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Captain Nemo and the Underwater City Poster

Captain Nemo and the Underwater City

They tried to leave the golden city with the most valuable prize of all - their lives!
1969 | 105m | English

(1988 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

Survivors of a sinking ship are rescued by Captain Nemo and his submarine crew. They are taken to an underwater city where they may spend the rest of their lives.
Release Date: Dec 01, 1969
Director: James Hill
Writer: Pip Baker, R. Wright Campbell , Jane Baker
Genres: Family, Adventure, Science Fiction
Keywords jules verne, utopia, underwater, captain nemo, underwater city, ship wreck, advanced civilization, shipwreck survivors, underwater life, underwater rescue
Production Companies Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios, Omnia Pictures Ltd.
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 10, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Backdrops

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Robert Ryan Captain Nemo
Chuck Connors Senator Robert Fraser
Nanette Newman Helena Beckett
Luciana Paluzzi Mala
John Turner Joab
Bill Fraser Barnaby Bath
Kenneth Connor Swallow Bath
Allan Cuthbertson Lomax
Christopher Hartstone Phillip Beckett
Ian Ramsey Adam
John Moore Skipper
Anthony Bailey Sailor
Alan Barry Sailor
Vincent Harding Mate Navigator
Name Job
Jules Verne Characters
Irene Howard Casting
James Hill Director
Pip Baker Writer
R. Wright Campbell Writer
Jane Baker Writer
Reg Bream Assistant Art Director
Angela Morley Original Music Composer
Bill Lewthwaite Editor
William C. Andrews Art Direction
Hazel Peiser Set Decoration
Olga Lehmann Costume Design
Ernest Gasser Makeup Artist
Alice Holmes Hairstylist
Albert Becket Production Supervisor
Terry Lens Production Manager
Ted Lewis Assistant Director
Raymond Becket Third Assistant Director
Paddy Carpenter Second Assistant Director
Peter Sheilds Draughtsman
Brian Muir Sculptor
Cyril Swern Sound
A.W. Watkins Sound Supervisor
Jim Sibley Sound Editor
Bob Jones Sound Mixer
Richard Conway Special Effects
George Gibbs Special Effects
Jack Mills Special Effects
Joe Dunne Stunt Coordinator
Cyd Child Stunts
Fritz Ford Stunts
Alan Hume Director of Photography
Name Title
Bertram Ostrer Producer
Steven Pallos Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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2025 10 739 739
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Reviews

Wuchak
7.0

**_The awe-inspiring wonders and possibilities of the vast seas (70% of the Earth)_** During the Civil War, a Senator (Chuck Connors), three men, a young widow & her boy, are rescued after abandoning ship in the stormy north Atlantic. Their savior ironically turns out to be the misanthropic Capta ... in Nemo (Robert Ryan), who happens to be the benevolent ruler of an amazing underwater city. “Captain Nemo and the Underwater City” (1969) takes the titular Jules Verne character from “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea” (1954) and “Mysterious Island” (1961) and expands his potential to that of being the mastermind of an unbelievable subaquatic community. The idea that this is only entertaining for kids is absurd since there's much here for adults to appreciate. Overlooking a few attempts at hokey humor (involving the gold-obsessed Bath brothers), there's the colorful sets and quality main actors, not to mention the beautiful women — Nanette Newman as Helena, Luciana Paluzzi as Mala and some peripherals. Speaking of Mala, she plays an instrument that's basically a Verne-esque version of the theremin, 65 years before it was patented by the Russian inventor Leon Theremin. Then there's the fascinating character of Nemo himself. He's driven by hate, yes, but it's hatred of the evils of war and unjust government, as well as the corresponding suffocating laws. In the ocean, he & his people are free from all of this and, especially, humanity's penchant for self-destruction, at least to a greater degree. Speaking of which, the ending brings up humankind's quest for Utopia and how to obtain it: Do we separate from humanity to achieve it in a secret enclave, like Nemo, or do we work with humanity to bring about positive change, like the Senator wants to do? This is an enduring theme since Coppola's new "Megalopolis" addresses the same kinds of questions. It runs 1 hour, 45 minutes, and was shot at MGM British Studios in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, which was just northwest of central London (demolished in 1970). The oceanic sequences were done off Malta in the Mediterranean Sea, as well as the Red Sea. GRADE: B

Sep 21, 2024