It’s
always amusing to me when reviewers or audiences label Renny Harlin’s Deep
Blue Sea (1999) a rip-off of
the 1970s shark hit, Jaws (1975).
Why?
A
close examination of the film makes it absolutely clear that Deep
Blue Sea rips-off a different
Steven Spielberg mega-hit: Jurassic Park (1993).
Deep
Blue Sea, is
-- in very real terms -- a wet Jurassic Park.
Think
about it for a minute.
Both
films involve genetically engineered animals in pens who prove far smarter and
far more resourceful than their god-playing human scientist-parents imagine.
Both
films -- released in the 1990s -- also draw their creative energy from the
Pandora’s Box of the Clinton Age: Genetic
Science.
In
1990, for example, the Human Genome Project began in earnest, unlocking the
secrets of our biological make-up, and horror movies responded…with fear and
worry.
Over
the next ten years at least, the horror genre gave us cinematic visions such as
Mary
Shelley’s Frankenstein (1994), The Island of Dr. Moreau (1997), and
Mimic
(1998), films wherein ambitious scientists make…monsters.
Deep
Blue Sea is decidedly
a part of that mad scientist “school” (forgive the fish pun), not of the “revenge
of nature” pack that Jaws more legitimately seems representative
of.
Beyond
matters of categorization, Deep Blue Sea is a fun, well-paced
horror romp. Not all the CGI effects hold up very well today. And the Scream (1996)-like material that
sees L.L. Cool J lamenting that “brothers” never survive situations like the
one in Oceania is risible at best.
Today, it feels horribly clichéd.
But
sharks -- genetically engineered or not -- are terrifying nemeses.
On
their terrain, we are just…appetizers. Deep
Blue Sea effectively taps into that universal fear of being in alien
territory, hunted by a life-form that better understands the geography. So there’s suspense and action here to go
along with the goofy self-referential humor and don’t-tamper-in-God’s-domain
lesson.
I
don’t entirely respect myself for feeling this way -- especially since I hold
movies to a high standard in terms of what they achieve and how they achieve it
-- but Deep Blue Sea is a lot of dumb fun.
“If
they eat you, it’s because they think you’re a fat little seal.”
Following
the escape of a test shark from the facility, corporate mogul and disaster survivor
Russell Franklin (Samuel L. Jackson) wants to check up on one of his
controversial investments: a sea-going laboratory called Aquatica.
There,
Dr. Susan McAlester (Burrows) has created genetically-enhanced sharks so she
can extract from their over-sized brains a hormone that will cure Alzheimer’s
in humans.
Following
a storm at sea, the next-gen sharks -- all three of them -- stage a
life-threatening break-out of the facility.
McAlester,
Franklin, shark wrangler Carter Blake (Jane) and others are trapped inside the
sinking laboratory, and the sharks are on the prowl.
But
what do the sharks want? Just another
meal, or something else?
“Beneath
this glassy surface, a world of gliding monsters.”
Beneath
this shark-y-surface…a world of Jurassic Park tropes.
Both
Jurassic
Park and Deep Blue Sea commence with an accident. In Spielberg’s film, a work is killed at
night on Isla Nublar when a Velociraptor is transferred from one cage to
another. In Deep Blue Sea, a shark
escapes Aquatica, and nearly kills a group of horny teenagers before being
caught.
The
scene and set-up in the latter is derivative of the former, but still I like
how Harlin executes it; particularly the moment when red wine spills into the ocean
water, right above the camera’s eye.
This
is isn’t the only time in the film that the water will run red, so the moment
is portentous, to say the least.
After
the accident, both Jurassic Park and Deep Blue Sea share another
similarity. They each feature a flight
to a far-flung facility that involves a visitor who is in a position to assess
that facility and its work.
In
Jurassic
Park, Alan (Sam Neil), Ellen (Laura Dern) and Ian (Jeff Goldblum) fly
to Isla Nublar to determine if the facility is safe to be opened to the public. In Deep Blue Sea, Samuel L. Jackson’s
Franklin flies to Aquatica to make the same assessment.
In
both films, a sense of wonder comes next.
Alan and Ellen see real living dinosaurs, and also see how they are
created in a lab. They even witness a
velociraptor emerging from an egg. In Deep
Blue Sea, Franklin witnesses shark wrangler Carter (Thomas Jane) riding
a shark in the tank. Then, he sees the
operation to aspirate shark brain juice for Alzheimer’s treatment.
But
of course, something goes wrong in both cases.
And
that something is universally preceded by a storm’s arrival. In Jurassic Park, a storm wreaks havoc
when Nedry leaves his post with the security systems down. He then drives his car into the mud, and is
killed by a Dilophosaurus. But the storm also sends away the park’s main personnel,
for reasons of safety.
In
Deep
Blue Sea, a storm rolls in, while most of Aquatica’s staff is off for
the weekend, resulting in a helicopter crash, and an explosion.
In
both cases, the subtext is all about Mother Nature. Man (John Hammond) -- or woman (Dr. Susan
McAlester) -- attempts to play God, to re-write nature. So Forces of Nature respond. Aggressively.
Man
proposes and God disposes.
The
primary boogeymen in both films -- the velociraptors and sharks, respectively --
are also defined by the dialogue as “hunting in packs.” Similarly, the beasts are under-estimated vis-à-vis
their intelligence. The dinosaurs of Jurassic
Park figure out how to mate, even in the absence of males.
And the
sharks of Deep Blue Sea figure out to how to sink Aquatica so they can
swim through the above sea gates.
Both
the raptors and the sharks escape their cages, too, to wreak havoc.
And
finally, just for fun, Samuel L. Jackson’s character dies in both films. We see his severed arm in Jurassic
Park. We see a severed leg in the water in Deep Blue Sea.
Near
the finale of both films, too, survival depends on characters being able to
turn the power back on in the respective facilities.
I
could go on and on here, I suspect, but you get the point. Deep Blue Sea is, more
aptly, Jurassic Sea World, or some such thing.
Yet,
the wholesale aping of Jurassic Park doesn’t automatically render
Deep
Blue Sea a disaster. Harlin adds his own over-the-top stylistic touches
to the material, slathering the film with whirling pans and zooms, and thus a real
sense of visual kineticism. The movie itself
may not be as deep as the ocean, but it’s a ore-than adequate roller-coaster
ride experience.
Intriguingly,
the film also gives us a lesson in mechanical sharks vs. CGI sharks. In Deep
Blue Sea, the scenes involving the mechanical shark interacting with
the actors still hold up. The scene in
which one scientist, Whitlock (Stellan Skarsgard) gets his arm bitten off by a
shark is terrifying, and more than that, terrifyingly real. The CGI shark scenes, by contrast, look like
living cartoons, no more real today than Jabberjaw.
Over
the years, I have watched Deep Blue Sea probably six or seven
times. Not because it is a great film,
but because it is a gory, fast-paced horror film with plenty of action, and a
few laughs.
Just like Dr. Susan McAlester
(our primary transgressor and tamperer in God’s domain…), the film goes down
the gullet pretty easily.
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