There have been many adaptations and stories about Jules Verne’s famous submarine commander since
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea was published back in 1870; from the excellent 1954 Disney version with James Mason to the abysmal screen version of
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. The film we are discussing today kind of falls in the middle.
The film starts off in a similar fashion as the one in the book, with Captain Nemo’s (
Robert Ryan)
submarine the Nautilus picking up survivors of a shipwreck, but in the
original Nemo was the one responsible for the ship going down while in
this movie it’s a storm that sinks the ship.
"The weather started getting rough, the tiny ship was tossed."
As
the ship takes on water the passengers are rushed to the lifeboats, but
high winds and turbulent waves causes one of the boats to capsize. Six
people are dumped into the drink and quickly begin to sink beneath the
waves. Lucky for them the Nautilus was cruising by and a group of Nemo’s
submariners go out and retrieve the poor souls; Senator Robert Fraser (
Chuck Connors), English engineer Lomax (
Allan Cuthbertson), two gold hungry brothers Barnaby and Swallow Bath (
Bill Fraser and
Kenneth Connor), Widow Helena Beckett (
Nanette Newman) and her son Phillip (
Christopher Hartstone).
They quickly learn that though they have been spared from a watery
grave, as Captain Nemo (Robert Ryan) informs them, they may never return
to the surface world. Their new home is the undersea city of
TempleMir.
"Darling it's better, down where it's wetter, take it from me!"
Needless
to say this is a bit of a shock to the newcomers and a catastrophe for
poor Lomax, a claustrophobic who once spent seven days trapped in a
mine. The idea of spending his days living under thousands of tons of
water is terrifying, and his constant fear and panic leads to multiple
escape attempts that end in disaster. Fraser on the other hand has a
more noble reason for wanting to escape, he was on a diplomatic mission
to stop the supply of European weapons that were flooding both sides of
the Civil War. The Bath Brothers, upon discovering that most things in
this undersea kingdom are made of gold, want to escape with as much loot
as they can carry.
Leading to much “Comedy Relief” antics.”
Helena
and her son are the only ones who seem to be really enjoying themselves
as Phillip gets to play in an amazing waterpark while Helena has
managed to catch the eye of Nemo himself. Another romance blooms between
Fraser and Phillip’s swimming teacher Mala (
Luciana Paluzzi),
but this relationship is complicated by the fact that Fraser must
return to the surface to fulfill his duty to his country, and that
Nemo’s second and command Joab (
John Turner) just so happens to also be in love with Mala.
Mala, the undersea blossom.
Much
like the original story this is not a plot heavy movie, just a series
of underwater adventures interspersed with lame comic bits with the Bath
Brothers. The stuff with crazed Lomax trying to escape is easily the
best element of the movie as one can sympathize with his predicament,
even when he breaks into the control and sabotages the key life support
system, which causes over pressurizing of the dome. This results in much
destruction in the city, but also Lomax’s tragic death. Much to
Helena’s horror Nemo had to order the control room sealed to save the
city, but in doing so dooms Lomax to a horrible fate as he drowns when
the room fills up with seawater.
Nemo, making the tough calls.
The
other dramatic action piece has to do with Fraser and the Bath Brothers
escaping in the experimental sub Nautilus II with Captain Nemo in
pursuit aboard the original. Turns out the new sub has a critical engine
flaw that only Nemo knew about and could explode at any moment. A nice
twist is that Joab aided in the stealing of the sub because he was
jealous of how close Fraser was getting to both Mala
and Nemo. Joab gets the noble death for his actions while Barnaby Bath is drowned by his greed.
Death by excessive bling.
This
is not a terrible movie, most the cast do a fine job, but the script
and production designs could have used a lot more work. Both the models
and the sets vary from goofy to downright cheesy, with nothing looking
at all functional. Even the science is beyond stupid as we’re told that
the reason there is so much stuff made of gold is because there is a
machine that produces all their fresh water and oxygen and its waste
by-product is gold. Even by sixties sci-fi standards that’s pretty dumb.
When bad science and bad fashion sense collide.
Chuck
Connors does fine as the stalwart hero that chooses his duty over the
girl he loves while Robert Ryan’s enigmatic Nemo shows cracks of being
interesting with his developing relationship with Helena, but the film
doesn’t really have time to expand on it, not when you can have more
scenes of the Bath Brothers trying to steal gold. There is also a couple
of pathetic “monster attack” scenes as TempleMir is threatened by a
monstrous manta ray type creature called Mobula. To say these sequences
are embarrassing is being generous.
Doesn’t quite live up to the giant squid from the Disney movie.
Captain Nemo and the Underwater City
was an MGM movie with a modest 1.5 million dollar budget with fairly
poor special effects to prove it. Like most undersea movies it is
hampered by scenes of people scuba diving, which is the cinematic
equivalent to Nyquil, and director
James Hill brings nothing new to the table here. Has there ever been a really good scuba diving action scene?
“So he strikes…like a Thunderball.”
The
film ends with Chuck Connors and the surviving Bath Brother being
picked up a passing ship (the ocean is a very small place don't yah
know) but as the credits roll we are left wondering two things; will
Chuck Connors ever return to the lovely Mala, and will he win the Civil
War?
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