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Waterworld

Beyond the horizon lies the secret to a new beginning.
1995 | 135m | English

(220238 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 7 (history)

Details

In a futuristic world where the polar ice caps have melted and made Earth a liquid planet, a beautiful barmaid rescues a mutant seafarer from a floating island prison. They escape, along with her young charge, Enola, and sail off aboard his ship. But the trio soon becomes the target of a menacing pirate who covets the map to 'Dryland'—which is tattooed on Enola's back.
Release Date: Jul 28, 1995
Director: Kevin Reynolds
Writer: David Twohy, Peter Rader
Genres: Adventure, Action, Science Fiction
Keywords human evolution, ocean, pirate gang, melting ice caps, barmaid, water planet, reluctant hero, new species of human, survival at sea, special child, sailboat, tattoo, mutant, pirate, oil tanker, free diving, environmental disaster, underwater fight, genetic mutation, fuel shortage, futuristic world
Production Companies Universal Pictures, Gordon Company, Davis Entertainment, Licht/Mueller Film Corporation
Box Office Revenue: $264,218,220
Budget: $175,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 06, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Kevin Costner Mariner
Dennis Hopper Deacon
Jeanne Tripplehorn Helen
Tina Majorino Enola
R. D. Call Enforcer
Gerard Murphy Nord
Michael Jeter Old Gregor
Rick Aviles Gatesman
Kim Coates Drifter
Chaim Jeraffi Drifter
Sab Shimono Elder
Zitto Kazann Elder / Survivor
Rita Zohar Atoller
Jack Black Pilot
Zakes Mokae Priam
Jack Kehler Banker
Leonardo Cimino Elder
Lanny Flaherty Trader
Robert A. Silverman Hydroholic
Henry Kapono Ka'aihue Gatesman
Neil Giuntoli Hellfire Gunner
Robert Joy Ledger Guy
John Fleck Doctor
Greg Goossen Sawzall Smoker
William Preston Depth Gauge
John Toles-Bey Plane Gunner
Ari Barak Atoll Man
Chris Douridas Atoller
Alexa Jago Atoll Woman
Sean Whalen Bone
Robert LaSardo Smitty
Lee Arenberg Djeng
Doug Spinuzza Spun
Hal Douglas Narrator (voice) (uncredited)
Anne Gaybis Deacon Gang Member (uncredited)
Annie Costner Atoll Girl (uncredited)
John Otrin Wild Lines (uncredited)
Michael Haddad Smoker (uncredited)
Heidi Miller Extra (uncredited)
Name Job
James Newton Howard Original Music Composer
Dean Semler Director of Photography
Dennis Gassner Production Design
Richard King Sound Effects Editor
Norman Howell Stunt Coordinator
Chad Randall Stunt Coordinator
R.A. Rondell Stunt Coordinator
Kevin Reynolds Director
Wendy Rogers CG Supervisor
Richie Gaona Utility Stunts
Ana Maria Quintana Script Supervisor
Jeff Atmajian Orchestrator, Conductor
Jimmy Nickerson Stunts
David Twohy Writer
Cheyenne Ellis Stunts
David R. Ellis Second Unit Director
Mark Ulano Additional Production Sound Mixer
Caitlin McKenna First Assistant Sound Editor
Craig Hosking Aerial Coordinator
Cliff Fleming Pilot
Troy Gilbert Stunts
Jeff Imada Stunts
Gene LeBell Stunts
Annie Ellis Stunts
Troy Robinson Stunts
Troy Brown Stunts
Lance Gilbert Stunts
Gregory J. Barnett Stunts
Steve M. Davison Stunts
John C. Meier Stunts
Gary McLarty Stunts
Buddy Joe Hooker Stunts
Billy D. Lucas Stunts
Tony Epper Stunts
Danny Epper Stunts
Clay Cullen Stunts
Michael Runyard Stunts
Danny Wynands Stunts
Al Goto Stunts
Jeff 'JJ' Dashnaw Stunts
Jimmy N. Roberts Stunts
Peter Boyle Editor
David Rubin Casting
David F. Klassen Art Direction
Nancy Haigh Set Decoration
John Bloomfield Costume Design
Nick Scarano Costume Supervisor
Peggy Casey Art Department Coordinator
Fred Arbegast Sculptor
Don Cinderella Set Designer
John Dexter Set Designer
Gary Diamond Set Designer
Natalie Richards Set Designer
Marco Rubeo Set Designer
Paul Sonski Set Designer
Darrell L. Wight Set Designer
Robert Greenfield Leadman
John Villarino Construction Coordinator
Liloa Wong Greensman
Dan O'Connell Foley
Jay Wilkinson Supervising Sound Editor
Gregg Landaker Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Martin Bresin Special Effects Coordinator
Michael Schorr Special Effects Coordinator
Robin Griffin Visual Effects Producer
Kimberly Nelson LoCascio Visual Effects Producer
Michael J. McAlister Visual Effects Supervisor
Ben Glass Still Photographer
Mark O'Kane Camera Operator, Steadicam Operator
Ian Fox Camera Operator
Melton C. Maxwell Gaffer
John Frazier Special Effects Coordinator
Laura Baker Set Costumer
Brenna Charlebois Set Costumer
Anthony J. Lipin Set Costumer
Jay B. Richardson Music Editor
Jim Weidman Music Editor
Gene Levy Line Producer
Lee Scott Music Editor
Steve Burg Assistant Art Director
Stefan Dechant Production Illustrator
John French Standby Painter
Richard Merryman Additional Photography
William 'Bear' Paul Key Grip
Bruce Byall Grip
Kurt E. Soderling Visual Effects Camera, Aerial Camera
Pete Romano Underwater Camera
Chrisi Karvonides-Dushenko Assistant Costume Designer
Janis Clark Hairstylist
David LeRoy Anderson Makeup Artist
Richard F. Anderson Set Dresser
David Aaron Armorer
Daniel Turk Carpenter
Alan Barnett Digital Effects Supervisor
Chris Haynes Driver
Chad Rivetti Loader
Doreen A. Dixon Post Production Supervisor
Kieran Woo Production Controller
Michael Denering Scenic Artist
Shannon Rawls Security
Bill Meadows Sound Recordist
Danny Rowe Stand In
Terry Ahue Stunts
Louis Dinson Transportation Co-Captain
Alan B. Curtiss First Assistant Director
Dale E. Grahn Color Timer
Tony Hibbard Best Boy Electric
Ric Delgado Electrician
Scott Kidner Lighting Technician
Rick A. Benedetto Rigging Gaffer
Levon Besnelian Rigging Grip
Jakki Fink Casting Associate
Krystyna Demkowicz Executive In Charge Of Production
Ginger Peterson Location Manager
Dina Farnell Production Coordinator
John J. Smith Production Manager
Stephen Traxler Production Supervisor
Timothy P. Salmon Boom Operator
David Burk Assistant Sound Editor
Lou Angelo Sound Editor
Keith A. Wester Sound Mixer
Doug Ikeler 3D Artist
Jason Dowdeswell Digital Compositors
Ralph Kerr Special Effects Supervisor
Karin Joy Visual Effects Coordinator
Sandra McNeil Studio Teachers
Bud S. Smith Creative Consultant
Steve Kohler Sound
Michael C. Mason Music Score Producer
Peter Rader Writer
Francisco X. Pérez Makeup Supervisor
Robert Huberman Second Assistant Director
David Hallinan Second Second Assistant Director
Scott M. Anderson Assistant Property Master
Paige Augustine Lead Set Dresser
Eric Ladd Opening Title Sequence
Wayne Fitzgerald Title Designer
Susan Dudeck ADR Editor
Thomas J. O'Connell ADR Mixer
Rick Canelli ADR Recordist
Bill W. Benton Additional Sound Re-Recording Mixer
John T. Cucci Foley Artist
James Ashwill Foley Mixer
Nerses Gezalyan Foley Recordist
Lauren Palmer Supervising ADR Editor
Mark C. Grech Utility Sound
George Zamora Special Effects Assistant
Stan Blackwell Special Effects Technician
Alex Frisch VFX Artist
Jonny Winograd Visual Effects Assistant Editor
Mark Vargo VFX Director of Photography
Larry Nicholas Stunt Double
Robert Beverlin Assistant Camera
Michael Guthrie Best Boy Grip
John W. Murphy Dolly Grip
Kirk Bloomberg Second Assistant Camera
Carole Henderson Harrington Assistant Editor
Jonathan Lucas Associate Editor
Sandy Brundage Negative Cutter
Chela Fiorini Art Department Production Assistant
Carol Ashley Compositing Supervisor
John K. Stirber Effects Supervisor
Anne Johns Extras Casting Coordinator
Joseph Kelly Padovich Generator Operator
David M. Bernstein Key Set Production Assistant
Jack Holland Production Assistant
Tom Prince Production Executive
Gary D'Amico Pyrotechnician
Mary Leitz Rotoscoping Artist
Mike Gerzevitz Underwater Gaffer
Terri Cadiente Stunts
Patricia A. Walrod Stunts
Kira Tashjian Stunts
Lori Lynn Ross Stunts
Nancy Emerson Stunts
Jani D. Davis Stunts
Christy Cotton Stunts
Tammy Brady Conrad Stunts
Kenneth Chamitoff Extras Casting
Louis Niemeyer First Assistant Camera
Richard M. Ellis Stunts
Tommy J. Huff Stunts
Gladys Vega First Assistant Editor
Bob Brown Stunts
Cris Thomas-Palomino Stunts
Lawrence Gordon Presenter
Ronnie Rondell Jr. Stunts
Danny Rogers Stunts
Name Title
John Davis Producer
Lawrence Gordon Producer
Charles Gordon Producer
Ilona Herzberg Executive Producer
Andrew Licht Executive Producer
Jeffrey A. Mueller Executive Producer
David Fulton Associate Producer
Kevin Costner Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 45 70 30
2024 5 43 74 32
2024 6 44 86 27
2024 7 47 85 29
2024 8 45 64 28
2024 9 33 56 23
2024 10 35 79 22
2024 11 30 62 20
2024 12 34 46 24
2025 1 43 79 26
2025 2 23 44 4
2025 3 9 29 3
2025 4 8 14 3
2025 5 8 15 4
2025 6 6 9 5
2025 7 5 7 5
2025 8 5 8 5
2025 9 8 9 7

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 9 501 680
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 233 701
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 448 785
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 598 848
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 293 724
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 247 726
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 134 615
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 612 835
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 533 759
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 234 743
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 549 840
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 552 787
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 465 702
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 105 468

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

You're a fool to believe in something you've never seen. Waterworld is directed by Kevin Reynolds and jointly written by David Twohy, Peter Rader and Joss Whedon. It stars Kevin Costner, Dennis Hopper, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Tina Majorino, Michael Jeter and Gerard Murphy. Music is scored by James Ne ... wton Howard and cinematography by Dean Semler. It's the future and the polar ice caps have melted and the Earth is practically covered by the sea. As civilisation is forced to live on the water, their only hope is to one day find the fabled place known as Dryland. A Mariner drifter may hold the key to Dryland's whereabouts... It was by definition a troubled shoot, with sackings, difference of opinions, cost overruns, production set backs (hurricane destroying a hugely expensive set) and bad word of mouth generated by a film press intent on giving Kevin Costner a good kicking. Facts are, now that all the water has evaporated over the years, Waterworld is neither the flop or the bad film that many believed it to be. Should it be a better movie considering the gargantuan amounts of cash spent on it? Absolutely, without question! But Waterworld turned a decent profit in spite of its problems and mixed reviews, and now it firmly has a fan base willing to love it for the great sci-fi escapism that it is. Now readily available in 3 cuts (Theatrical, TV Edit and Ulysses), you can sample each to find the pros and cons of home format film tampering. Even in its theatrical form the film is still a rollicking water based adventure, full of spectacular stunts (oh my those jet-skis rock), amazing sets (whoosh, the sci-fi grandeur of the floating atoll) and blood pumping scenes (the eerie journey and subsequent revelation of a city under water). Sure it's far from flawless as the pace is uneven at times and as plot narratives go it's pretty thin, but Reynolds and Costner have crafted an impressive world submerged by water. The cast, too, are delivering knowing performances. Costner's Mariner is indeed one note, unsympathetic and moody, this guy is a loner and a mutation after all, his sombre persona neatly playing against Hopper's cartoonish, satirical and maniacal villain. Tripplehorn (a porn star name if ever there was one!) beautifully shines in a film populated predominantly by males (there's another flaw for you), Michael Jeter scores favourably as a highly strung elder, while young Majorino is suitably winsome, neatly playing it as a device to mellow the Mariner's cold fishy heart. Take that and fill it out with the detail of the definitive cut (Ulysses) which showcases Reynolds' vision and it's fan nirvana all round. If it was meant to be a serious picture in the first place, a sermon on topical destroying of the Earth, then it fails a touch because the characterisations are bound by cliché manacles. Yet collectively the inhabitants of this Waterworld share a common goal of survival, played out to the backdrop of Reynolds' excellent futuristic setting. When thrust together to make a good versus evil action movie, the characterisations work handsomely within that framework. That is ultimately the best way to enjoy Waterworld, let it wash over you (hrr hrr hrr) in a wave (hrr, OK I'll stop now) of water based action and heroics. It's a world where soil is currency and smoking is a marker for being a bad guy. From the opening shot of the Universal World logo becoming submerged in water, to the bittersweet finale, yes! Waterworld is indeed escapism in its purest cinematic form and becomes a high definition must in the process. 8/10

May 16, 2024
John Chard
8.0

You're a fool to believe in something you've never seen. Waterworld is directed by Kevin Reynolds and jointly written by David Twohy, Peter Rader and Joss Whedon. It stars Kevin Costner, Dennis Hopper, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Tina Majorino, Michael Jeter and Gerard Murphy. Music is scored by James Ne ... wton Howard and cinematography by Dean Semler. It's the future and the polar ice caps have melted and the Earth is practically covered by the sea. As civilisation is forced to live on the water, their only hope is to one day find the fabled place known as Dryland. A Mariner drifter may hold the key to Dryland's whereabouts... It was by definition a troubled shoot, with sackings, difference of opinions, cost overruns, production set backs (hurricane destroying a hugely expensive set) and bad word of mouth generated by a film press intent on giving Kevin Costner a good kicking. Facts are, now that all the water has evaporated over the years, Waterworld is neither the flop or the bad film that many believed it to be. Should it be a better movie considering the gargantuan amounts of cash spent on it? Absolutely, without question! But Waterworld turned a decent profit in spite of its problems and mixed reviews, and now it firmly has a fan base willing to love it for the great sci-fi escapism that it is. Now readily available in 3 cuts (Theatrical, TV Edit and Ulysses), you can sample each to find the pros and cons of home format film tampering. Even in its theatrical form the film is still a rollicking water based adventure, full of spectacular stunts (oh my those jet-skis rock), amazing sets (whoosh, the sci-fi grandeur of the floating atoll) and blood pumping scenes (the eerie journey and subsequent revelation of a city under water). Sure it's far from flawless as the pace is uneven at times and as plot narratives go it's pretty thin, but Reynolds and Costner have crafted an impressive world submerged by water. The cast, too, are delivering knowing performances. Costner's Mariner is indeed one note, unsympathetic and moody, this guy is a loner and a mutation after all, his sombre persona neatly playing against Hopper's cartoonish, satirical and maniacal villain. Tripplehorn (a porn star name if ever there was one!) beautifully shines in a film populated predominantly by males (there's another flaw for you), Michael Jeter scores favourably as a highly strung elder, while young Majorino is suitably winsome, neatly playing it as a device to mellow the Mariner's cold fishy heart. Take that and fill it out with the detail of the definitive cut (Ulysses) which showcases Reynolds' vision and it's fan nirvana all round. If it was meant to be a serious picture in the first place, a sermon on topical destroying of the Earth, then it fails a touch because the characterisations are bound by cliché manacles. Yet collectively the inhabitants of this Waterworld share a common goal of survival, played out to the backdrop of Reynolds' excellent futuristic setting. When thrust together to make a good versus evil action movie, the characterisations work handsomely within that framework. That is ultimately the best way to enjoy Waterworld, let it wash over you (hrr hrr hrr) in a wave (hrr, OK I'll stop now) of water based action and heroics. It's a world where soil is currency and smoking is a marker for being a bad guy. From the opening shot of the Universal World logo becoming submerged in water, to the bittersweet finale, yes! Waterworld is indeed escapism in its purest cinematic form and becomes a high definition must in the process. 8/10

May 16, 2024
FilipeManuelNeto
1.0

**Rather poorly edited and cut, this film is downright forgettable.** I've seen this movie twice, and I honestly can't believe it. It was truly the same as burning money. After being impressed by the poor quality of the film, I went to read and research about it, and discovered the eventual cause ... of this disaster: from the beginning, it was a project doomed to failure. Badly planned, it was filmed in a place where the weather conditions would cause problems. The ambition to do more and better is healthy, but in this case it caused an escalation of costs. To make things more difficult, the production was guided by Kevin's disagreement against Kevin, since the director, Kevin Reynolds, was contradicted several times by the main actor, Kevin Costner. The most blatant disagreement may have happened during post-production, with the actor and the studio demanding a straight cut of the film, which was lame and poorly edited. It had everything to go wrong... I know, now, that there are extended versions of the film, but I haven't found a "director's cut" that would be able to reverse the changes and give us the version that Reynold initially envisioned. What I saw is the “canonical version” of about two hours, and I hated it. The script is based on a very apocalyptic and poorly explained future, where the entire world is flooded, and a myth has been created where, somewhere, there would be land, but which no one has actually been able to confirm. The few surviving people live on atolls and artificial islands, and on boats. The film never shows us a storm, a hurricane or anything that threatens the lives of those survivors, nor does it explain how they survived, or why no one properly explores the world to discover signs of earth. There are a lot of loose ends and absurdities, and the film will only work if we avoid thinking about it too much. The cast rests solidly on Kevin Costner's back, and even those who aren't particularly fans of the actor will have to agree that he makes a good acting exercise, and is charismatic enough to ensure the role that is expected of him, especially if we're considering how indigestible and unsympathetic his character can be. Dennis Hopper is a likable villain, more cartoonish than truly menacing. Jeanne Tripplehorn is decent and satisfying. Technically, the film stands out for its commitment to excellent production values, with the effort and financial expenditure applied being clear: the choice of filming locations is very good, despite having brought many practical and logistical difficulties to the production; the cinematography takes every opportunity to make the film beautiful and elegant. The sets and costumes, made extremely realistically, are excellent, and you can see that they were expensive and detailed. The action scenes were well-thought-out and executed, and could have been better had the film not been structured for such a low rating. Good effects and a soundtrack that satisfies without enchanting make up the overall picture of a rather forgettable film.

Nov 29, 2022