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Deep Star Six (1989)
Released By: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment   Rating: R   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Genre: Sci-Fi
MPAA Rating: R
Director: Sean Cunningham
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Cindy Pickett, Greg Evigan, Miguel Ferrer, Nancy Everhard, Nia Peeples, Taurean Blacque
Published ID: 826
UPC: 012236115168, 012236116042,
Plot: Friday the 13th director Sean S. Cunningham helmed this sea-monster opus about a team of engineers on an undersea missile platform who disturb the slumber of a huge, killer crustacean, which soon develops a taste for human-flavored snacks. The rubbery-looking beastie is quite a laugh, but there are some genuine freak-outs as it chomps away at the crew -- that is, while they're not reducing their own numbers through sheer incompetence. In the end, it's B.J. & the Bear's Greg Evigan (alas, minus chimp) who saves the day. One of a dozen-or-so subaqueous Alien clones (half of which were produced by Roger Corman) designed to trade on the building hype of James Cameron's long-awaited The Abyss, this soggy little picture managed to reach theaters first. Not that it's the least impressive of the lot -- actually, it succeeds on its own terms as a thoroughly intense and fast-paced B-monster flick, aided by good performances (Evigan is a likable, sensitive hero, and Miguel Ferrer quaffs the scenery as a high-strung jerk). At least it's better than Leviathan, which tells essentially the same story but wastes considerably more money. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
seems familiar
Added 10/1/2009

i was just curious about this movie since i did not see it in the theatres. it seems like it is parts of other movies. good popcorn movie with spouse
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Needs More Monster
Added 5/16/2009

Deep Star Six: VHS Movie Review

Grade: C+

O.K., so in the age of DVD's, I buried this out of my VHS collection, and remembered one scene (the infamous decompression scene). Remembering watching it about 5 years ago, decided to give it another try. I now know why I didn't remember much of it though; most of the movie is pretty much forgetable.

The plot, yet another shameless "Alien: 20th Anniversary Edition [Award Series]" rip-off, this time tries to put Alien underwater, disturbed from his sleep (hibernaton?) by a crew of explorers trying to set up a Navy Base on the bottom of the ocean floor. It gets mad, and starts (just like Friday the 13th Uncut (Deluxe Edition), another movie Sean S. Cunningham directed) picking off the crew one by one.

But the sad thing: you just about never see the monster. (Although when you do see it, I rather liked the way it looked, despite it being a rubber suit) Instead, the movie focuses more on character development, developing useless characters that just die later on in the movie, when the monster (finally) shows up.

Along with a ton of character development, there are numourous underwater shots, but its too dark to see anything clearly. Basically, nothing really goes on for the first hour of the movie, and you don't even see the monster until the movie only has about half an hour left. (And it's only actually on screen for a total of about a minute.)

Yet there was one thing that really surprised me: the casting. The actors and actresses were chosen extremly well, and they all play their parts like they really were trapped underwater with a giant angry lobster/crab thing.

So in the end the acting saves the movie from being a total disaster, and there are some cool scenes. (Once again, the decommpression scene.) The first of 1989's "underwater thriller" era (The Abyss (Special Edition) and Leviathan are the other ones) Deep Star Six still manages to pack a punch, even on VHS.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
The Abyss R-rated
Added 3/18/2009

Sorry for the stupid title but I find it hard to come up with something short and original for every review. This is one great low budget underwater film and I`ve found it even better than the similar themed Leviathan. You can`t compare it to The Abyss because that`s a whole different kind of mosnter. The is movie is fun (which film who has Miguel Ferrer on the cast isn`t?) has some nice splatter effects (decompression) and the cast is doing it`s best to create likeable characters and keep a straight face in all the mayhem.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
A Decompressing Film
Added 10/4/2008

I saw this one in the theater back in the day(my most vivid memory is that I really had to pee and I was happy when the film ended so I could dart off to the restroom). I wasn't crazy about it then, and I'm still not today. It's a pity coz the right ingredients are here. You got an underwater crew menaced by a prehistoric beasty(on an adequate budget) directed by Sean Cunningham. Sounds like fun, right?
Well, for a monster movie, there is a surprising lack of monster action. Most of the film it seems like endless scenes of folks sitting in cockpits/control rooms, water bursting from walls, people bickering, people shouting stuff like, "Close the hatches!", and endlessly repairing damage(or attempting to). When the monster shows up, you're already kinda tired of the whole thing. It doesn't look quite as bad as others have said(it's wisely kept in the dark most of the time), but it's not terribly impressive.
On the positive side, those of you who couldn't get enough of Greg Evigan in My Two Dads will have a splendid time watching him as a hero in a full length film! And using the F word! Also along for the ride are Matt Mccoy, Miguel Ferrer, and Ferris Buhler's mom. Ferrer is Deep Star Six's version of Michael Biehn's character in The Abyss.
Deep Star Six has a few good bloody moments, and even fewer suspense moments, but it's not a total throwaway I guess.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
DVD in full screen?
Added 9/24/2008

Besides being a cheesy movie, although it has Miguel Ferrer, son of legendary screen star Jose Ferrer at the helm, I did buy it just to complete my trilogy of underwater Sci-Fi thriller movies (The Abyss*****, Leviathan*** and Deep Star Six**).

Not much to say here, except that it is a shame we still get dished up movies on DVD in the full screen version.
While I can still understand it for a movie in a ratio 1.66:1, where the cropping of the image would be minimal if at all, for a movie filmed in 1.85:1, 2.35:1 and up it is simply unforgivable.

Mostly movies by Universal are dished up like this (see the recent release of "Colossus - The Forbin Project", or even a splendid movie like "Iceman" starring Timothy Hutton and John Lone).

Also a shame are all those movies send to the market in mono, when they were originally released in Stereo Surround sound in theaters (see MGM/UA's release of "Meteor", starring Sean Connery and Natalie Wood and "Midway" starring Robert Mitchum and Glenn Ford).

This simply shows that the industry has absolutely no respect for their audiences, or worse, that they consider them stupid.

It is even more amazing, since all the above titles were released at one time on Laserdisc with their original soundtracks and image ratios intact.
I should know, because I own them and therefore I have living proof in my hands that ever since Laserdiscs have been discontinued in favor of DVDs, the industry has made steps backward instead of ahead as the technology proves.

Yet they allow themselves the luxury to play games with us, instead of practicing what they always preach: excellence.
Some Hollywood dinosaurs should really die off if they cannot prove they still can maintain a bit of decency and honesty of the trade.

It is not enough to make a quick buck, my dears.
You need to really get back to work if you want to stay alive...
This is truly my honest suggestion to the industry, if they really want to go on producing movies.

For the DVD quality, there is little to be said. A bit better than the VHS version, at least in the title section, but still, being in Full Screen one has a difficulty to keep focus throughout the action scenes, since everything is framed at 1.33:1, hence confused for this sort of movie.

Not recommended at all.

Wait for a real reissue of this movie, and possibly in Widescreen.

2 out of 2 people found this helpful.
seems familiar
Added 10/1/2009

i was just curious about this movie since i did not see it in the theatres. it seems like it is parts of other movies. good popcorn movie with spouse
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Needs More Monster
Added 5/16/2009

Deep Star Six: VHS Movie Review

Grade: C+

O.K., so in the age of DVD's, I buried this out of my VHS collection, and remembered one scene (the infamous decompression scene). Remembering watching it about 5 years ago, decided to give it another try. I now know why I didn't remember much of it though; most of the movie is pretty much forgetable.

The plot, yet another shameless "Alien: 20th Anniversary Edition [Award Series]" rip-off, this time tries to put Alien underwater, disturbed from his sleep (hibernaton?) by a crew of explorers trying to set up a Navy Base on the bottom of the ocean floor. It gets mad, and starts (just like Friday the 13th Uncut (Deluxe Edition), another movie Sean S. Cunningham directed) picking off the crew one by one.

But the sad thing: you just about never see the monster. (Although when you do see it, I rather liked the way it looked, despite it being a rubber suit) Instead, the movie focuses more on character development, developing useless characters that just die later on in the movie, when the monster (finally) shows up.

Along with a ton of character development, there are numourous underwater shots, but its too dark to see anything clearly. Basically, nothing really goes on for the first hour of the movie, and you don't even see the monster until the movie only has about half an hour left. (And it's only actually on screen for a total of about a minute.)

Yet there was one thing that really surprised me: the casting. The actors and actresses were chosen extremly well, and they all play their parts like they really were trapped underwater with a giant angry lobster/crab thing.

So in the end the acting saves the movie from being a total disaster, and there are some cool scenes. (Once again, the decommpression scene.) The first of 1989's "underwater thriller" era (The Abyss (Special Edition) and Leviathan are the other ones) Deep Star Six still manages to pack a punch, even on VHS.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
The Abyss R-rated
Added 3/18/2009

Sorry for the stupid title but I find it hard to come up with something short and original for every review. This is one great low budget underwater film and I`ve found it even better than the similar themed Leviathan. You can`t compare it to The Abyss because that`s a whole different kind of mosnter. The is movie is fun (which film who has Miguel Ferrer on the cast isn`t?) has some nice splatter effects (decompression) and the cast is doing it`s best to create likeable characters and keep a straight face in all the mayhem.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
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