Features:
 - Color
 - Widescreen
 - Closed-captioned
 
  
 Description:
  Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 20,000 Leagues Under  the Sea gets a dose of On the Beach in Irwin Allen's visually  impressive but scientifically silly Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea.  While the Seaview, the world's most advanced experimental submarine,  maneuvers under the North Pole, the Van Allen radiation belt catches fire,  giving the concept "global warming" an entirely new dimension. As the Earth  broils in temperatures approaching 170 degrees F, Walter Pidgeon's  maniacally driven Admiral Nelson hijacks the Seaview and plays tag with  the world's combined naval forces on a race to the South Pacific, where he plans  to extinguish the interstellar fire with a well-placed nuclear missile. But  first he has to fight a mutinous crew, an alarmingly effective saboteur, not one  but two giant squid attacks, and a host of design flaws that nearly cripple the  mission (note to Nelson: think backup generators). Barbara Eden shimmies to  Frankie Avalon's trumpet solos in the most formfitting naval uniform you've ever  seen, fish-loving Peter Lorre plays in the shark tank, gloomy religious fanatic  Michael Ansara preaches Armageddon, and Joan Fontaine looks very uncomfortable  playing an armchair psychoanalyst. It's all pretty absurd, but Allen pumps it up  with larger-than-life spectacle and lovely miniature work. --Sean  Axmaker  Fantastic Voyage 2001: A Space Odyssey took the world on  a mind-bending trip to outer space, but Fantastic Voyage is the original  psychedelic inner-space adventure. When a brilliant scientist falls into a coma  with an inoperable blood clot in the brain, a surgical team embarks on a  top-secret journey to the center of the mind in a high-tech military submarine  shrunk to microbial dimensions. Stephen Boyd stars as a colorless commander sent  to keep an eye on things (though his eyes stay mostly on shapely medical  assistant Raquel Welch), while Donald Pleasance is suitably twitchy as the  claustrophobic medical consultant. The science is shaky at best, but the  imaginative spectacle is marvelous: scuba-diving surgeons battle white blood  cells, tap the lungs to replenish the oxygen supply, and shoot the aorta like  daredevil surfers. The film took home a well-deserved Oscar for Best Visual  Effects. Director Richard Fleischer, who turned Disney's 1954 20,000 Leagues  Under the Sea into one of the most riveting submarine adventures of all  time, creates a picture so taut with cold-war tensions and cloak-and-dagger  secrecy that niggling scientific contradictions (such as, how do miniaturized  humans breathe full-sized air molecules?) seem moot. --Sean Axmaker
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