Popularity: 6 (history)
Director: | James Cameron |
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Writer: | James Cameron |
Staring: |
A civilian oil rig crew is recruited to conduct a search and rescue effort when a nuclear submarine mysteriously sinks. One diver soon finds himself on a spectacular odyssey 25,000 feet below the ocean's surface where he confronts a mysterious force that has the power to change the world or destroy it. | |
Release Date: | Aug 09, 1989 |
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Director: | James Cameron |
Writer: | James Cameron |
Genres: | Adventure, Science Fiction, Thriller |
Keywords | diving suit, alien life-form, scuba, thalassophobia, flying saucer, insanity, warning, deepsea, ocean, u.s. navy, underwater, trapped underwater , submarine, nuclear missile, scuba diving, message, sea, secret mission, ufo, extraterrestrial life form |
Production Companies | 20th Century Fox, Pacific Western |
Box Office |
Revenue: $90,000,098
Budget: $43,000,000 |
Updates |
Updated: Jul 30, 2025 (Update) Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
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Ed Harris | Virgil 'Bud' Brigman |
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio | Lindsey Brigman |
Michael Biehn | Lieutenant Hiram Coffey |
Leo Burmester | Catton ‘Catfish’ De Vries |
Todd Graff | Alan 'Hippy' Carnes |
John Bedford Lloyd | Jammer Willis |
Kimberly Scott | Lisa 'One Night' Standing |
Chris Elliott | Bendix |
J.C. Quinn | Arliss 'Sonny' Dawson |
Pierce Oliver Brewer, Jr. | Lew Finler |
George Robert Klek | Wilhite |
Christopher Murphy | Schoenick |
Adam Nelson | Ensign Monk |
Dick Warlock | Dwight Perry |
Jimmie Ray Weeks | Leland McBride |
J. Kenneth Campbell | DeMarco |
Peter Ratray | Captain |
Michael Beach | Barnes |
Ken Jenkins | Gerard Kirkhill |
Michael Chapman | Dr. Berg |
William Wisher | Bill Tyler |
Wendy Gordon | Anchorwoman |
Paula Cross | Young Woman |
Emily Yancy | Woman Reporter |
Joe Farago | Anchorman |
Marcus K. Mukai | Anchorman #2 |
Thomas F. Duffy | Construction Worker |
Chris Anastasio | Truck Driver |
Tom Isbell | Wave Reporter |
Mikhail Gorbachev | Self (archive footage) (uncredited) |
Frank Lloyd | Navigator |
Name | Job |
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Rick Avery | Stunts |
Denney Pierce | Stunts |
Steve Kelso | Stunts |
James Cameron | Writer, Director |
Pat Romano | Stunts |
Frank Lloyd | Stunts |
Howard Feuer | Casting |
Leslie Dilley | Production Design |
Anne Kuljian | Set Decoration |
Conrad Buff IV | Editor |
Joel Goodman | Editor |
Howard E. Smith | Editor |
Russell Christian | Art Direction |
Joseph C. Nemec III | Art Direction |
Kathryn Fenton | Makeup Artist |
Deena Appel | Costume Supervisor |
George Stokes | Construction Coordinator |
Mary Alice Palmer | Art Department Coordinator |
Dan Webster | Assistant Art Director |
Brian Cole | Sculptor |
Michael T. Daigle | Scenic Artist |
Screaming Mad George | Sculptor |
Gershon Ginsburg | Set Designer |
Andrew Precht | Set Designer |
Thomas P. Wilkins | Set Designer |
Greg Orloff | Foley |
Joseph T. Sabella | Foley |
Blake Leyh | Sound Designer |
Joseph A. Unsinn | Special Effects Coordinator |
Joe Viskocil | Special Effects Coordinator |
Laura Buff | Visual Effects Producer |
Kathy Chasen-Hay | Visual Effects Editor |
Miller Drake | Visual Effects Editor |
Leslie Huntley | Visual Effects Producer |
Diana Shornstein | Visual Effects Producer |
Walt Conti | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Richard Foreman Jr. | Still Photographer |
Paul C. Babin | Camera Operator |
George D. Dodge | Camera Operator |
Jordan Klein Jr. | Underwater Camera |
Mark A. Shelton | Gaffer |
George S. Neil | Gaffer |
Bob Gorelick | Steadicam Operator |
Dwight Campbell | Gaffer |
Kenneth Karman | Music Editor |
Chuck Clarke | Transportation Coordinator |
Sharron Reynolds-Enriquez | Script Supervisor |
J. Michael Muro | Steadicam Operator |
Richard Overton | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Kevin F. Cleary | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Kevin E. Carpenter | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Don J. Bassman | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Tom Jones Jr. | Construction Foreman |
John D. Kretschmer | Leadman |
Karen Steward | Painter |
Michele Moen | Production Illustrator |
Joe Cooper | Standby Painter |
Ian Fox | First Assistant Camera |
Bobby Huber | Key Grip |
Robert Hoelen | Grip |
Emanuel Millar | Hairstylist |
General Fermon Judd Jr. | Set Dressing Artist |
Robert Garrett | Additional Music |
Jack Cornish | Carpenter |
Stephan Schultze | Craft Service |
John Anderson | Driver |
Neil Gahm | Propmaker |
Nancy Blewer | Set Production Assistant |
Dominic Jack Pizzo, Sr. | Stand In |
Clay Boss | Stunts |
Brian Delahanty | Transportation Captain |
Anne Marie Stein | Unit Publicist |
David Schmalz | Video Assist Operator |
Bob Hagans | Color Timer |
James M. McEwen | Best Boy Electric |
Vince Pace | Electrician |
Richard Mula | Lighting Supervisor |
W.D. Hill | Rigging Grip |
Dennis Osborne | Casting Associate |
Andrew Chapman | Location Manager |
Vince Heileson | Production Accountant |
Laura Greenlee | Production Coordinator |
Charles Skouras III | Production Manager |
Paul Tivers | Production Supervisor |
George Leong | Boom Operator |
Howell Gibbens | Assistant Sound Editor |
Stuart Copely | Sound Editor |
Jeff Burks | Animation Supervisor |
Mike Chambers | Visual Effects Coordinator |
James B. Campbell | Orchestrator |
Emily Yudell | Property Master |
Charles Stewart | Property Master |
Robert Renga | Sound Recordist |
Joe Dorn | ADR Editor |
Newt Arnold | First Assistant Director |
Michael Cassidy | Stunts |
Linda Waxman | Assistant Property Master |
Charlotte Patterson | Construction Buyer |
Phillip Norwood | Storyboard Artist |
Roy Seeger | Apprentice Sound Editor |
Marilyn Graf | Foley Mixer |
Carolyn Tapp | Foley Recordist |
Donn Markel | Special Effects Technician |
Erik Henry | Visual Effects Assistant Editor |
Kristina Birkmayer | Visual Effects Production Manager |
Michael Griffin | Assistant Camera |
Marc Brown | Second Assistant Camera |
Joshua Keep | Wardrobe Assistant |
Christopher Koefoed | Assistant Editor |
Gary Burritt | Negative Cutter |
Robert Gordon | Assistant Accountant |
Beth DePatie | Assistant Production Coordinator |
Timothy Greenwood | Editorial Staff |
Larz Anderson | Effects Supervisor |
Hilbert Hakim | Key Set Production Assistant |
Matt Brown | Production Assistant |
Jennifer C. Bell | Production Secretary |
Gene Witham | Technical Advisor |
Marcia Holley | Stunts |
Diane Hetfield | Stunts |
Glory Fioramonti | Stunts |
Alan Silvestri | Original Music Composer |
Mikael Salomon | Director of Photography |
Deborah Everton | Costume Design |
John Roesch | Foley |
Dody Dorn | Supervising Sound Editor |
Ned Gorman | Visual Effects Producer |
Hoyt Yeatman | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Dick Warlock | Stunt Coordinator |
Ron Cobb | Conceptual Design |
John Bruno | Visual Effects Supervisor |
David Jobe | ADR Recordist |
Jon H. Epstein | Stunt Double |
Jimmy Leavens | Dolly Grip |
Dennis Muren | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Steven Quale | Editor |
Kerry Rossall | Stunts |
Loren Janes | Stunts |
Verónica González Rubio | Second Assistant Director |
Ernest Farino | Title Designer |
Robert Deschaine | ADR Mixer |
Kevin Bartnof | Foley Artist |
Marian Wilde | Foley Supervisor |
David Luckenbach | Additional Second Assistant Camera |
Scott R. Davis | Best Boy Grip |
Jim English | Project Manager |
Tekin Cetinkaya | Assistant Unit Manager |
Charles 'Tom' Hinson | Key Rigging Grip |
Patrick Murray | Underwater Gaffer |
Randy E. Moore | Weapons Master |
Peter Childs | Supervising Art Director |
Mike Johnson | Stunts |
Christopher Warren | Visual Effects Production Assistant |
Glenn Edwards | Mechanical Designer |
Glenn Edwards | Mechanical Designer |
Glenn Edwards | Mechanical Designer |
Wilson Tang | Visual Effects Art Director |
Ralph Williams | Musician |
Julia Gibson | Visual Effects Producer |
Steve Johnson | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Lee Orloff | Sound mixer |
Jean Giraud | Concept Artist |
Steve Williams | CG Artist |
Name | Title |
---|---|
Gale Anne Hurd | Producer |
Van Ling | Producer |
Organization | Category | Person |
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Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
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2024 | 4 | 107 | 235 | 55 |
2024 | 5 | 282 | 348 | 222 |
2024 | 6 | 173 | 284 | 66 |
2024 | 7 | 56 | 96 | 29 |
2024 | 8 | 38 | 89 | 25 |
2024 | 9 | 26 | 38 | 19 |
2024 | 10 | 34 | 64 | 16 |
2024 | 11 | 42 | 86 | 22 |
2024 | 12 | 39 | 81 | 25 |
2025 | 1 | 42 | 67 | 30 |
2025 | 2 | 71 | 178 | 25 |
2025 | 3 | 19 | 62 | 3 |
2025 | 4 | 7 | 9 | 5 |
2025 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 5 |
2025 | 6 | 5 | 6 | 4 |
2025 | 7 | 5 | 6 | 4 |
2025 | 8 | 5 | 7 | 4 |
2025 | 9 | 6 | 8 | 5 |
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2024 | 11 | 328 | 671 |
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2024 | 10 | 410 | 786 |
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2024 | 9 | 673 | 873 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 8 | 370 | 764 |
Cameron's Marvellous Close Encounters Of The Sea Kind. Special Edition A deep sea oil crew are called upon by the military to investigate the events that saw an American Nuclear Submarine crash down in the abyss. As the crew, and their hot headed Navy Seal passengers, get down deeper, it woul ... d seem they are not alone down there. The Abyss is a flawed movie when put under the microscope, even allowing for the reinserted (and much better) ending that James Cameron was forced to cut by idiot studio executives. Most glaringly obvious as a fault is that The Abyss, after holding us for 2 hours of engrossing cinema, can't quite seal the deal as a deep (hrr hrr hrr) message movie for the modern era. What isn't in doubt upon revisits to the piece is that it's at times spectacular, at others it's joyously ambitious, both things coming together in one big loud boom of being a blockbuster with brains. James Cameron can never be accused of not trying to entertain the masses, and here, with a bit more thought on a humanist level, then we would have been talking in the realms of masterpiece. The making of the film is itself worthy of a movie, a fraught and angry shoot with many problems, of which I wont bore you with as they can be found at the click of a mouse. But Cameron pushes hard because he wants to please and dazzle, and he does, every buck and sweat drop is up there on the screen to be witnessed. The lead actors put in great work, Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio give the film its centrifugal emotive heart as the warring Brigham's, while Cameron fave Michael Biehn does a fine line in Gung-Ho decompression nut case! The technical aspects do dazzle, the visual effects rightly won the Academy Award in that department, and both the cinematography (Mikael Salomon) and art design (Dilley/Kuljian) are worth the price of a rental alone. It's true to say that The Abyss is a fusion of Close Encounters Of The Third Kind & The Day The Earth Stood Still, but really I don't personally see anything wrong with that! As a spectacle it rewards the patient in spades, as a deeply profound moving picture it falls just about short, but even then a less than 100% Cameron picture is still one hell of a ride to be on. 8.5/10
A fantastic movie ruined by the studio's shortsightedness. Be sure to watch James Cameron's version of this movie, aliens included, to get the full and best experience! The cinema release was a botch. The Abyss proves you can have a big action film that hits all the right marks with zero profanity! ...
"The Abyss" features a random assortment of sequences which look suspiciously altered to accommodate the course of the film and one of the most obvious is why Bud isn't instantly crushed to death by the pressure while plummeting to what appears to be certain death. And how can he possibly rally hims ... elf so quickly when he is already caught in the unforgiving grip of delirium? And how can he be capable of successfully defusing a nuclear warhead after enduring such trauma? The film also enthusiastically throws every conceivable obstacle at its cast of characters - that would probably include a kitchen sink if they had one available - as Murphy's Law is unleashed upon them and runs rampant like never before in any previous film to produce what is essentially a thrilling and completely enthralling motion picture experience.
When a nuclear-powered submarine goes missing, scientists-cum-salvagers “Bud” (Ed Harris) and his estranged wife “Lindsey” (Mary Elizabeth Mastroantonio) are drafted in to find out what’s happened. The area where it was lost has become something of a “Bermuda Triangle” with mysterious power surges a ... nd electrical failures but luckily (?) they have the help of navy SEAL “Lt. Coffey” (Michael Biehn) and his team of gun-toters to assist as they dive deep under the ocean. Things doesn’t quite go to plan and they are dragged even deeper, where she is convinced that they are not alone - and that what they are seeing isn’t natural, nor man-mad either! Might it be possible that there’s another species peacefully adorning the ocean floor that’s had it’s fill of mankind and it’s dangerous tantrums? I can’t say much for the acting here, it’s all a bit wooden and with not much by way of decent or scientific dialogue here it’s largely left to the increasingly maniacal Biehn and to some stunning visual effects to deliver the story. It’s that imagery, coupled with the vivid imagination of James Cameron that keeps this slightly over-long adventure moving seamlessly. There’s a predictable, if rather heavy-handed, moral at the denouement (anyone seen “Warlords of Atlantis” from 1978?) and, indeed, the whole thing is riddled with environmental messages of some degree but it’s still essentially a quickly paced and claustrophobic adventure film with plenty going on. It looks great on a big screen with Alan Silvestri’s score compensating well for the banality of the writing, and I quite enjoyed it.