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Cinema



The Abyss

Year:1989
Country:  USA
Language:English
Genre:Adventure, Drama, Science Fiction
IMDB:IMDB Page
Rating:7.9  Rate
Collection:  Seen It     Wishlist 
Community: 18 Have Seen


DirectorJames Cameron
Selected CastEd Harris as Virgil 'Bud' Brigman
 Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio as Lindsey Brigman
 Michael Biehn as Lt. Hiram Coffey
 Leo Burmester as Catfish De Vries
ProducerGale Anne Hurd
WriterJames Cameron
SoundtrackAlan Silvestri


On DVD & Blu-ray World

DVD

The Abyss - 20th Century Fox - USA (2001)
DVD

The Abyss - 20th Century Fox - UK (2002)
DVD Box Set

The Abyss - 20th Century Fox - USA (2000)
DVD

The Abyss - 20th Century Fox - UK (2001)
VHS

The Abyss - 20th Century Fox - USA (1989)
VHS

The Abyss - 20th Century Fox - USA (1996)
VHS

The Abyss - CBS / Fox - Australia (1990)
DVD

The Abyss - 20th Century Fox - Sweden (2005)
DVD

The Abyss - 20th Century Fox - Australia (2000)
LaserDisc

The Abyss - CBS / Fox - USA (1990)
DVD

The Abyss - 20th Century Fox - Germany (2000)
DVD

The Abyss - 20th Century Fox - UK (2004)
VHS

The Abyss - CBS / Fox - Germany (1990)


Images



Number: 816928  THUMBNAIL
Uploaded By: Tailspin
Description: The Abyss title


Comments and Reviews
 
zabadak
23rd Dec 2015
 He wrote Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio as a bitchy feminist a***ole.

Did he also write the bit where she got her "ballast tanks" out? :shocked:
 

 
Magic Marmalade
22nd Dec 2015
 
 

 
George Slv
22nd Dec 2015
 Rated 9/10
The final reward for watching flop underwater pix in previous years, this Cameron film delivers. Cameron developed a reputation for stuffing two movies into one. Studios gave him enuf money, and I guess he didn't know when to stop writing. The first story here is the peril of a submerged submarine crew, a hurricane above water, and rescue attempts. The second is the discovery of underwater aliens in the area. Maybe the Bermuda Triangle?
I was a little dissatisfied that the first story took up so much attention, when you got this potential with the aliens, which seems secondary.
Photography and special effects are superb.
James Cameron writes his own screenplays. He seems to have establishment liberal tendencies. For his characters' situations here he wrote in a bunch of scorn for "conspiracy theories" or "paranoia". When someone calls others "paranoid" I immediately write them off as a fool.
He wrote Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio as a bitchy feminist a***ole. Those were the times. Cameron was told by a female TV interviewer later that it annoyed everyone, male and female. (Are females annoyed by that? I thought they gloated.) He pointed out as we know now that most scripts are written by males, and it's hard for them to see the female approach. (which I guess would be to throw down their arms and offer themselves to the enemy. or, there are no enemies. Vote for Hillary to be sure.)
So anywayzes, this was a milestone theatrical event. The theatrical release had to be cut in length to 2:25, and Cameron made the decisions on cutting. Then the full length of 2:51 was released on video as the Special Edition.

4 people found this review helpful.   ✔︎ Helpful Review?
 


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