Arrow Video: Deep Blue Sea (1999) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Arrow Video

Renny Harlin is arguably the most globally famous and successful Finnish filmmaker in Hollywood history, starting out in horror with Prison and A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master before segueing into the action picture with Die Hard 2, Cliffhanger and The Long Kiss Goodnight.  A modestly sized successor to Walter Hill who also was the director’s mentor, Harlin’s career while varied with some hits and some hard misses ala Cutthroat Island is often written off as dispensable filler.  With Arrow Video, however, and their upcoming 4K UHDs of both The Long Kiss Goodnight and today’s film review of his 1999 sharksploitation epic Deep Blue Sea, the tide seems to be turning for Harlin’s reputation.  Undeterred and a film worker at heart, Harlin’s plainly tongue-in-cheek science-fiction horror thriller comes to Arrow Video in a new limited-edition boxed set featuring a new transfer supervised and approved by Harlin and has never looked or sounded better!

 
In the middle of the ocean lies a remote secret multimillion dollar research facility with a team of scientists commandeered by Susan McAlester (Saffron Burrows) involving developing a cure for Alzheimer's by genetically enhancing the size of a shark’s brain mass.  When one of the super sharks escapes the lab and attacks some boaters, executive Russell Franklin (Samuel L. Jackson) is sent in to pull the plug on the project, leaving her team including but not limited to shark wrangler Carter Blake (Thomas Jane), scientists Jim Whitlock (Stellan SkarsgĂ„rd) and Janice Higgins (Jacqueline McKenzie) scrambling to prove the worth and value of the project.  Amid a demonstration of subduing and extracting brain fluid from one of the sharks, however, the animals break free of their cages having enhanced brain masses and they proceed to wreak havoc and horror on the laboratory and the people trapped inside it.

 
An expensive, scenic plain faced tongue-in-cheek B-movie boasting arresting set pieces by Event Horizon production designer Joseph Bennett lensed handsomely in scope by recurring The Fast and the Furious series cinematographer Stephen F. Windon and featuring a trademark rousing score by Armageddon composer Trevor Rabin, Deep Blue Sea is an enjoyably slickly silly ‘animals-attack’ romp.  Featuring LL Cool J as the facility’s cook Sherman Dudley and the film’s comic relief who also contributed two original tracks to the film’s soundtrack, the tone of the film doesn’t quite go full Meg 2: The Trench but it comes close.  Pure check-your-brain-at-the-door action-thriller escapism that combine Steven Spielberg with James Cameron in a kind of goofy mashup, it is not to be taken completely seriously.  It also plays against expectations, particularly with some of the more notable supporting actors involved, keeping viewers guessing who will or won’t make it out alive.

 
Released in the summer of 1999 to sizable box office returns, grossing $165 million globally against a $60 million budget, Deep Blue Sea was Harlin’s first real bona fide blockbuster since his 1993 Sylvester Stallone epic Cliffhanger which this film pays homage to at one point even.  Despite mixed critical reception with some finding the sharksploitation exercise to be somewhat dull with laughably corny looking CGI effects which look rather cartoonish, the film was enough of a commercial hit to have spawned two direct-to-video sequel films (without Harlin) and reignite interest in the shark attack subgenre.  Yes it shamelessly cribs key scenes from Jaws despite having a higher gore and kill quotient, but most going into this know that full well.  Arrow Video’s 4K UHD boxed set is jam packed with extras and will absolutely satisfy sharksploitation fans as well as Harlin disciples who have urged moviegoers to take another look at his stuff and not merely write him off as a B movie giant.

--Andrew Kotwicki