The Abyss
The Abyss is a science fiction film from 1989, 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 cooling tower of an unfinished nuclear reactor in Gaffney, South Carolina. The tank took 7 million gallons of water to fill it to a depth of 40 feet, making it the biggest ever underwater set. The depth and length of time spent underwater meant that cast and crew had to go through decompression.
There is a novelisation written by Orson Scott Card.
The story is about an underwater oil drilling rig that is sent by the US military to examine a sunken submarine, which leads to an international crisis bordering on a new world war. It turns out that at the bottom of the abyss near the crash site of the submarine, an underwater city of water-dwelling aliens is located. A Navy SEAL, suffering from High Pressure Nervous Syndrome, turns paranoid and tries to destroy the city with a nuclear weapon from the crashed submarine. In the original script the aliens in turn threaten to destroy all coastal regions of the world by giant megatsunamis, but in the version that was ultimately shown in theatres the aliens are portrayed much more benevolently and simply rescue the main characters from the depths. The Director's Cut version of the movie includes the megatsunami subplot.
External link
- The Abyss (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096754/) at the Internet Movie Database
fr:Abyss ja:アビス