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Dom Robinson reviews

The Abyss:
Special Edition

Distributed by


At 0922 local time an American nuclear submarine, the USS Montana with 156 men went down about 22 miles from where the crew of the Deepcore are working and they're being asked to team up with a bunch of Navy SEALs to help in the rescue. Hopefully they'll be a little more prompt than the Russians were with the Kursk, although I'm sure the Montana's downward spiral is for an entirely different reason...

The situation brings together estranged, warring couple oil-rig foreman Bud Brigman (Ed Harris) and his bossy other half Lindsey (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio). Together with SEAL team leader Lt. Hiram Coffey (Michael Biehn) they'll head off "two and a half miles straight down" to see what they can see, where we'll learn that not all aliens are bad and perhaps we can get along with our extra-terrestrial friends, but it's not a given in all cases.

It's difficult to explain the film further without giving away any plot points, suffice to say it's worth a watch for anyone and is never less than fascinating, for those who'll appreciate it, apart from the occasional slow moment early on as the film gets going.

There's a few problems I have with this release, albeit mostly none that are Fox's fault, but I shall mention them as the review progresses. The main thing is the cut enforced by the BBFC in chapter 12 where a rat is shown breathing oxygenated liquid. Around 50 seconds has been lost to get around showing the submerged rodent, since they cannot show anything that might illicit animal cruelty. As it happened though, the rat was perfectly fine and it is possible to breathe in that environment once you've taken the fluid into your lungs. Taking the censored scene as it is it doesn't look too bad unless you've seen the unabridged version and you can see what they've done to it.


film pic

'Water' way to treat the rat.


Another problem I have with this DVD is in the picture, but again it's something that's not Fox's fault. James Cameron didn't strike a fresh anamorphic transfer so shame on him for leaving us with a 2.35:1 widescreen picture that loses intensity as you have to zoom it in to appreciate as much of the effect as possible. Overall, the PAL transfer just doesn't always look as sharp as it should and this is especially obvious in the tidal wave sequence which is quite as shame as it's something that could've been avoided had Cameron been bothered. The widescreen image is also not centrally-positioned and, like a few recent non-anamorphic Paramount DVDs, the subtitles are placed outside of the 16:9 frame so they don't fit on a widescreen TV without some tweaking! Please can someone remember to get this right next time? The average bitrate is 6.42Mb/s varying wildly through the film.

For his first Super 35 experience, Cameron has always said he prefers the open-matte fullscreen version after personally overseeing that transfer, so why would he bother with sorting out the widescreen? Call me a cynic if you like...

The sound never fails to impress in the remastered Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack whether it's the aliens appearing, heavy breathing inside the helmets or the general ambience of the underwater life.


film pic

Say hello, 'wave' goodbye.


Released over two discs, the first containing both the regular version and the special edition with an extra 24 minutes of footage. There are plenty of extras, but my final niggle is that there's not quite as many as the Region 1 DVD.

Sadly, compared to the Region 1 DVD, it is missing the DVD-ROM content, the Abyss in-depth Mission Components, looking at the Deepcore 2, Pseudopod and Cab One, plus a stack more info about the machinations of its creation under Operations. The Drill Room presents all the text info in a straight-forward manner without having to negotiate too hard. Finally, on the R1 DVD, the Hydrophone Checkout in the audio menu is a Dolby Digital trailer I haven't actually seen before.

There are 54 chapters in total (45 for the regular edition), plus subtitles in English only for both the film dialogue, even though they occasionally miss out lines of dialogue, plus text commentary. The menus evoke the under-the-sea feeling very well indeed and are almost identical to the Region 1 DVD but don't allow you to access as many options.

FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS



OVERALL

Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2001.

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