Skip to main content

25 years later, this outrageous action movie remains the ideal summer blockbuster

The cast of Deep Blue Sea.
Warner Bros. Pictures

Twenty-five years ago this week, an under-the-radar action movie swam into theaters as the comeback project of director Renny Harlin and became an unexpected late-summer hit. Although Harlin had established himself with films like Die Hard 2, Cliffhanger, The Long Kiss Goodnight, and A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master, he also directed Cutthroat Island, a pirate flick that lost so much money that it helped sink a studio. By 1999, Harlin hadn’t had a true hit for six years until Deep Blue Sea gave it to him.

Harlin and his collaborators brought together a first-rate cast for the film, including Thomas Jane, Saffron Burrows, Samuel L. Jackson, Stellan Skarsgård, Michael Rapaport, and even LL Cool J in one of his earliest roles. At the time, only Jackson was a certified movie star, but Deep Blue Sea helped these performers go on to even bigger things.

To celebrate the 25th anniversary of Deep Blue Sea, we’re sharing the five reasons why it’s one of the best summer blockbusters.

It’s got an audacious and intriguing premise

Thomas Jane is a attacked by a shark in Deep Blue Sea.
Warner Bros. Pictures

Killer shark movies are nothing new in Hollywood, and Jaws is still one of the all-time greats in that category. Deep Blue Sea shook up the standard shark premise by revealing that these were more deadly than ordinary sharks. Scientists at a remote ocean facility inadvertently made its shark test subjects into intelligent predators while researching chemicals in their brains that could fight Alzheimer’s disease.

Once the sharks are smart enough, they decide to make their escape even if they have to kill every human left in the facility. It’s a ludicrous premise, but the film never shies away from it. This is the story it wants to tell, and it does it well.

The action is suspenseful and surprising

Thomas Jane in Deep Blue Sea.
Warner Bros. Pictures

One of the key reasons why Deep Blue Sea is such an effective thriller is that the smart sharks have a tendency to strike when least expected. Once the sharks’ escape plan is in motion, they don’t pass up opportunities to whittle down their human captors one by one.

If you’ve ever seen any horror movies, it’s not that difficult to guess which characters are going to die first. The joy of this film is watching the humans meet their fate in sudden and sometimes even shocking ways. Deep Blue Sea successfully keeps its audience in suspense for most of its runtime, and it’s even got exciting action sequences to hold our attention.

Samuel L. Jackson’s impassioned speech

Samuel L. Jackson in Deep Blue Sea.
Warner Bros. Pictures

Early in the film, Deep Blue Sea introduces Samuel L. Jackson as Russell Franklin, a corporate executive who survived a previous disaster on ice under enigmatic circumstances. That’s just a small piece of backstory until Russell brings it up during his big speech in the film. Just as the survivors are starting to turn on each other, Russell commands the room and reveals more details about his earlier ordeal to make a point that they have to stick together.

The other characters are all transfixed on Jackson in this scene because of his impassioned delivery and the way he’s laying out a common sense way to deal with the emergency. To say anymore about the scene would ruin it for first-time viewers, but it’s arguably the best part of the movie.

The smart sharks are fun villains

Thomas Jane and a computer generated friend in Deep Blue Sea.
Warner Bros. Pictures

There are limits to the sharks’ intelligence, of course. At no point are any of the sharks smart enough to actually communicate with humans. They’re not really interested in the people stationed at the facility except for their potential as a food source. Anyone unfortunate enough to be taken by the sharks meets the same grizzly fate.

Any good villain needs a good hero as well, and Deep Blue Sea has two. There’s the hyper-competent shark wrangler Carter Blake (Jane) and the facility’s cook, Sherman “Preacher” Dudleyarlin (LL Cool J), They get most of the shark encounters, and it’s satisfying to see them narrowly survive each time.

Deep Blue Sea gives the audience what it wants

Saffron Burrows in Deep Blue Sea.
Warner Bros. Pictures

There’s a scene late in the movie that contrives a flimsy reason for Saffron Burrows’ Dr. Susan McCallister to be in her underwear in order to survive a shark attack. It’s one of the more unintentionally hilarious moments in the movie because it feels like it was added just to give the film more sex appeal.

One thing that was definitely changed was the ending of Susan’s story, because test audiences saw her as a villain who deserved to be punished for making the sharks smart … even though she had altruistic intentions.

Thus the final version of the film gives Susan some redemption for her hubris, and more importantly, it gives the audience what it wants. Deep Blue Sea delivers on its promises, and that’s why it’s one of the best summer blockbusters.

Watch Deep Blue Sea on Max.

Topics
Blair Marnell
Blair Marnell has been an entertainment journalist for over 15 years. His bylines have appeared in Wizard Magazine, Geek…
25 years later, the superhero genre has forgotten this overlooked movie’s greatest message
A nuclear missile soars into the air above the Iron Giant.

Nowadays, superhero movies are more common than most other Hollywood blockbusters. That wasn't the case in 1999. Back then, not only were comic book films still few and far between but good ones were even rarer and more difficult to find. A lot has, of course, changed since then. Entire superhero-driven cinematic universes have been born, taken over Hollywood, and -- in the case of Warner Bros.' DC Extended Universe -- even been put out to pasture. What hasn't changed, however, is The Iron Giant's status as one of the best superhero movies that Hollywood has ever produced.

Directed and co-written by Brad Bird, The Iron Giant received immediate and widespread praise when it was originally released in August 1999, but it was a box office bomb. Thankfully, its poor financial performance didn't stop it from gradually earning a special place in the hearts of a lot of comic book fans. In the years since its theatrical debut, the film has frequently been cited as one of the best American animated movies of the past 30 years, and it has become a comfort food-esque go-to for many of its admirers.

Read more
This excellent 2004 movie changed the game for the action genre forever
A man burns a journal in The Bourne Supremacy.

Today, Matt Damon is largely known as a movie star. The Oscar winner has had a long and quite prolific career, starring in leading and supporting roles alike and receiving acclaim in multiple genres. From psychological thrillers like The Talented Mr. Ripley to sci-fi vehicles like The Martian, from pitch-black comedies like The Informer! to cheesy family flicks like We Bought a Zoo, Damon has truly done it all.

It was 2002's The Bourne Identity that launched Damon as a potential action star, but the sequel ensured his legacy. More importantly, The Bourne Supremacy changed the game for the action genre as a whole, acting as a precursor to the gritty, thrilling, raw action films that would dominate much of the late 2000s and early 2010s and paving the way for the over-the-top extravaganzas we have today. On its 20th anniversary, let's look back at The Bourne Supremacy, a film that changed its genre for good -- and for the better.
The Damon identity

Read more
25 years ago, Tom Cruise starred in the strangest summer movie of all time
A man looks at a young woman in Eyes Wide Shut.

Tom Cruise is now known as an action star and "savior of cinema," but in the late 1990s, the actor only worked on two movies: Magnolia, in which he had a supporting role, and Eyes Wide Shut. The latter, Stanley Kubrick's final movie, drew widespread attention in 1999 with its mysterious subject matter, prolonged production time, and provocative teasers.

Upon its posthumous release, Kubrick’s final film received mixed reviews and was the subject of innumerable censorship scandals. But 25 years later, Eyes Wide Shut has cemented its status among Kubrick’s lushest, most crowd-pleasing seriocomic masterworks -- and as one of Cruise's finest movies.
A dreamlike mirage

Read more