I love this movie so much
I really wanted to like this movie. I feel terribly cynical trashing it, and that's why I'm giving it a middling 5. Actually, I'm giving it a 5 because there were some superb performances.
View MoreWhile it is a pity that the story wasn't told with more visual finesse, this is trivial compared to our real-world problems. It takes a good movie to put that into perspective.
View MoreWorth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.
The Watch Below (1966) is a novel by science fiction author James White about a colony of humans stranded underwater in a sunken WWII freighter surviving due to air pockets. Sound familiar? The later half of the book deals with an invasion by aquatic aliens.
View MoreWell I thought this was going to be really cheesy but I was pleasantly surprised. The initial idea is fun - a cruise liner sinks to the bottom of the sea and 40 years later a salvage crew discovers it - plus a whole community of people who have somehow managed to stay alive inside it! The beginning of the story is the best, when a diver catches a glimpse of a girl's face through a grimy porthole, followed by the first divers surfacing inside the shipwreck. The drawbacks are mainly the impossibility of the people actually surviving at all - the explanations for how they have been breathing, eating and so on for 40 years trapped underwater really fell flat for me, no spoilers here about that as I couldn't actually understand that part at all! The film sags a little after the surface people are inside the ship, but picks up quite well as we learn more about some quite sinister rules of the "society" down below, however there is a really, REALLY pointless sub-plot about a top secret document that could have been totally cut out of the whole plot with no ill-effects at all. The surface people even say that the document must be retrieved and then destroyed, which is ridiculous because it's already at the bottom of the sea! The movie comes to quite a dramatic close, with an almost ridiculously drawn out struggle for survival by the main characters right at the end. The acting is mostly good, well it's got Christopher Lee after all, and he's never let a film down that I have seen.Effects are fairly good, lots of real ship and diving hardware on view, and the sunken ship exterior looks reasonably ominous. So it's 3 hours of fun (I watched the full version), and I wonder why there has not been a DVD rediscovery of it, like there was with Salem's Lot, which also saw the light of day in a truncated version before being released in full. Sadly the only commercial release of Goliath Awaits was a feature length re-edit, which is a shame, as it's really not bad at all.
View MoreThese might not be spoilers, but better safe than sorry."The Goliath Awaits" appears to be loosely based on the science fiction novel "The Watch Below" by James White. In it, a few passengers and crew of a trading vessel sunk in World War II manage to survive because their supplies include pedal-operated electric generators, light bulbs, bean or pea plants for food and air replenishment, and a huge trove of powdered eggs and powdered milk. Water is collected from condensation and, if I remember correctly, also distilled from brine somehow. To pass the time and keep sane they play a memory game, recalling every detail of their lives including everything they've ever read, seen, and learned. And so they pass on their knowledge to their children who pass it on to theirs.Unlike in "Goliath" there is a science fiction element to the story: 150 years after the sinking their descendants are rescued by aquatic aliens who fled their dying world hoping to find refuge in Earth's oceans. The crew of the spaceship were similar to the denizens of the wreck in that they were descendants of the original crew, who had discovered that repeatedly entering suspended animation caused crippling brain damage. The shipwrecked Earthlings use their well-trained memories to learn the aliens' language and plead their new friends' case to wary Earth authorities. (The novel all along cross-cuts between similar events in the wreck and the spaceship, such as the breaking off of rival factions and their later reconciliation.)A major technical flaw in a story like "Goliath Awaits" is that a sinking ship is basically a falling object. The Titanic, for instance, did not settle on the ocean bottom 12,000 ft. down, it SLAMMED into it. I don't have the figures for how fast it was determined to have been moving just before impact, but these vessels are found lying in pieces. (The ship of "The Watch Below" was in much shallower water and was visible from low-flying observation aircraft.) If the people on board aren't killed or badly injured in the crash it is doubtful that there would be enough integrity in the hull to maintain air pressure for long.The movie was diverting if predictable. The lack of pallor of the people and the good condition of their clothes was an omission typical of American TV of 1981. Ridley Scott-type production design had not yet penetrated television and wouldn't really start to until MTV's influence was felt (in shows like "Miami Vice"). It takes more time and money, so the financiers would not budget for it until forced to do so by competition.
View MoreI know...I know: it's difficult (if not paradoxical) for there to be such a thing as "believable" fantasy. But, to me, there is also such a condition wherein TOO MUCH UNbelievability interfere's with, or distracts from my overall opinion of the movie. The latter was the case for me with regard to Goliath Awaits. Not only did I have too many unanswered questions concerning the storyline, but some of the acting, too, I thought, was a bit over-the-top. (Maybe, though, it was the writing: asking them to recite too many trite, predictable, cliched (over-?) reactions.) Others have said enough about the plot. I just wish that it was done - and, I think that it COULD have been - more convincingly. P. S.: This is a FRESH comment about this film - I just finished watching it a couple of minutes ago; not a recollection from years ago.
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