Deep Sea (IMAX) buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
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List Price: $27.98 Our Price:
$19.99
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Features
• AC-3
• Closed-captioned
• Color
• Dolby
• Dubbed
• DVD-Video
• Subtitled
• Widescreen
• NTSC
In Theaters : 03 March, 2006
DVD Release : 27 March, 2007 |
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Deep Sea (IMAX) description
The balance of the earth's ecosystems is continually changing and no where is this more apparent than in fascinating world beneath the sea. Narrated by Johnny Depp and Kate Winslet, this 41-minute IMAX film features breathtaking underwater photography from the coral reefs to the cold waters of British Columbia with a focus on underwater inhabitants, their symbiotic relationships, and the ever-shifting balance between predator and prey. While viewing this DVD on even the largest home television screen can't compare with the stories high IMAX theatre experience, underwater footage including a California mantis shrimp fighting off an octopus and a wolf eel eating a sea urchin is riveting in any venue. The footage of the mysterious once-a-year spawning of the coral reef in the Gulf of Mexico can only be described as truly amazing. Enchantment with underwater beauty gives way in the end to a chilling message about man's over-fishing of the sea and his leading role in the unraveling of the sea's delicate ecosystem. (Ages 3 and older) --Tami Horiuchi |
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Deep Sea (IMAX) Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥ |
Disappointing Howard Hall Film!
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| I am definitely a Howard Hall fan. His work in such films as Underwaterworld and the earlier IMAX film on the Island of the Sharks (Cocos Island) was outstanding. However, the production of this film is really a problem. A lot of the earlier clips suffer from a blue/red syndrome (poor color balance), perhaps in part due to the 3D production (did it use color glasses?). The narration is limited in effect if not outright silly in places, and although I admire both Kate Winslet and Johnny Depp on their own, they really didn't fit the material here. It had a lot of the old True Life Adventure (Disney) feel, I must admit. The alternation between their voices made no sense at all. Definitely not a dialog, so why do it? The music track greatly interfered with the video production, and was very distracting and annoying at times. I am donating my copy to the local library; maybe somebody else can enjoy it for what it is. There are a lot of much better ocean DVDs out there, starting with the BBC Blue Planet series. |
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