-le3gp9 ай бұрын
36:34 That is the only CGI shot in the sequence, because in the original 1989 release, they couldn't work out how to make a wave just come to a halt. And so the entire wave scene was cut. Thanks to advances in CGI technology introduced by T2, they were able to work it out, and the scene was restored for the Special Edition. It also make me tear up every time I see the wave receed, and the scene after when Bud asked the NTI's why they didn't do it shows that mankind is not all bad, and we may find the selflessness in ourselves to survive.
@dotprodukt9 ай бұрын
At 10:15 where they are talking about the challenges of filming this kind of movie and it got me thinking about how at the time, James Cameron was probably one of the only people who could have pulled this off, because of his passion for the ocean and deep sea exploration combined with filmmaking. He has in fact contributed over the years to the development of the knowledge, tools and technologies required for deep sea exploration today. Edit: I'm not implying this was filmed on location at extreme depths. Rather just that his passion and knowledge and access to certain technologies contributed to the making of this film in ways that no other filmmaker would have been able to do.
@ewthmatth6 ай бұрын
@19:50 the station/rig is pressure equalized with the ocean around them. That's why there's an exit pool they just drop divers and mini subs into. If it wasn't equalized they would need to go into pressurized airlocks every time you left to dive. The way it's set up they only have to pressurize in an airlock once when they first arrive to the station from sea level.
@captbunnykiller1.09 ай бұрын
Orson Scott Card wrote an accompanying book (not a novel after the movie but written in full cooperation with the director, screenwriters and actors). It dives deep into the thinking of the aliens and main characters. It shows that the situation is even much more complex. Absolutely worth reading.
@obato769 ай бұрын
No it's not. It's incredibly misogynist and does a huge disservice to the character of Lindsay.
@captbunnykiller1.09 ай бұрын
@@obato76 Dude, find some joy in your life before it's too late.
@obato769 ай бұрын
@@captbunnykiller1.0Dude, talk to a woman for once in your life.
@robertpollard76819 ай бұрын
Oddly enough an underwater expert once told me the scene where their in the leaking sub ruined the film for him because the leak was low on the wall not overhead and since the sub was at the same pressure as the rig the water would have never gotten higher than the leak
@bamzilla.9 ай бұрын
Everyone in the theater cheered at the end of the crane drag sequence. This movie was the pinnacle of sci-fix cinema for quite a while.
@CaptainEnglehorn9 ай бұрын
the song they sing is Willin by Linda Rondstat
@ariadnepyanfar10489 ай бұрын
AFAIK the water tentacle was the first CGI ever used in a movie. There is a FANTASTIC one hour “Making Of” documentary that came with the original The Abyss CD. It’s by far my favorite “Making Of” documentary to this day. The Abyss remains one of my favorite movies to this day too, and I’m so glad you found the Extended cut, which had the wider Cold War plot and ending slashed for the theatre, because the Berlin Wall fell and Glasnost started while the movie was being made, and the original version was seen as being too provocative while the breakup of the USSR was in its infancy. As well as Ed Harris, James Cameron almost drowned Kate Winslet during filming of the Titanic. He finally got his diving team safety perfected for Way Of Water, with two safety divers for every actor. I don’t know how he sweettalked Winsket into doing Way Of Water for him, she spent years not talking to him after the Titanic near drowning, like Ed Harris. She trained hard, and her freediving record was a 7 min 14 sec breath hold for one scene, surpassing Tom Cruise’s Hollywood record breath hold for Mission Imposdible. The actual World record breath hold is 24 min.
@texashookem229 ай бұрын
This movie was so innovative for its time, absolute classic.
@LogicalNiko9 ай бұрын
So tungsten carbide rings have some advantages and some disadvantages. On the upside they are nearly impossible to scratch or damage. My friend even took his and dragged his against the pavement when he did go cart racing, and looks as new as can be. The downside is if you get your ring stuck, or there is a reason they need to cut off your ring in an emergency they won’t bother. Instead they just amputate your finger and deal with reattaching of a finger after the emergency is over. The only ways they could remove it would be with specialized diamond saws that would likely cause too much damage and heat for your hand to deal with.
@namco0039 ай бұрын
I love your initial reaction to the RAT was "EEEWWWW!!", but not long after, being like NOOOO!!! SAVE THE RAT!!! The rat can't die!!
@CEngelbrecht9 ай бұрын
Rats get a bad rep. They're actually very social and if you let them get up from the sewers even hygienic. Just like us, really.
@poynt93729 ай бұрын
The scene of the dead submariner with the crab crawling out of his mouth, was actually Camerons brother who did the scene for real and had to hold his breath numerous times to complete the shot
@Kasatali139 ай бұрын
Song is “Willin” performed by Linda Rodstandt. Love this one! Rough filming conditions. Also…..”The Fountain” 2006
@NintendoCapriSun9 ай бұрын
Dude. That shot of Lindsey struggling to get air under that circular ceiling before drowning, is one of the most horrifying things I've ever seen in a movie. But like you pointed out, Virgil's side of it would be just as horrifying, just having to watch the life go out of her face. Our VHS copy that we watched as kids didn't have any of the world ending stuff at the end. Virgil just arrives down there, sees them, and they broadcast his words back to him and he's like oh cool. Still seems weird that that was released as the official version. Unless maybe we just filmed it off of cable? I guess that's possible.
@StoryOfUsFinalDraft9 ай бұрын
There is a difference between Cinebinge and me. We both looked into the abyss, but when it looked back at us, Cinebinge blinked.
@synaesthesia20109 ай бұрын
fun fact: the wide shots of the Bentic Explorer were a miniature that was so large that they had to legally register it as a vessel
@Johnny_Socko9 ай бұрын
This was one of only two movies in which the VFX of ship miniatures did not look like crap -- and I guess the reason is because they were not "miniature" at all, lol. (Water does not scale, so miniature-based water effects usually look "wrong" to the eye.) The other movie being "Raise the Titanic". Yes, I thought the miniature VFX looked better in "Raise the Titanic" than in Cameron's "Titanic".
@synaesthesia20109 ай бұрын
@Johnny_Socko have you seen the footage behind the scenes of the model? it was so big you could walk around on it. it makes you wonder at what point does a miniature cease to be an miniature?
@Johnny_Socko9 ай бұрын
@@synaesthesia2010 It was pretty amazing, I love that model and the whole concept of that ship. Along the same lines, the miniature DC8 they crashed in Die Hard 2 was about the size of a Lear jet. Since it was an accurate model, it generated lift; the only way they could get it to crash the way they wanted was to pull it into the ground using cables.
@januzi29 ай бұрын
There's a medical procedure in which you would have a pipe inserted into your lungs and then a lot of fluid pumped in. It's performed to remove the dust, sand and things like that from the lungs of the people that are working in the mines. It looks like the high pressure cleaning of the kitchen pipes, they do this until the liquid that comes out of the lungs gets clear.
@sc13389 ай бұрын
I wanna see it done
@robertpollard76819 ай бұрын
Michael biehn is a fantastic and underrated actor, he is probably most well known as Kyle Reece in the original terminator, and johnny ringo in tombstone but absolutely kills it in everthing he does
@magnuswendin79249 ай бұрын
You missed Corporal Dwayne Hicks in Aliens:)
@WhiskyCanuck9 ай бұрын
11:00 people forget that digital filming is still pretty recent, and still plenty of filmmakers prefer film today. Nobody was doing big Hollywood features on digital cameras for another 10-12 years after The Abyss came out in 1989 (Attack of the Clones in 2002, Collateral in 2004)
@blakewalker841209 ай бұрын
16:30 "It can't be heavier than their whole rig." Well, no, the crane itself is not. But that umbilical is mostly metal and weighs possibly weighs as much as 50 pounds per foot for 2000 feet is 100,000 pounds of cable. The crane is also massive because it needs to lift that heavy cable. And all of that weight is dragging them toward the abyss with lateral force. It does not need to be heavier than the deep core rig to drag it in the same way that you don't have to be heavier than your car to push it if you run out of gas. It doesn't stop dragging them until they get to the edge because now that force is vertical, pulling them down against the ground instead of lateral dragging across the ground.
@billross72459 ай бұрын
In one of Hunter S. Thompson's books, he met a guy who exited a plane's bathroom with a completely blue dyed hand. He apparently retrieved something of value from the toilet. Thompson also said he met the guy 3 weeks later and his hand was still a pale blue. I appreciate consistency in movies, and if you noticed, Ed Harris's hand was a pale blue throughout the film.
@Lightningrod759 ай бұрын
The 4k release is March 12th.
@pirwzy9 ай бұрын
Finally, after 3000 years...
@go-nogo14759 ай бұрын
@@pirwzyWill there be any "additional" footage at the end? To convey what Cameron sought -and felt he had failed- to show?
@snowdenwyatt62769 ай бұрын
As others have posted, the documentary about making this film done four years after its' release is fantastic. The ring was made of machined titanium and someone was selling replicas of it online at one point. Cameron was such a hot director at this point that after the film was announced two competing underwater films (Leviathan & Deep Star Six) were completed and rushed out before The Abyss made it to theaters to capitalize on it.
@prestonvogel14319 ай бұрын
I was laughing at water-Simone on the thumbnail for like 10 minutes straight before I watched this!