Dull and stupid, this
Philippines/U.S. coproduction is a fantasy-adventure story about mainland
criminals who venture to a mysterious island populated by fish/human hybrids in
order to plunder a cache of priceless pearls. Virtually nothing in the movie
works. The principal makeup effect involves pasting fake-looking fish eyes over
the faces of the actors playing hybrids. One of the would-be highlights
involves a fellow falling into a pit full of crabs. Crabs? That’s the most
menacing creature the filmmakers could muster? The hybrids are inexplicably led
by two normal-looking characters, an old man and his daughter, and the daughter
is a slinky bleach blonde with perfect grooming and makeup. Whatever. The cast
features a pair of American actors who spent much of the ’70s making bad movies
in the Philippines: John Ashley plays a scuba diver with a mercenary attitude,
and Sid Haig plays the crook who discovers the whereabouts of the pearls. (Indestructible
Filipino actor Vic Diaz appears in a small role, lending his usual cartoonish
corpulence.) Playing the movie’s nominal leading role is John Wayne’s son, Patrick
Wayne, whose career peaked a few years later when he starred in Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger (1977),
and if Beyond Atlantis isn’t the
nadir of Wayne’s screen career, it’s close. Although most of Beyond Atlantis is boring, fans of bad
cinema might enjoy the last 20 minutes or so, which include an underwater
catfight, a poorly staged shootout, and the ridiculously long funeral sequence
for a key character. One can actually feel the filmmakers straining to fill the
screen with any old thing that might flesh out the running time of this insipid
schlockfest.
Beyond Atlantis: LAME
1 comment:
Don't forget the best part - which is why I always watch it - the camera is very good at prolonged shots of Leigh Christian (the blonde heir to the fishman throne) pearl diving, or something, in amidst the reefs. Seriously she must be down there in those pretty reefs for like twenty minutes and looks quite alluring undulating and kicking and other barefoot, bikini beach girl kind of moves. It's pretty spectacular, with good underwater photography, it's like an aquarium with a beautiful girl swimming merrily around in it. I sometimes put that sequence on to fall asleep. Too bad it has to end and it's back to the mainland. I would never want to visit the Philippines - it looks way too humid, like the dew point is through the roof. It makes me claustrophobic even when they're outside!!
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