Deadwater (film)

Deadwater
Directed by Roel Reiné
Produced by Ethan Wiley
Roel Reiné
Written by Roel Reiné
Ethan Wiley
Starring Gary Stretch
Lance Henriksen
James Russo
Narrated by Rebel Wan
Music by Joseph Bauer
Cinematography Roel Reiné
Edited by Radu Ion
Bayard Stryker
Production
company
Wiseacre Films
Rebel Film BV
Distributed by Film and Music Entertainment
Release dates
  • May 20, 2008 (2008-05-20)
Running time
100 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $350,000

Deadwater aka BlackOps aka Nazi Dawn in the United Kingdom, is a horror film written and produced by Ethan Wiley, it was directed by Roel Reiné and stars Lance Henriksen, Gary Stretch, James Russo, D. C. Douglas and Jim Hanks.[1] The film was produced by Wiseacre Films and Rebel Film and released in the US by First Look Studios.

Plot

Secret U.S. military interrogations of suspected terrorists are being conducted on an American World War II-era ship in the Persian Gulf. After mysterious sounds are heard on the ship, an unexplained force kills the crew. When contact with the ship is lost, the army sends a team of Marines and two scientists to investigate. When they land on the ship, they discover that almost all the crew have been killed. The team, led by Col. John Willets (Lance Henriksen), cannot make contact with command, while the ship drifts toward Iranian waters. Willets interrogates one of the scientists and learns that the mysterious force is the ghost of a Nazi officer who was created to be a secret weapon. The ghost, which has strong psychic powers, is trapped on the ship and the two scientists were sent to try to capture it. Meanwhile, the supposed terrorist being interrogated onboard turns out to be an MIT-educated decoy (who was forced to impersonate a terrorist). He aids in the efforts to destroy the ghost, before being killed by it.

Cast

Production

An example of low-budget guerrilla filmmaking, the film cost a reported $350,000 and was shot in 15 days using a couple of Panasonic HVX-200 HD digital cameras.[2] The producers secured a restored museum Liberty ship docked in Los Angeles and shot mostly at night after museum patrons had left. Luckily the ship made a trip to a World War II San Diego event, affording the producers to get "at sea" footage for free.[3] All the guns were plastic models, so all the muzzle flashes and sound effects were laid in later. Director Roel Reine does a commentary with all this information.[4]

Release

The film premiered on 20 July 2008 as direct to video production over First Look Studios.[5]

References

External links

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