The Abyss-1989
Director James Cameron
Starring Ed Harris, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio
Scott’s Review #1,210
Reviewed December 19, 2021
Grade: B+
Well before he created Titanic (1997) and Avatar (2009) and became a household name, director James Cameron made the gorgeous, special effects-laden film The Abyss (1989).
The film followed hits like Terminator (1984) and Aliens (1986).
These films undoubtedly allowed him to make a film that he wanted to make with the necessary freedoms.
The Abyss is completely visual, and the interesting cast of characters, with potential for development, is never allowed to shine through, instead feeling stale.
They are usurped by the constant flow of underwater, lush, worldly spectacles that utterly encompass the film.
Even when the central characters get a moment to dig deeper into their backstories, Cameron never goes for the emotional jugular, instead encouraging viewers to focus on the extraterrestrial and science-fiction elements rather than on his characters.
That’s the type of director Cameron is, and I recommend watching The Abyss on the big screen, or the biggest screen possible.
I did not recognize the sheer bombast that a cinema watching would render.
I missed out.
The film, and specifically Cameron, must be heralded for the vast loveliness of the art direction, visual effects, and cinematography.
Forget the convoluted plot entirely and sit back and enjoy the spectacle.
Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio portray Bud and Dr. Lindsey Brigman, formerly married petroleum engineers who still have some issues to work out.
When an American submarine sinks in the Caribbean, a US search and recovery team works with an oil platform crew, racing against Soviet vessels to recover the boat.
Deep in the ocean, they encounter something unexpected, and the American team is determined to find out what it is. Is it the Russians or a deadly and intelligent extraterrestrial force?
The story is overly complicated and riddled with stereotypical plot points.
As the team becomes submerged in their submarine, they encounter the usual troubles: a hurricane, a rogue team leader, a flooded rig, and freezing temperatures.
Harris and Mastrantonio have pretty good chemistry here, but we never fully grasp their marital problems or why there is a distance between them. Thrown together on this mission, they predictably face peril and come close to losing each other.
When they embrace in the final scene, it is a wrapped up as a tight bow sort of ending that underwhelms.
But, man, the visuals are amazing. When the team drops at the alien city in the deepest trenches of the ocean floor, the beautiful underwater camera shots take center stage.
The technical consistency is simply breathtaking and becomes the focal point of the film.
I daresay The Abyss (1989) features the greatest underwater sequences ever seen on film to date, but somehow, decades later, the film feels forgotten or overshadowed by Cameron’s other works.
Perhaps the dated Cold War plotline and the traditional romance have not served the film well in the long run.
Oscar Nominations: 1 win-Best Art Direction, Best Cinematography, Best Visual Effects (won), Best Sound
