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Mysteries of the Deep Poster

Mysteries of the Deep

1959 | 24m | English

(104 votes)

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Popularity: 0.1 (history)

Director: Ben Sharpsteen
Writer: Roy Edward Disney
Staring:
Details

Mysteries of the Deep is a 1959 Disney nature documentary short film. Though not an official True-Life Adventures film, it did accompany the release of The Vanishing Prairie and was included on the Walt Disney Legacy Collection's True Life Adventures releases as a bonus feature. It is narrated by Winston Hibler. The film is a panorama of animals inhabiting the sea near the coast: dolphins, sharks, whales, crabs, rays and fish of all kinds.
Release Date: Dec 16, 1959
Director: Ben Sharpsteen
Writer: Roy Edward Disney
Genres:
Keywords
Production Companies Walt Disney Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Jan 23, 2026
Entered: May 29, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Winston Hibler Narrator
Name Job
Roy Edward Disney Writer
Ben Sharpsteen Director
Grant K. Smith Editor
Evelyn Kennedy Music Editor
Robert O. Cook Sound
Joshua Meador Animation
Art Riley Animation
Harry Pederson Camera Operator
Verne Pederson Camera Operator
George MacGinitie Camera Operator
Nettie MacGinitie Camera Operator
Stuart V. Jewell Camera Operator
William A. Anderson Camera Operator
Dick Borden Camera Operator
Conrad Limbaugh Camera Operator
Al Hanson Camera Operator
Oliver Wallace Music
Name Title
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Though I thought Winston Hibbler's narration rather pedestrian and Oliver Wallace has rather intrusively scored this as if it were one of Disney's more famous animations, it's still quite an enjoyable dip in the deep with some fine oceanic photography. I can never see enough of whales - especially w ... hen they are breaching. They've even managed to capture some pictures of baby dolphin being born, too. The rest of this is all fairly standard fayre illustrating the whole concept of the survival of the fittest several hundred feet under the water. The squabbling jawfish could have inspired the gophers in "When the Dust Settles" (1997) and just about everything is trying to make an home or a snack - or both - out of everything else. The octopuses look so unnaturally ugly yet they glide about the ocean floor effortlessly (and dangerously) and the seahorse looks as if it's sneezing out it's newborn. Puffer fish live up to their name and the manta rays loom like something from the "Outer Limits". Indeed some of the excellent photography here readily explains why so much maritime folklore features magnificent beasts of all shapes and sizes - many of them do actually exist! It's cleverly stitched together with quite a bit of action photography and I thought it well worth twenty minutes.

Jan 30, 2025