Plot
On a US nuclear missile sub, a young first officer stages a mutiny to prevent his trigger happy captain from launching his missiles before confirming his orders to do so.
Release Year: 1995
Rating: 7.2/10 (42,601 voted)
Critic's Score: 66/100
Director:
Tony Scott
Stars: Gene Hackman, Denzel Washington, Matt Craven
Storyline When some Russian rebels takes control of some ICBM's, the Americans mobilize. Among the vessels sent is the nuclear sub, the Alabama. But before they leave they need a new X.O. and among the choices is Commander Hunter, who hasn't seen much action. But the ship's Captain, Ramsey OK's him. While on the way, there was an incident and Hunter disagreed with how Ramsey handled it, it's evident that Ramsey doesn't think much of Hunter because Hunter was college educated while Ramsey worked his way up. They're given orders to attack but when they were in the process of receiving another order, the ship's communications were damaged, so the entire message was not received. Ramsey decides to continue with their previous order while Hunter wants to reestablish contact first. That's when the two men butt heads that ends with Hunter relieving Ramsey. Later when some men die...
Writers: Michael Schiffer, Richard P. Henrick
Cast: Denzel Washington
-
Lt. Commander Ron Hunter
Gene Hackman
-
Capt. Frank Ramsey
Matt Craven
-
Lt. Roy Zimmer, USS Alabama Communications Officer
George Dzundza
-
Chief of the Boat
Viggo Mortensen
-
Lt. Peter 'Weps' Ince
James Gandolfini
-
Lt. Bobby Dougherty
Rocky Carroll
-
Lt. Darik Westergaurd
Jaime Gomez
-
Officer of the Deck Mahoney
(as Jaime P. Gomez)
Michael Milhoan
-
Chief of the Watch Hunsicker
Scott Burkholder
-
T.S.O. Billy Linkletter
Danny Nucci
-
Petty Officer First Class Danny Rivetti
Lillo Brancato
-
Petty Officer Third Class Russell Vossler
(as Lillo Brancato Jr.)
Eric Bruskotter
-
Bennefield
Ricky Schroder
-
Lt. Paul Hellerman
(as Rick Schroder)
Steve Zahn
-
William Barnes
Taglines:
In the face of the ultime nuclear showdown, one man has absolute power and one man will do anything to stop him
Release Date: 12 May 1995
Filming Locations: Chapman University - One University Drive, Orange, California, USA
Box Office Details
Budget: $53,000,000
(estimated)
Gross: $157,400,000
(Worldwide)
Technical Specs
Runtime:|
USA:
(extended version)
Did You Know?
Trivia: Skip Beard, listed as a Technical Advisor, served as the Commanding Officer of the real USS Alabama (SSBN 731). He can be seen in the Board of Inquiry scene. He is the man with no hair sitting next to Jason Robards.
Goofs:
Factual errors:
Capt. Ramsey gives the missile launch keys to only one crewman. Proper procedure is to have two crewmen receive and deliver the keys to launch control together.
Quotes: Hunter:
Look, it wasn't a mutiny, I did everything by the book. Chief of the Boat:
It's not about the book. If the Russians are gonna launch and we sit here and do nothing... who's gonna stop 'em? Half of me's glad the Captain came back.
User Review
One Of The Best Submarine Movies...
Rating: 9/10
As CRIMSON TIDE opens we visit various crew members of the USS Alabama as
they bid farewell to their loved ones. For one man, Lt. Cmdr. Ron Hunter
(Denzel Washington), it will be his first time as second in command of a
nuclear submarine. Capt. Frank Ramesy (Gene Hackman) is in charge and is
not shy about letting everyone know. He is a seasoned veteran, as
juxtaposed with the young idealistic Hunter. The early scenes do much to
set up the main conflict of the film. For example when members of the
crew
discuss Carl Von Clausewitz, and his 1832 work Vom Kriege ("On War"), the
intellectual showdown occurs between Ramesy and Hunter. This scene not
only
heightens the tension, but also reveals the different philosophies of
these
two men, what they believe in, why they are there. This short scene goes
a
long way to setting up why each of these characters are so unbending when
the crisis presents itself.
The Crisis: The ship has been damaged and the EAM contact that has been
received is disjointed. The Russian force (who is never very carefully
explained) is fueling rockets for use against the US. That's all they
know.
The captain wants to surface and fire, Hunter thinks he's wrong.
Factions
form, but the film does a good job presenting a good argument for both
desicions (although you get the sense that the film makers lean towards
the
"dove" side rather than the "hawks"). As tensions mount, there are
various
shifts in power and the crew stands divided. Every member of the crew
watching as the minutes tick by, closer and closer to the final moment of
truth...
Hackman is at the top of his form here as the relentlessly tough Ramesy.
When given a good script with room to work, there is few better at
creating
a solid performance. The looks he gives, the way he uses his eyes, his
speech patterns, simply wonderful to watch. Washington is just as good as
Hunter, and the showdown between these two men, near the end, sends sparks
flying off the screen. The rest of the cast is filled out with strong
actors: Matt Craven, George Dzundza, (pre LOTR's) Viggo Mortensen, and
(pre
'Sopranos') James Gandolfini.
As is well known, the script received various rewrites from Robert Towne
(the Clausewitz scene), Steve Zaillian, and Quentin Tarantino (the Silver
Surfer references, the scene where the crew chimes in about other
submarine
movies). All these different contributions blends fairly well together.
The story is tough and direct, and touches on points that heighten the
tension. The photography, by Dariusz Wolski (DARK CITY, THE CROW), is
tight
and atmospheric; Hans Zimmer's score pounding and reflective. The VIP
vote,
however, goes to Tony Scott, who proves himself with this film. He knows
when to hold shots and doesn't rush the action (as he did with TOP GUN);
he
paces the film well and let's his actors work for him. CRIMSON TIDE is an
entertaining and challenging film that, along with films like THE HUNT FOR
RED OCTOBER and DAS BOOT, may set the high water mark (forgive the pun)
for
the genre. 9/10.
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