20,000 Leagues Under the Sea is a 1954 film starring Kirk Douglas as Ned Land, James Mason as Captain Nemo, Paul Lukas as Professor Aronnax and Peter Lorre as Conseil. It is the first Science-fiction film produced by Walt Disney Pictures, as well as the first and only Science-fiction film produced by Walt Disney himself. The film has become the most well-known adaptation of the book of the same name by Jules Verne. Taglines:
Plot
In the year 1866, rumours of a devastating sea monster attacking ships in the Pacific Ocean have created apprehension and fear among sailors, disrupting shipping. Prof. Pierre M. Aronnax (Lukas) and his assistant, Conseil (Lorre), are on their way to Saigon but get stuck in San Francisco by the halting of ships. Aronnax is interviewed and mentions he has an open mind on the matter, but news reporters twist Aronnax's statements as if he had said the monster was definitely real, and make up an article with accompanying illustrations of the monster. The U.S. Government invites Aronnax onto an expedition to either prove or disprove the monster's existence. Ned Land is an convict who has been condemned to serve on this expedition. The voyage on the U.S. warship is uneventful and frustrating at first, with only little boosts in crew morale thanks to the singing and music of Ned Land (Douglas), a cocky harpooner seen at the beginning of the film, dismissing a pair of con men who spin a fabulous tale about the fabled sea monster. Just after the captain cancels further searching, the "monster" is finally spotted. Trying unsuccessfully to take it down with cannon fire, the ship is rammed, and Ned, Aronnax, and Conseil are thrown overboard. They find themselves abandoned as the warship, badly disabled and the crew struggling to save it, drifts away. All hope seems lost. The three drift into a strange-looking metal vessel, and realize the "monster" is a man-made "submerging boat", that seems to have been deserted. Inside they find all sorts of obscure and interesting objects. Aronnax then looks through a massive viewing window and sees the crew, wearing underwater-suits and breathing devices, holding an undersea funeral of a shipmate killed during the battle. The crew spots the intruders aboard their ship. The three castaways try to escape, but end up being captured. The captain introduces himself as Nemo, master of the Nautilus, and does not take kindly to visitors. "The sea brought you, the sea shall have you back", except Aronnax, whom he recognizes for his work and research. He tempts Aronnax to stay, but Aronnax prefers to share his companions' fate – thus passing a test of character. Nemo's knowledge and technology make a strong impression on Aronnax. His companions, however, do not share his enthusiasm. Nemo takes them all on an underwater expedition to gather supplies, but Ned rather foolishly tries to salvage a treasure chest from a sunken wreck, almost getting attacked by a shark. Nemo lectures Ned that he "cannot eat pieces of eight" and reminds him the greatest treasure of all is a "sound mind and a full belly." Aronnax gets more and more intrigued by Nemo's skills, especially what powers the Nautilus: atomic energy. Aronnax: "Such a secret could revolutionise the world!" Nemo: "Or destroy it". After having travelled "10,000 leagues under the sea" [meaning, "10,000 leagues across the sea while submerged the entire voyage"], Nemo takes Arronax to the penal colony island of Rora Penthe, where inmates used as slaves load a ship with minerals to produce ammunition, so "the world will die a little more" (Nemo). Nemo reveals he was once a prisoner himself, as was the crew of the Nautilus. At night, the Nautilus rams the ship and destroys it, killing the entire crew. Aronnax accuses Nemo of being a hypocrite, to which Nemo defends himself, stating his actions have just saved some thousand people from death in war. Nemo also discloses that revenge is involved in his crusade, as the government tortured and killed his wife and son in an attempt to get the secrets of Nemo's work. Ned, having seen fellow sailors murdered, has had his fill and spurs into action, sneaking into the captain's cabin to get the co-ordinates of Nemo's base of Vulcania. He puts messages in bottles, hoping somebody will pick these up and free him of his captivity. Off the coast of New Guinea, the Nautilus gets stranded on a reef. Under the pretense of wanting to participate in a scientific survey, Ned asks to go ashore with Conseil, but he attempts escape, only to be chased back to the Nautilus by cannibals, who are repelled from the ship by electrical charges circulated on the Nautilus's skin. As Ned was forwarned by Nemo not to escape, his second attempt results in him being imprisoned in a cell. The tide floats the Nautilus free, but a warship is fast approaching and opening fire, causing a hull breach and momentarily loss of control, sending and sinking the Nautilus deeper than ever before, where it attracts the attentions of a giant squid. The electric charge fails to repel the monster squid and burns out the capacitors, so Nemo and his men are forced to fight the beast on the surface in a stormy night. During the battle, Nemo is caught in one of the squid's tentacles, but Ned – who has freed himself from his cell – jumps to his rescue and saves his captor's life. As the Nautilus approaches Vulcania, Nemo confides to Aronnax that he had considered using him as a mediator to share his secrets with the world. But it is too late. Vulcania is surrounded by warships of hostile governments, whose marines are converging on his hideout. Nemo decides to destroy his base rather than let his findings fall into wrong hands, dodging enemy fire to set the countdown. But when returning to the Nautilus, he is struck and mortally wounded by an invader's bullet. After navigating the Nautilus out of Vulcania and settling on the ocean floor as its last resting place, Nemo announces, "I'm dying. And the Nautilus is dying with me." and proclaims "We are taking the Nautilus down for the very last time." Loyal to Nemo to the very end, his entire crew declares that they will accompany their captain in death. Nemo orders everybody to return to their quarters. Against joining in the mass suicide, Arronax, Conseil, and Ned are forcibly taken to their cabins. Ned fights back, escapes to the now deserted bridge, and manages to surface the Nautilus, hitting a reef in the process which begins to rapidly flood the ship. After rescuing Arronax and Conseil, the three escape in the launch/lifeboat. Arronax realizes that his journal has been left behind but Ned knocks him out so he can be rescued. In his final moments, Nemo staggers to the viewing window, slumps against it, and looks at his beloved ocean one last time before he collapses and dies. The companions witness the destruction of Vulcania in an incredible explosion, apparently atomic, creating an enormous mushroom cloud, that also presumable destroys the invading warships. The shockwave and the flooding takes the Nautilus back to its watery grave, and as the Nautilus disappears forever, Nemo's last words to Arronax echo: "There is hope for the future. And when the world is ready for a new and better life, all this will someday come to pass. In God's good time." Reaction
The Nautilus as envisioned in the Walt Disney film
The film received positive reactions, and has become a classic film of the Disney corporation. Audiences fondly remember it for the giant-squid battle and for the Nautilus itself, which have both become iconic images of both the film and Verne's original novel. Even 50 years after the initial release 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea is considered by many the most mature Disney live action production, rich in controversial and philosophical dialogue revolving around timeless issues, a fascinating display of pessimism (Nemo) versus optimism (Prof. Aronnax). The film was also highly praised for the performances of the leading actors. This was the first time that major Hollywood stars such as Kirk Douglas, James Mason and Peter Lorre had appeared in a Disney film, although Robert Newton, a well-known actor in British films, had played Long John Silver in Disney's 1950 version of Treasure Island. Mason especially was singled out for his performance as Captain Nemo, and many people who first saw him onscreen in the film identify him most strongly with this role. The film has a 90% rating on Rotten Tomatoes with a consensus of "One of Disney's finest live-action adventures, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea brings Jules Verne's classic sci-fi tale to vivid life, and features an awesome giant squid."1 Critic Steve Biodrowski says that the film is "Far superior to the majority of genre efforts from the period (or any period, for that matter), with production design and technical effects that have dated hardly at all." and that it "may occasionally succumb to some of the problems inherent in the source material (the episodic nature does slow the pace), but the strengths far outweigh the weaknesses, making this one of the greatest science-fiction films ever made."2 In addition, the era in which events take place comes alive in meticulous artistic accuracy, down to the beard trim of the sailors, surpassed only by the riveted steel skin of the Nautilus. And yet the Disney version echoes the hopes and fears of audiences of the 1950s and beyond, equally illustrating the chances and the dangers of nuclear power. What was also well noted about the film was that the film's director, Richard Fleischer, was in fact the son of the man who was arguably Disney's biggest rival in the 1930's, Max Fleischer, creator of the Betty Boop and Popeye cartoons. The film has inspired a dark ride at Tokyo DisneySea and a walkthrough at Disneyland Paris. Disneyland used the original sets as a walk-through attraction from 1955 to 1966. Walt Disney World Resort's Magic Kingdom also had 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: Submarine Voyage from 1971 to 1994 which consisted of a submarine ride, complete with the giant squid attack. For this ride, voice artist Peter Renaday stood in for James Mason in the role of Captain Nemo. Cast
* Not credited on-screen. Comparisons with the bookEarl Felton's script deviates noticeably from the original Jules Verne book by integrating elements of the lesser known Jules Verne book Facing the Flag, whose main attraction is an invention of peril (German book title) which Felton re-interpreted as nuclear power rather than the super nitroglycerin Verne had envisioned. Thus, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea became more palatable to movie audiences of the atomic age. Other elements borrowed from Facing the Flag were Ned Land's messages in bottles and Nemo's base Vulcania, inspired by Ker Karraje's pirate hideout Buttercup Island. Other changes included:
In the movie, Nemo is mortally wounded by a gunshot and the Nautilus is crippled beyond repair by cannon fire. A dying Nemo then steers the ship towards "its final resting place,". (It is suggested and presumed that Nemo has discovered nuclear power, which may power the submarine as well as the spectacular explosion that destroys the island.) He does this, not out of selfishness, but out of care for mankind, believing them unready for his discoveries. He leaves behind these final words: "There is hope for the future... and, when the world is ready for a new and better life, all this will, someday, come to pass, in God's good time." Ned, Arronax, Conseil and Nemo's pet sea lion Esmeralda barely escaping in time.
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References
External links
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