Plot
An underwater cave diving team experiences a life-threatening crisis during an expedition to the unexplored and least accessible cave system in the world.
Release Year: 2011
Rating: 5.7/10 (23,854 voted)
Critic's Score: 42/100
Director:
Alister Grierson
Stars: Rhys Wakefield, Allison Cratchley, Christopher Baker
Storyline The 3-D action-thriller Sanctum follows a team of underwater cave divers on a treacherous expedition to the largest, most beautiful and least accessible cave system on Earth. When a tropical storm forces them deep into the caverns, they must fight raging water, deadly terrain and creeping panic as they search for an unknown escape route to the sea. Master diver Frank McGuire has explored the South Pacific's Esa-ala Caves for months. But when his exit is cut off in a flash flood, Frank's team-including 17-year-old son Josh and financier Carl Hurley are forced to radically alter plans. With dwindling supplies, the crew must navigate an underwater labyrinth to make it out. Soon, they are confronted with the unavoidable question: Can they survive, or will they be trapped forever?
Writers: John Garvin, Andrew Wight
Cast: Richard Roxburgh
-
Frank McGuire
Ioan Gruffudd
-
Carl Hurley
Rhys Wakefield
-
Josh McGuire
Alice Parkinson
-
Victoria Elaine
Dan Wyllie
-
Crazy George
Christopher Baker
-
J.D.
Nicole Downs
-
Liz
Allison Cratchley
-
Judes
Cramer Cain
-
Luko
Andrew Hansen
-
Dex
John Garvin
-
Jim Sergeant
Sean Dennehy
-
Chopper Pilot
Nea Diap
-
Kastom Shaman
Filming Locations: Cave Of The Swallows, San Luis Potosí, Mexico
Box Office Details
Budget: $30,000,000
(estimated)
Opening Weekend: $9,447,930
(USA)
(6 February 2011)
(2787 Screens)
Gross: $108,943,221
(Worldwide)
(19 October 2011)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
The cave itself was also quite obviously based on the Cheve/Chaco/etc expeditions in the Yucatan, and the father character was likely based on Bill Stone, the caver/diver who was instrument in those expeditions as well as in the invention of the re-breather.
Goofs:
Continuity:
While Josh is hanging on the rock and trying to cross over to the other side he's got a watch on his left arm. However while his stunt-man is jumping to the other side, he's not.
Quotes:
[first lines]
Dex:
Josh? Wow, your old man let you come up for air? Josh:
Oh you're kidding, Dex. Dex:
Oh you're gonna be in the shit.
[big hug]
User Review
Take it from a caver, the details are very accurate
Rating: 9/10
Sanctum is an action thriller involving exploration of an extensive,
world-class cave system in Papua New Guinea. The movie is inspired by
an actual flood event in an extensive cave in the Nullarbor Plain of
Australia in 1988. It is not a documentary, but designed to be a
realistic, albeit embellished, account that includes non-stop action as
the team is faced with its deadly situations and decisions. Although
released in 2-D, 3-D, and IMAX formats, Sanctum is not a science
fiction or horror movie. There are no monsters, weird creatures, on
humanoid inhabitants, such as are found in the recent films, The Cave,
The Cavern, and Descent (Parts 1 and 2). And it is not a fantasy
underground adventure like the recent remakes of Journey to the Center
of the Earth and Alice in Wonderland. Sanctum is about caving, an
adventure sport that is practiced by knowledgeable and safety-minded
people throughout the world.
Most movie goers may not recognize the authenticity of the techniques
and equipment used in the film. As one who has spent over 45 years
exploring and studying caves in over 35 states and several countries, I
am familiar with modern caving in some of the great cave systems on the
planet and I personally know many of the cavers who are making new
discoveries every year. Therefore, I can attest to the great care that
the director Alister Grierson and writer-producer Andrew Wight have
taken to provide realism to the cave setting. In fact, Wight was a
survivor of the Nullarbor event and is an experienced caver and diver.
That having been said, Sanctum takes some liberties to create an
exciting story. Nearly every activity in caving is included in this
epic, such as climbing, rappelling and other rope work, squeezing and
negotiating tight passageways, and of course cave diving. This story
shows what can go wrong with each of these if care is not taken or if
safety is ignored. Sanctum is an adventure thriller that consists of a
long string of incidents, dilemmas, and solutions. Each situation is
believable on its own merit and has happened at one time or another in
caving. But in Sanctum, all of these have been combined, one after
another, and continually pose challenges and demand solutions. It
reminds me of the classic and entertaining cliff- hanger movies of old.
This makes for an exhausting tale in which the audience feels the tense
and claustrophobic situations. It is unlikely that such a string of
events would ever be encountered by a single caving expedition.
However, individually accidents do happen, although they are relatively
rare because cavers strictly abide by established safety rules.
What disturbs me is that many of the reviewers of the movie to date
miss the point of the film and show an ignorance of what caves and
caving are like. Here are some typically unfair remarks and why these
are so.
"There is little character development." Caving is very focused. When
you are underground, you only think about your surroundings and
mission. You do not think about the outside world and your life there,
much less about your interpersonal relationships with your fellow
cavers. It is true that when caving, you learn a lot about your
compatriots and their personalities (just like in the movie), but you
do belabor interpersonal relationships. Team members are selected based
on their proved track record underground. If there are challenges and
threatening conditions, you focus on those as a team, as in the film.
Many reviewers apparently wanted more psycho-drama among the
protagonists.
"The dialog is terse, unrealistic, and too loud." I disagree. Under the
emergency conditions such as shown in the film, the dialog of the
characters would be similar. There would be a leader and a plan would
develop, just as we witnessed in 2010 in the case of the trapped
Chilean miners. As for loudness and screaming, this is the only way to
make yourself heard in the presence of running water in the echoing
confines of cave passages. I know this from experience. One's senses in
a cave are very much focused on sight and sound and the immediate
surroundings.
"It is a tedious tale." Yes, trying to escape through a cave system
that is flooding could easily be tedious and, given the extent of the
cave in Sanctum, finding routes and traversing them would take
considerable time. Cave exploration is not a fast process.
I have been on hundreds of caving trips, including some grueling ones
in long and complex cave systems. For me, the representation of the
features in the cave and the techniques of exploration are portrayed
quite well in Sanctum. Again, this movie is an adventure story that
accurately shows what caves are like, even though it combines many of
the dangers into a thrilling series of unfortunate events. It is a
fictional tale, but realistically portrayed.
Reviewers who expected Sanctum to be a high-culture movie or one that
explores interpersonal interactions among the characters have missed
the point completely. Unless they have gone on trips into extensive and
wild caves, they have little idea of what caves and caving are really
like and what this movie is all about. They can not possibly understand
the dynamic among cavers under adverse conditions. I find more faults
with the reviewers' logic and understanding than they can legitimately
find in the film. The movie stays true to what extensive caves are like
and the techniques used to explore them. Given that, it is also one
heck of an adventure thriller.
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