Two aspects of producer
Irwin Allen’s cinematic identity converged in this campy sci-fi movie, which
was made for television as the pilot for a series that never materialized. The
project echoes Allen’s past, because Allen produced the 1964-1968 adventure
series Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea,
as well as the 1961 theatrical feature from which that series was adapted. Yet City Beneath the Sea also hints at
Allen’s future, because the picture is a disaster saga, and Allen’s name became
synonymous with the disaster genre once he unleashed The Poseidon Adventure (1972). City
Beneath the Sea scores as high on the Cheese-O-Meter as anything Allen ever
made. The narrative is silly, the performances are robotic, and the
storytelling is primarily designed to showcase elaborate costumes, sets, and
special effects. That said, City Beneath
the Sea is brainless fun, with laughably one-dimensional characters
struggling to survive a series of absurd crises. Every scene bursts with
exposition, because screenwriter John Meredyth Lucas struggles to include all
of the pulpy plot elements provided by Allen, who is credited with writing the
story. Seen today, City Beneath the Sea
feels like a relic from a distant time, because the pristine design style represents
a mid-century-modern vision of the future. “Sleek” is the watchword, and nobody
on this production was afraid of using bright colors.
Set in 2053, the movie
begins with the U.S. President (Richard Basehart) demanding that former Navy
Admiral Michael Matthews (Stuart Whitman) return to duty as commander of
Pacifica, a huge underwater research installation. Here’s the laugh-out-loud
premise: The U.S. has been transferring its cache of gold from Fort Knox to
Pacifica because of seismic activity near Fort Knox, and now the U.S. has
learned that it must also transfer a huge store of fissile radioactive material
to Pacifica for safekeeping, because only proximity to gold keeps the material
from exploding. Oh, and a giant meteor is about to crash into the Earth, with
Pacifica the likely ground zero, so the dozens of people living underwater must
abandon the station as soon as the gold and radioactive material are secured in
a meteor-proof vault. As if that’s not goofy enough, City Beneath the Sea features an “aquanoid,” a mutant who can
breathe either air or water. Woven into all of this hogwash are the various
cardboard characters one always finds in Allen’s pictures: The stalwart hero
blamed for an accident he didn’t actually cause, the bereaved widow whose
recriminations crush the stalwart hero beneath a mountain of guilt, the
duplicitous lieutenant planning an evil scheme, and so on. (As for that evil
scheme, it’s a brazen gold heist, since City
Beyond the Sea clearly needed even more plot material.) In addition to Basehart
and Whitman, actors providing the film’s wooden performances include Joseph
Cotten (who appears in just one short scene), Rosemary Forsyth, Robert Colbert,
and Robert Wagner.
City Beneath the Sea: FUNKY
Peter, thank you for this. Yes, brainless fun -- but with Irwin Allen conviction and dedication, by gum. Another bittersweet reminder that the future isn't what it used to be.
ReplyDelete"Yet City Beneath the Sea also hints at Allen’s future, because the picture is a disaster saga, and Allen’s name became synonymous with the disaster genre once he unleashed The Poseidon Adventure (1972)."
ReplyDeleteFitting, since Irwin Allen's entire oeuvre was a disaster of sorts.
It is brainless fun but the way the plot piles one crisis after another on poor Pacifica gets ridiculous quite fast.
ReplyDelete