DEEP RISING

MOVIE REVIEW

Movies Eddie McMullen Jr. Review by
E.C. McMullen Jr.
Deep Rising
 

DEEP RISING

- 1998
USA Release: Jan 20, 1998
Hollywood Pictures
Rated: USA: R

First off, this is NOT Science Fiction no matter who may tell you otherwise. There is zero science in this movie, but there are many bitchin' cool monsters, and Monster Movies mean Horror. This is a purposefully created B movie that was given an A movie budget.

I'm cool with that.

In many ways this movie is much like VIRUS which was written long before DEEP RISING but not released as a movie until 2 years after. Both movies have the "Small boat in the storm comes across large mysteriously abandoned ship." The folks from the small boat climb aboard the large ship and gradually discover what became of the passengers. Merry mishaps ensue.

DEEP RISING was written and directed by Stephen Sommers (THE MUMMY, THE MUMMY RETURNS) who, after recognizing his limited talents with the live action Jungle Book (another Disney flick), decided to "know his limitations" and entertain us with what he CAN do. What he can't do is write straight horror.

The script here is laughable. Stephen goes for those laughs so that we are never made to presume, even from the beginning, that this movie is expecting us to take it seriously. This is Horror/Action with a comedy punch, go with it and enjoy the ride. What Stephen lacks in story writing ability he makes up for in directing. The guy can direct, and he gives us quite a number of creepy skin crawling moments as well as one WOW moment courtesy of Blur Studio.

*

TRIVIA
DEEP RISING actor Kevin O'Connor appeared in AMISTAD with Djimon Hounsou.

^

TRIVIA NOTE
Titanic was the second time in James Cameron's career that he started a wave of copycat sea movies and beat all comers.
The first wave he started with
THE ABYSS.

SFX:
The show-stopping Half-Digested Billy scene and how it was made.
Tracking Nightmares: Behind Blur's Half-Digested Billy Shots in DEEP RISING – From 20 years ago.

These moments are the shared efforts of some of the finest SFX houses in the biz. Starting first with Rob Bottin (THE HOWLING, John Carpenter's: THE THING) Studios. Also Dream Quest and Industrial Light and Magic both of whom have credits too numerous to mention. The unknowns (to this reviewer) are Banned From The Ranch Entertainment and finally, the "Half Digested Billy" sequence by Blur Studio.

I'm not joking. This one, approximately 8 second scene, is devastatingly realistic. No spazzing rubber animatronics or fuzzy computer animations will ever work for you again once you see this moment. WOW! Blur Studios did their tiny job with excellence and that moment stays with you long after the movie is over.

Treat Williams (DEADLY HERO, DEAD HEAT) is the star of this flick. He plays John Finnegan, Captain of a souped up PT Boat that services the desperado trade with a "Don't ask, don't tell" policy regarding their customers and cargo. It's his smirking kick back attitude that sets the tone for this movie from the very beginning.

Imagine if Ash had a fast attack boat.

John's client on this trip is the mysterious Hanover (Wes Studi: THE KILLING JAR), a solid, serious man who captains a small band of tightly-strung, hi-octane men. They are rude and dangerous, and since you already know this movie is going to have an abundance of bloodshed, you are eager to see them lose theirs.

Among the bad guys are two of note. Cliff Curtis (BRINGING OUT THE DEAD) who also stars in another Monster on the Deserted Ship Movie, VIRUS (see review on this site). Can there actually be a career in such a subgenre as Monster On A Deserted Ship Movie? I bring this up because, in both VIRUS and DEEP RISING, Curtis has you thinking that he is somehow the only person who doesn't know that this is all make believe: that's how real his acting is.

Djimon Hounsou also stars which again is of note because his other claim to fame is his leading role in AMISTAD, another boat movie made the same year but released in 1997.* Hollywood was big on the high seas in 1997-98. It's just too bad that TITANIC capsized them all.^

Deep Rising

Anthony Heald (SILENCE OF THE LAMBS, 8MM) plays a bastard yet again as the owner of a luxurious ocean liner. The lovely Famke Janssen (THE FACULTY, THE HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILL [1999], XMEN [all]), does a turn as an inept international jewel thief. The part is brimming with comic possibilities, but she plays it cool and caustic. Kevin O'Conner (THE MUMMY) is Captain Finnegan's engineer and tech monkey, Pantucci. I notice that O'Conner always plays the same role regardless of the movie (somewhere in a Hollywood think tank a frantic studio exec chomps a cigar and growls "We need a whining sniveler for this part!" Fist slams on the desk with a flash of insight and he shouts, "Get me Kevin O'Conner!").

The critters themselves are giant hydra like creatures; powerful and rip roaring. They don't eat you, they drink you. That means that once they pull your wet parts off your hard parts, they spit the bones back out. Boy do these monsters suck! Literally!

When they finally make their appearance halfway through the movie they are mighty cool to watch. In fact, they are more fun to watch than when the boss monster appears. The huge boss monster, by comparison, is a sloppy fuzzy mess of CGI incompetence; dull and sluggish. Eat less Fat!

!!!UNFAIR RACIAL CLICHÉ ALERT!!!
While having an entire shipload of minority actors in this movie, they are all, of course, slaughtered in the time honored Horror movie cliché of Kill The Non-Whites/Black People. That's not to say a few white people didn't also die, they did. The UNFAIR RACIAL CLICHÉ ALERT is to let you know that, no matter how many victims or how many people from different races in the movie, the whites and ONLY the whites were cast as the survivors.

Go to the UNFAIR RACIAL CLICHÉ ALERT page for larger list.

!!!SCIENCE MOMENT!!!
Oh, they came so close! This is a fun movie and the last thing it needed was a liberal arts major's feeble attempt to provide science exposition. It was almost another TREMORS (don't explain the monsters – just deal with them). But they just couldn't resist. The ship, we are told, happens to be over a very deep part of the ocean and the creatures must be from the ocean floor. Because they live in the tremendous pressure of the deep ocean they are therefore super tough and tremendously strong.

More at The SCIENCE MOMENT Page.

DEEP RISING is fun and not to be taken seriously. It's a good theater time and a good video rental. Balancing on the curve of good and so bad it's good, I give it three positive and three negative shriek girls.

They do not cancel each other out. When in doubt, read our ratings guide to see why this qualifies then go check out DEEP RISING!

Shriek GirlsShriek GirlsShriek GirlsNegative ShriekNegative ShriekNegative Shriek
This review copyright 1998 E.C.McMullen Jr.

Deep Rising (1998) on IMDb
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