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Disney's 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea (Two-Disc Special Edition)
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Shipping & Fee Details
| Price | $8.00 | |
| AmazonGlobal Shipping | $11.19 | |
| Estimated Import Fees Deposit | $0.00 | |
| | ||
| Total | $19.19 | |
| Additional DVD options | Edition | Discs | Price | New from | Used from |
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| Rent | Buy |
| Genre | ACTION, Action/Adventure, LIVE |
| Format | Multiple Formats, Closed-captioned, NTSC, Widescreen, Anamorphic, Special Edition, Live, Color, Dolby See more |
| Contributor | Charles A. Nichols, Walt Disney, Peter Lorre, Richard Fleischer, Joshua Meador, James Curtis Havens, Emile Kuri, Elmo Williams, Paul Lukas, Bob Macke, Portland Mason, Al Hansen, Fred Zendar, Chris Mueller, Kirk Douglas, Roy Edward Disney, Bob Burns (III), Bob Broughton, Vincent Di Fate, Peter Ellenshaw, John A. Kuri, James Mason See more |
| Language | English |
| Runtime | 2 hours and 7 minutes |
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Product Description
Product Description
For the first time ever, you can enjoy this timeless classic in a Special Edition DVD. Fully restored to look and sound as it was originally intended, it also includes hours of exclusive bonus materials your family will enjoy again and again. Climb aboard the Nautilus...and into a strange undersea world of spellbinding adventure! Kirk Douglas, Paul Lukas, and Peter Lorre star as shipwrecked survivors taken captive by the mysterious Captain Nemo, brilliantly portrayed by James Mason. Wavering between genius and madness, Nemo has launched a deadly crusade across the seven seas. But can the captive crew expose his evil plan before he destroys the world? Featuring Norman Gimbel and Al Hoffman's memorable song "A Whale of a Tale," Disney's Academy Award(R)-winning (Special Effects and Color Art Direction, 1954) adaptation of Jules Verne's gripping tale makes 20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA a truly mesmerizing masterpiece!|The submarine the Nautilus was built to scale: 200 feet long and shaped as Verne had described it -- a monster with headlights as eyes.|Based on the classic Jules Verne novel, this was the first Disney feature filmed in CinemaScope.|The Disney special effects department built the giant squid out of rubber, steel spring, flexible tubing, glass cloth, Lucite, and plastic. When finished, the monster had tentacles that were 40 feet long and two feelers that measured 50 feet long. It took a crew of 28 to operate the beast's intricate remote controls.|The first time the battle with the giant squid was staged, the monster got waterlogged and sank. Real creatures weren't much more cooperative. When the filmmakers couldn't get real fish to swim by the cameras, the studio substituted animated fish instead.|Shooting locations for the film included various locales in the Bahamas and Jamaica, as well as the Disney backlot.
Set Contains:
Besides making a lavish, state-of-the-art live action film in the early 1950s, Walt Disney was perceptive enough to chronicle his film with a great deal of care and clarity. The new 90-minute documentary is stuffed with vintage behind-the-scenes color footage. As director Richard Fleisher, Kurt Douglas, and a bevy of technicians reminisce about their adventures on set, there is often footage chronicling the exact moment. This DVD edition is one of the most complete packages of a classic movie to date. Interesting tidbits include an audio re-recording Peter Lorre's dialogue, unused animation (for undersea scenes), gobs of photos, and vintage marketing films. A short segment about the Nautilus ingeniously combines computer animation with movie sequences, production photos, and blueprints for a tour of the sub. The jewel, though, is the original squid attack that was reshot because it looked so fake. Even on the new commentary track (enjoyable, but low-key), Fleischer thinks--and hopes--the footage is lost, yet seeing the sequence illustrates how the movie was almost sunk by a less-than-breathtaking final act. --Doug Thomas
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 2.55:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : G (General Audience)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 2.72 ounces
- Item model number : 786936192476
- Director : Charles A. Nichols, Richard Fleischer
- Media Format : Multiple Formats, Closed-captioned, NTSC, Widescreen, Anamorphic, Special Edition, Live, Color, Dolby
- Run time : 2 hours and 7 minutes
- Release date : May 20, 2003
- Actors : James Mason, Kirk Douglas, Peter Ellenshaw, Elmo Williams, Vincent Di Fate
- Subtitles: : English
- Language : Unqualified, English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Studio : WALT DISNEY PICTURES
- ASIN : B00005JKU0
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #4,407 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #412 in Kids & Family DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
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Such a great movie
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Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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The Amazon review above will give you the bare bones of the story; a terrible "sea monster" - all glowing eyes and "breath like a furnace!" - is sinking ships just after the end of the American Civil War. Things have gotten so bad that maritime trade is being crippled; ships can't sail without a crew, the crews themselves having deserted in fear of the "monster." Almost in desperation, the authorities organize a hunt for the creature, and invite the famed oceanographer, "Professor Arronax," and his research assistant "Conseil," along, on a US warship, to lend the expedition scientific gravitas. Also along for the ride is a fearless harpooner, "Ned Land," looking for adventure, and the rewards of being the man who kills the "monster."
After more than a month at sea, and with no sighting of anything unusual, they are about to head for home when they see a ship, some miles distant, explode with enormous force. They race to the spot and arrive in time to see the vessel slipping beneath the waves with all hands. A lookout sees the creature in the distance, moving away from the area; they fire on it and it turns towards them. Slicing through the waves, the creature races towards its attackers with a hellish shriek, its eyes alight, just as the stories said, with an unearthly glow. Panic ensues on the ship, the gunner's fire repeatedly, but cannot find their range; the creature is covering the distance between them at incredible speed!
The resulting impact is shattering; Arronax, Conseil, and Land, are hurled into the sea, where they are separated. Arronax and Conseil watch helplessly as the crippled warship limps away into the distance, listing badly. After hours in the water, and completely lost in a fogbank, Arronax and Conseil come across the "monster" floating on the surface. They soon discover that what they thought was a supernatural beast, is, in fact, a fantastic vessel, a "sub-marine boat," capable of travel beneath the surface of the sea.
Seemingly deserted, they enter the ship and start to explore, soon to be joined by Ned Land, who paddles into view on an upturned skiff. From a massive view port, they see the crew outside the ship working on the seabed; once the crew returns, the three friends are quickly apprehended... now their adventure, and ours, is about to REALLY begin!
The ship they are on is called the "Nautilus," a technological wonderland, it's commanded by "Captain Nemo;" his crew, all of them to a man, absolutely loyal. The Captain has scant time for Conseil, and even less for Land, but he is pleased to meet the renowned Pierre Arronax, a man he sees, at least as far as their mutual fascination for the sea is concerned, as a kindred spirit. Nemo takes Arronax under his wing, slowly revealing to him the secrets of the deep through which they travel, and the fantastical secrets of the Nautilus itself. Nemo also shares his own terrible secrets with the oceanographer, experiences that have shaped him, and driven both him, and his crew, to disown any allegiances to any and all terrestrial governments and flags.
Nemo is portrayed by James Mason in a magnificently layered, complex performance. At first cold, austere, dark, and brooding, Mason slowly reveals the tortured soul of the man, driven by his own demons to do what he knows are terrible things, for, he hopes, the betterment of mankind. Neither hero nor villain, Mason's performance is beautifully nuanced, and his final scenes are especially moving.
The three other central characters are also played to perfection, Kirk Douglas, especially, has a blast with Ned Land, one moment slap-sticking his way through his song, "A Whale of a Tale," the next butting heads with Nemo, and plotting escape. Peter Lorre, as Conseil, is the perfect foil to Douglas' larger than life character, and the two of them seemed to have formed a genuine friendship on the set, something which shows through in the "hair" scenes... you'll know them when you see them! Paul Lukas is pitch perfect as Professor Arronax, all at once in thrall to Nemo's genius, but at the same time horrified by the terrible deeds he's capable of. And a final word has to go to the `biggest' character of all, the Nautilus itself; a gothic masterpiece, it's quite simply the greatest fantasy vehicle ever created for the silver screen... EVER! The Nautilus departs quite extensively from Verne's description, but, just like the film itself, it's completely within the spirit of the original story, more so than just about any film adaptation of classic Science Fantasy that I can think of!
One minor gripe, Nemo, as I have said before, is an incredibly complex character, so I was saddened to see on the back of the DVD case, the following; "...can the captive crew (Arronax etc) expose his (Nemo's) evil plan before he destroys the world?" After all that Disney has done to make this a landmark release, with hours of extras, including an incredible 90 minute(!) "making of" featurette, it's such a shame that Nemo is misrepresented so crudely.
Almost half a century(!) later, this is still Disney's crowning glory, and a glowing testament to visionary film making... HIGHLY recommended!!!
70 years on, this Disney classic still has the power to enthrall audiences of all ages...partly from the wonder of the Nautilus. the groundbreaking underwater photography that Disney (and director Richard Fleisher) pioneered for the movie, but most of all for James Mason's brilliant portrayal of Captain Nemo.
This was not only Disney's first 'live action' film...and, the most expensive production in history up to that point...but, his first time hiring established movie stars. Mason was an established leading man, and polished character-actor, with anti-heroes and total villains in his resume. He brought elements of all those parts into Nemo: a first-class genius, whose altruistic core had been overwhelmed by the demons haunting him. 'That hated nation' (the English Empire) that imprisoned him and tortured his wife and child to death twisted him full of hate and vengeance. A charismatic inspired leader, a brilliant tactician, who seeks to prevent more harm to the world by inflicting massive harm on his enemy...Mason's Nemo is a characterization for the ages.
THEN...we have Kirk Douglas as the 'hero' Ned Land. In Douglas' hands, Ned is all ID and a well-intentioned thug of lower intellect...and plays him with camp while the rest of the cast is playing things seriously. It is very jarring.
He expresses himself with physical intimidation towards Peter Lorre's gentle Conseil, reacts to everything from a purely primal and emotional POV and (gawd help us) forces us to listen to his 'singing' (it ain't pretty, folks). Douglas sang in a scene from the 1952 film 'The Big Sky' (a fave of mine), came away thinking he was Frank Sinatra and used his star power to force certain things into the script. Every time I watch the movie, I am SO disappointed that the cannibals didn't catch & eat him.
Along with Peter Lorre's dry and suitably humerous portrayal of Conseil...assistant to Professor Arronax...we have the dignified portrayal of the Professor by Paul Lukas. He brings levels of ingrained intelligence, integrity, sincerity and more than a bit of naivete that play beautifully off of Mason's Captain Nemo. They make you believe in the growth of both men during their voyage: the Professor forces Nemo to open his mind and heart again to possibilities beyond revenge; and, the Captain opens the Professor's eyes to the great evil that nations do to each other...and, to individuals...in the name of 'Empire'.
As to the legendary battle with the giant squid? I would need a separate review in order to do it justice...it is simply thrilling.
If you love adventure, science fiction with deeper meaning...or just a legitimately 'ripping yarn', Disney's '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea' should be at the top of your 'must-watch' list.
Top reviews from other countries
Anyway, it's a great movie.