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  1. I love this movie, but I think it gets "forgotten" in a sense because it was right in between Aliens and Terminator 2 (arguably Cameron's two best movies), and Terminator 2's liquid special effects are a lot more memorable/iconic in pop culture.

    • It Was Expensive
    • Cameron's Visual Trickery Was in Full Effect
    • Complete Darkness Using Ingenious Methods
    • The Water Tentacle Scene Was Filmed Early
    • The Resuscitation Scene Was Grueling
    • The Fists Flew Freely
    • The Filming Burned Many Bridges
    • The Movie Goes by Many Nicknames
    • Animal Abuse?
    • No Blu-Ray, to This Day

    One needn't watch more than 15 minutes of The Abyss to realize the enormous financial cost of creating such a film, but few audiences really understand the full impact. The Abysshad a budget of approximately $70 million dollars in 1989. Adjusted for inflation, that's about $145,710,080 dollars by today's standards. While that might not seem like a ...

    A haunting scene in the film involves mini-subs going down to investigate the wreckage of a nuclear sub teetering at the edge of the Mariana Trench. The mini-sub crews can be seen from the outside, which was achieved using screen projectors playing pre-recorded sequences of the actors. This pre-CGI filming technique had been used by Cameron before ...

    The underwater scenes were filmed in a gigantic tank located at a half-completed nuclear reactor in South Carolina. Even though the tank was filled with water to a depth of 40 feet, it wasn't enough to hide light coming from the surface, as would normally be expected at vast depths. To compensate, Cameron draped a large tarpaulin over the surface, ...

    Cameron wanted to experiment with a new type of advanced CGI for The Abyss,but there was no guarantee that it would meet his original vision. To compensate, Cameron filmed the memorable water tentacle scene early on, to give visual effects artists much-needed time to harness and perfect the CGI. RELATED: James Cameron: 10 Best Movies According To I...

    Few scenes in The Abyssare as chilling and emotional as the one involving Bud trying valiantly to resuscitate a dead Lindsey. The ordeal continues for what seems like an eternity, but it's nothing compared to what the actors themselves had to endure. The scene was shot, and then re-shot a second time, but the camera ran out of film and would requir...

    Tensions were so high during the filming of The Abyssthat several people ended up getting a knuckle sandwich due to the amount of stress on set. Actor Ed Harris was so fed up with James Cameron grabbing the perfect shot (of him drowning, no less) that he lost his temper and reportedly punched the director before storming off and later breaking down...

    The Abyssmight be a technical masterpiece, but it ended up costing James Cameron a lot of friends. Its troubled production created a rift between Cameron and actors Ed Harris and MaryElizabeth Mastrantonio, not to mention many crew members who have seemingly gone in opposite directions since that time. Perhaps the most notorious upset for an alread...

    So grueling and punishing was the process of shooting The Abyss,that cast and crew members began showering it with flack in the form of clever nicknames. This may have been an exercise in passive aggression, or a cathartic method of dealing with the on-set trauma. Some of the more colorful titles included "The Abuse," "Life's Abyss And Then You Div...

    First-time audiences bit their knuckles with anxiety during that memorable scene where a live rat is placed in a container of oxygenated fluorocarbon. Although the rat in question was never in any danger of dying, one can clearly see the animal's distress as its body slowly becomes accustomed to the fluid. RELATED: 10 Things You Didn’t Know About J...

    Despite the mammoth undertaking required to bring The Abyssto life, the film has never received a high-definition Blu-Ray release. Although rumors continue to circulate as to whether a release is in the works, there has been little confirmation to by. James Cameron has hinted several times that he is indeed working on an ultimate edition of the fil...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › The_AbyssThe Abyss - Wikipedia

    The Abyss is a 1989 American science fiction film written and directed by James Cameron and starring Ed Harris, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, and Michael Biehn. When an American submarine sinks in the Caribbean, a US search and recovery team works with an oil platform crew, racing against Soviet vessels to recover the boat.

  3. The Abyss was a movie of destiny. First off, this movie either began or was the result of a lifetime obsession James Cameron has the ocean (see later Titanic and his IMAX deep sea movies). The Abyss is also full of echos of claustrophobic thriller/adventure movie Alien, in which Cameron directed the sequel.

  4. Step 1. Ikora Rey will be your guide as you train your Light. Follow her instructions, and learn to manipulate the subtleties of Void. Speak with Ikora Rey in the Tower Bazaar. "If you have ever felt a chill when gazing up at the stars, you know the power of Void." —Ikora. "Ah, a fellow practitioner of Void Light.

  5. The Abyss: Directed by James Cameron. With Ed Harris, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Michael Biehn, Leo Burmester. A civilian diving team is enlisted to search for a lost nuclear submarine and faces danger while encountering an alien aquatic species.

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  7. Jun 29, 2015 · The Deepest Cut examines multiple versions of the same film, how they differ, how they happened, and whether there's a clear choice to be made between them. After the success of The Terminator and Aliens, writer-director James Cameron and his producing partner (and wife) Gale Anne Hurd had options.

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