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Deep Blue Sea (US) (DVD Details)

Unique ID Code: 0000002457
Added by: Mark Fountain
Added on: 3/1/2000 12:54
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Review of Deep Blue Sea

8 / 10

Video


Being a self confessed lover of disaster movies, and movies that wash over you with popcorn munching story lines, I was keen to see this film. The inevitable comparisons with Jaws made 25 years ago meant this film had a lot to live up to. This film is real projection/Dolby Digital fodder for home cinema fans, and is special effects crammed.

The DVD provides an anamorphic 2.35 transfer, and is split over 33 chapters – and for a film 105 minutes in length, is more than adequate. The visual clarity is excellent – crisp and sharp, and the more darker, murkier underwater scenes contain little if no grain.

The visual effects are very well done. In the director’s commentary, Renny Harlin defies anyone to be able to point out which sharks are real, which are animatronic and which are CGI. I think the audience will have rather less trouble in doing this that Harlin thinks, but who cares! The sharks make this film, and the technology in visual effects has improved unrecognisably since the rubber shark days of Jaws (excellent though that ground breaking film is).



Audio


This is another Dolby Digital treat, as you would expect from a high budget, effects filled action/horror picture. Most scenes are set underwater, and the creaks, groans and echoes reverberate around the soundstage in the quieter scenes. In the big boomy action scenes, all six speakers will be dancing around the room.



Features


This disc is nicely packed with extras, accessible from some cool animated menus with accompanying sound.

The commentary track features director Renny Harlin and Samuel L. Jackson in partnership for most of the film, but half way through Jackson gives up and leaves Harlin to it! Harlin’s commentary is essential listening for those movie fans like me, who have to know as much as possible about how this was shot, how that was done and how often Jackson played golf during the shoot.

You get cast and crew filmographies (but sadly not many of the cast!), and the theatrical trailer. Five separate deleted scenes are included, and you have the option as to whether to watch them with the standard sound, or have Harlin discussing the reasons for omission of each one – a nice touch.

Two ‘making of’ documentaries are included: ‘The Sharks of the Deep Blue Sea’ and ‘When Sharks Attack!’ lasting 20 minutes and 9 minutes respectively. A lot of information is here on the CGI and animatronic sharks they used, and the special effects techniques.

DVD-ROM users will also be able to access the Deep Blue Sea web site, access some special web events, use the chat room and look at some Genre essays – all probably of limited entertainment value. You also get trailers for Coma, Logan’s Run, The Matrix, Sphere and Westworld.



Conclusion


This film is real fun, and for me had far more scary bits than The Blair Witch Project.

There are obvious comparisons with Jaws, and Harlin has included several tribute scenes to pay homage to the Speilberg film (the number plate in the shark’s mouth is actually the same one that featured in Jaws). There is also the Jaws-like opening scene where the shark attacks some teenagers (but with a new twist). Again, this film has used some relatively unknown faces (except Jackson, who gleefully tells all he got paid far more than the others in his commentary!). The acting can be a little suspect at times however (LL Cool J as the chef?!!!)

The DVD is good value for money in that the audio and video presentation is good, and a lot of worthwhile extras are included on the disc.

But generally, all things considered, for popcorn movie fans – it’s a must buy.

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