City Under the Sea

City Under the Sea

Directed by Jacques Tourneur
Produced by Daniel Haller
executive
Nat Cohen
uncredited
James H. Nicholson
Samuel Z. Arkoff
Nat Cohen
Written by Charles Bennett
Louis M. Heyward
David Whitaker (additional dialogue)
Based on the poem The City in the Sea by Edgar Allan Poe
Starring Vincent Price
Tab Hunter
Susan Hart
David Tomlinson
John Le Mesurier
Music by Stanley Black
Cinematography Stephen Dade
Production
company
Bruton Film
Distributed by American International Pictures (US)
Anglo-Amalgamated (UK)
Release dates
  • June 1965 (1965-06)
Running time
85 min.
Country United Kingdom
USA
Language English

City Under the Sea (released as War-Gods of the Deep in USA)[1] is a 1965 science fiction film. It was directed by Jacques Tourneur (his final film) and starred Vincent Price, Tab Hunter and David Tomlinson.[2]

The plot concerns the discovery of a lost city beneath the sea off the coast of Cornwall. Price is the captain overseeing a group of sailors who have lived there for more than a century where the peculiar mix of gases has allowed them to extend their lifespan.

The film was made in the tradition of the period fantasies started with Disney's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954). The film attempted to capitalize on the series of Edgar Allan Poe films that had been made by Roger Corman, starring Price. To this extent the film took the title of a Poe poem, "The City in the Sea", and attempted to exploit the Poe films trend, even though the film is only loosely based on the poem with a recitation of the poem at the end of the film.[1]

Plot

Around the turn of the century, American mining engineer Ben Harris is working on the Cornish coast in England when he finds a body washed up on the beach.

Ben makes inquiries at the nearby hotel. While talking to the hotelier’s daughter, fellow American Jill Tregellis, and an eccentric artist, Harold Tufnell-Jones, a mysterious intruder appears but disappears.

Later that night Jill is kidnapped by gill men. Ben, Harold and Harold's chicken follow the trail through a secret door into the caves under the house where they are sucked into a pool.

They emerge in a cavernous city on the ocean floor. The city was built by a race of ancients who survive only as a breed of gill men. The city is now inhabited by a group of smugglers led by the cruel and tyrannical Captain who hid down there in 1803 and due to the strange mixture of oxygen have not aged in over a century. However, the volcano that powers the city has become unstable. The Captain now imprisons them until Ben can come up with a means of maintaining it.

Dan, one of the Captain's men who wishes to leave, offers to help the two escape, provided they use their influence to secure him a full pardon for his past crimes of smuggling. The Captain finds out and reveals that because of the gas they've breathed for so long, exposure to sunlight would cause them to age rapidly and die. Dan is then sent to the surface as a means of execution while Ben and Harold are granted an audience with Jill. Whereupon they meet Rev. Jonathan Ives, who had vanished several decades ago from the surface.

The Captain it is shown is under the delusion that Jill is his deceased wife Beatrice, who he believes has returned to him.

Realising though that Ben and Harold are untrustworthy, the Captain decides to allow the Gill Men to sacrifice the two as a means to appease the volcano's wrath. While they await this, Jill and Ives free them and Ives instructs them all on how to escape the city. The three make it to the airlock and trek across the ocean floor to a cave, containing a tunnel that leads to the surface.

The Captain and his men pursue them there, but frequent volcanic eruptions cause rock falls that bury him and his men. Ben and his friends decide to return to the sea and attempt to reach shore on foot. The Captain meanwhile digs himself free and follows the tunnel to the surface, where the sunlight does indeed age him to death.

Ben and the rest make it to shore and watch as the volcano erupts, finally destroying the city.

Cast

Production

Shooting took place in the United Kingdom. Charles Bennett says he wrote a good script and AIP wanted him to come to Britain to work on the script but would not pay his way. The script was rewritten in Britain by Louis M Heyward. Bennett hated the changes and called the resulting film "the worst thing I was ever involved in."[3]

According to Susan Hart, Charles Bennett's original script was good but was heavily rewritten. She also says there was tension between the producers, Dan Haller and his British counterpart George Willoughby.[4]

Louis M. Heyward confirms this tension and admits to rewriting the script to add humour; in particular, he says he added the comic chicken and introduced the character played by David Tomlinson. Heyward says that Willoughby quit after these changes.[5]

Reception

The film was released in New York on a double bill with Beach Blanket Bingo. New York Times thought it was the better of the two movies, calling it "a briny safari".[6]

Comic book adaption

References

  1. 1 2 Jonathan Malcolm Lampley (3 Sep 2010). Women in the Horror Films of Vincent Price. McFarland. p. 121. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  2. "The City Under the Sea (1965) – IMDb". IMDb.com. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  3. Tom Weaver Double Feature Creature Attack: A Monster Merger of Two More Volumes of Classic Interviews McFarland, 2003 p 23 accessed 18 April 2014
  4. Tom Weaver, "Susan Hart", Double Feature Creature Attack: A Monster Merger of Two More Volumes of Classic Interviews, p 137
  5. Tom Weaver, Michael Brunas, John Brunas, "Louis M. Heyward", Science Fiction Stars and Horror Heroes: Interviews with Actors, Directors, Producers and Writers of the 1940s through 1960s, McFarland 1991 p 160
  6. Off the Deep End Thompson, Howard. New York Times (1923-Current file) [New York, N.Y] 3 June 1965: 24.
  7. Dell Movie Classic: War-Gods of the Deep' at the Grand Comics Database
  8. Dell Movie Classic: War-Gods of the Deep' at the Comic Book DB

External links

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