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Deep Rising is a 1998 American written and directed by and starring , and . It was distributed by Hollywood Pictures and and released on January 30, 1998. While the film was a critical and box office failure, it has been regarded as a .


Plot
Captain John Finnegan and his crew, Joey and Leila, are hired by Hanover, Mulligan, Mason, Billy, T-Ray, Mamooli, and Vivo to pilot their boat across the South China Sea to an undisclosed rendezvous point. Meanwhile, the Argonautica, a luxury built and owned by Simon Canton, is undertaking its maiden voyage. Thief Trillian is discovered and taken to the brig. An unidentified saboteur disables the ship’s navigation and communication systems. Something rises from beneath and rams the vessel, leaving it dead in the water, and the passengers are slaughtered by unseen creatures.

A speedboat that the “Argonautica” has shaken loose collides with Finnegan's boat. The mercenaries seize control with the intention of looting the passengers and vault of the Argonautica and then using the torpedoes stored on board to sink the ship. Leaving Leila and Billy behind to repair the boat, the group boards the ship. The group reaches the ballroom only to find blood and no sign of the passengers. Finnegan and Joey go to the ship's workshop to scavenge parts to repair the boat under Mamooli and T-Ray’s guard. While repairing their boat, Leila is dragged away by the creatures. The creatures kill T-Ray as he investigates the unusual noises. The creatures drag Mamooli away. Finnegan and Joey flee and encounter an escaped Trillian.

The mercenaries reaches the vault, and Vivo opens it. However, Canton, who was hiding inside with Captain Atherton and three other passengers, mistakenly kills Vivo. Mason and Mulligan panic and accidentally kill the passengers. The mercenaries, Canton, & the Captain flee the creatures and subsequently encounter Finnegan, Joey, and Trillian.

Canton is revealed as the saboteur, having hired the mercenaries to sink the unprofitable ship so that he could . The creatures appear as Canton and Captain Atherton fight, releasing a partially digested Billy after Finnegan shoots it. After the creatures attack and eat Captain Atherton, Canton theorizes the creatures are an evolution of , which drain their victims of their bodily fluids and then eject the bloody carcasses.

As the survivors flee, Mason is grabbed by a creature. He kills himself by detonating a grenade. Mulligan elects to stay behind in the crew's galley until a rescue party can arrive. A creature approaches Mulligan, who scares it off with fire from the stove before being devoured from behind by another creature.

In a running battle, the survivors find themselves being herded. Attempting to rid himself of any witnesses to his insurance scam, Canton misleads the others to the bow while he moves towards an exit route. The group finds the bow is a "feeding ground" full of bloody . The creatures break through the hull, flooding the lower decks and separating the survivors. Hanover wounds Joey to slow the creatures but is eventually devoured by one. As an act of mercy, Joey leaves Hanover a gun. However, Hanover wastes his only shot trying to kill Joey and is consumed.

Finnegan and Trillian spot an island and return to Finnegan's boat, but—having lost the engine parts—find it useless as a means of escape. Joey returns and begins repairs, and Finnegan sets the boat's to crash into the Argonautica and detonate the torpedoes. Trillian returns to the Argonautica and locates a with the fuel they can use to reach the island, but Canton arrives armed with a flare gun. Canton demands Trillian to join him or hand over the keys, but she flees and he chases her. Finnegan pursues Canton to the ballroom on the main deck, saving Trillian. The creatures smash through the main deck and are revealed to be tentacles of a vast deep-sea monster—the Octalus—rather than individual entities. The Octalus grabs hold of Finnegan, who shoots it in the eye, blinding it and freeing himself, and he and Trillian escape on the jet ski. Canton flees the Argonautica by jumping onto Finnegan's boat, but breaks his leg doing so. Crippled, he cannot disable the autopilot and dies as the boat crashes into the Argonautica, detonating the torpedoes and destroying both ships and the Octalus.

Finnegan and Trillian reach the island and reunite with Joey, who they thought had died. A roar then echoes from the jungle. The island turns out to have an active volcano in the distance as something big comes crashing through the trees towards the beach.


Cast

Production
began writing the script to Deep Rising, then called Tentacle, when he worked at Hollywood Pictures in the mid-1990s. Sommers was inspired to write the script for the film after reading a National Geographic article about . was originally cast as Trillian St. James, but dropped out after just three days, due to creative differences with Sommers, and was subsequently cast. Janssen almost did not get the part because the producers felt she was too recognizable from . turned down the role of John Finnegan, which later went to , and the film's budget was later downsized.

Filming for Deep Rising began on June 12, 1996, and lasted until October 18 of that year. The film was originally set for release in the fall of 1997, but was delayed until the following January 1998. Industrial Light and Magic was responsible for the film's special effects while who had previously worked on The Thing and on 's was hired as the special makeup effects designer.

The exterior shots of the cruise ship Argonautica were created by computer-generated imagery; it is an original design not based on any existing vessel. Two models of the cruise ship were created, a model for shots of the Argonautica on the ocean, and a model for the sinking of Argonautica.


Reception

Box office
On its opening weekend, the film made $4,737,793 (42% of its total gross), ranking #8. It ended with a total intake of $11.2 million in North America.


Critical response
''Chicago Sun-Times'' critic [[Roger Ebert]] included the film in his most hated list. Ebert called the film "essentially an ''Alien'' clone with a fresh paint job". ''Variety'' Leonard Klady said the film "is an old-fashioned B-movie with A-budget effects, but the quality sheen can't disguise the cheap-thrills hokum."
     

, writing for Entertainment Weekly called the film "a tightly written, often howlingly funny Aliens knockoff that, in its portrayal of tough men and tougher women under pressure, favorably recalls the work of Howard Hawks", giving it a grade of "B−". Bloody Disgusting wrote, "Excellent cast, State-of-art special effects, and terrific acting, this is a movie that should not be missed."

Audiences polled by gave the film an average grade of "C+" on an A+ to F scale.

Deep Rising has gone on to become a . Later, director Stephen Sommers said: "It didn't do a ton of business, but it has a very fervent following."


Home media
Deep Rising was released on and on October 19, 1998, both of which are now out of print. It was released as a 2-Disc Special Edition on and on August 7, 2007. It was released on as a double feature with The Puppet Masters from Mill Creek Entertainment on October 9, 2012. re-released the film on DVD and Blu-ray with new special features on August 21, 2018. Currently the film is streaming in the U.S. on the Peacock Network.


Notes

External links

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