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For other uses, see Water World (disambiguation).
Waterworld is a 1995 post-apocalyptic science fiction film. The film stars Kevin Costner who also produced it. Waterworld was released in the United States on July 28, 1995.
PlotAbout five hundred years in the future, the polar ice caps have melted due to unexplained events, though human action is hinted when the Mariner exclaims "We did it". The Earth's surface is almost entirely water. The surviving humans have forgotten the past and believe in a modified creation myth in which God created the world as a ball covered with water, but that there is also dry land somewhere out there. The survivors can be classified into four groups:
The antihero is a drifter known only as the Mariner (Kevin Costner) who comes into an atoll to trade. He is a mutant, a new step in evolution to accommodate the changes in climate, with webbed feet and gills. The atollers, fearful of mutants, try to kill him. At that moment, however, the smokers arrive in a raid on the atoll. They are searching for a girl living there named Enola, who has what appear to be directions to dry land tattooed on her back.[1] Her caretaker is Helen, the atoll's shopkeeper, and they plan to escape with Gregor, the atoll's resident astrologer, for dry land because, like the Mariner, they don't fit in. Unfortunately Gregor's escape balloon launches too early with him on it, leaving Helen and Enola stranded. They escape with the Mariner, who seems ill-pleased with their company. Chasing them is "the Deacon", who is the captain of a derelict oil tanker, the Exxon Valdez. He also wants to get to dry land, and has a number of skirmishes with the Mariner in his attempts to get Enola back. Helen wants to know where dry land went. The Mariner, who can breathe underwater, puts her in a diving bell, and swims down to a sunken city on the ocean floor. While they are beneath the ocean's surface, the Deacon and his smokers board the boat. Enola hides to avoid capture. When Helen and the Mariner resurface, the Deacon orders them to tell him where Enola is. When they both refuse to talk, the Deacon pretends to shoot them and Enola emerges from hiding and is captured. After he has Enola, the Deacon tells his men to kill both the Mariner and Helen, they dive underwater to escape and the Deacon burns the Mariner's boat. Since Helen cannot breathe underwater, the Mariner breathes for the both of them, resulting in a prolonged underwater kiss of life. They are later rescued from the wreckage of the Mariner's trimaran by Gregor in his balloon and he takes them to a makeshift atoll where the survivors of the atoll attack have regrouped. Using a jet-ski, the Mariner chases down the Exxon Valdez and boards it, where the Deacon is having a great celebration, during which he tosses gifts to the crew of the Valdez, proclaiming they have found the map to dry land. After they have all gone below the ship to row, the Mariner walks out onto the deck and threatens to drop a flare into the oil reserves unless the Deacon releases Enola. The Deacon refuses, saying that he would be crazy to blow up the ship. The Mariner drops the flare down into the oil reserves. The ship explodes, and the Mariner escapes with Enola rescued by Gregor by climbing a rope dropped from his balloon. The Deacon, still alive, grabs the rope and tries to pull Enola. The Deacon loses his grip and falls into the water. Still alive, he pulls out his pistol and shoots at the balloon, hitting one of the lines, causing Enola to fall back into the sea. The Deacon and two other Smokers, all on jet skis, converge on Enola. The Mariner ties a rope around his ankle and bungee jumps down to grab Enola, pulling her out of the water as the three jet skis collide and explode. Gregor figures out the map, and steers his balloon toward what does turn out to be dry land. As Gregor, Enola, Helen and the others begin to start civilization anew on the island, the Mariner decides to leave. Enola, saddened to hear the Mariner leaving, asks why he must go. He explains that he doesn't belong on dry land and that the ocean calls out to him. He finds a new boat near the beach, and before sailing off, Enola and Helen look out to him drifting away, back to his old life. Main cast
Box officeProblems encountered during filming led to massive budget overrun, and it held the dubious distinction of being the most expensive film ever made at the time. Some critics dubbed it "Fishtar" and "Kevin's Gate" (references to the notorious flops Ishtar and Heaven's Gate). With a budget of $175 million, the film grossed $88 million at the U.S. box office, which made it appear to be the all time box office bomb. [2]). Adjusted for inflation and expressed in 2006 dollars (USD), the budget for the movie was $231.6 million, and grossed $116.8 million at the U.S. box office and $232.9 million at the foreign box office.[3] Extended cutThe original director's cut of the film was submitted to the studio at a length of around three hours. But most of it was trimmed down by the studio and Kevin Costner against the wishes of director Kevin Reynolds to a running length of 136 minutes, and Costner re-shot or re-edited some major plot points. It wasn't until 1998 that ABC premiered Waterworld as a two-night event with an additional 40 minutes of footage that was never seen during its theatrical run. However, it was edited for language, violence, some nudity, and the opening shot of the Mariner urinating. This 177-minute version was praised and widely bootlegged by fans, and increased in popularity over the years, as the extended cut was syndicated on stations like Bravo, USA, and AMC. Most of these stations only included 20 to 30 minutes of the extra footage, especially excluding the Mount Everest ending in some broadcasts. It wasn't shown in its entirety until the full ABC cut, with commercials, was finally seen on the Sci-Fi Channel. After many petitions and pleas from Waterworld fans, Universal reissued it in November 2008 on DVD in a two-disc set. Despite being void of extras, sans the theatrical trailer, this contained a new anamorphic widescreen transfer and the extended cut. Fans were disappointed to find that the extended cut, despite being in a widescreen format, was actually a transfer of the ABC cut, rather than the major restoration-cut that fans had hoped for. Additional scenesThe original cut of Waterworld contained many additional character developments, and contributed less confusion to the film. Most of these are included in the first broadcast on ABC and syndicated versions of the extended cut, but some scenes are missing or dropped to fill in a three-hour block with commercials during such broadcasts. This was the version that was syndicated, until the Sci-Fi Channel picked the rights to air the full cut. Here is a detailed highlight of what was added:
Universal Studios Theme ParksThere is currently a show at Universal Studios Hollywood and Universal Studios Japan based on the film. It takes place immediately after the movie, where Helen returns to the Atoll with proof of dry land, only to find her followed by the Deacon, who survived the events of the movie. The Mariner arrives immediately after him, however, and defeats the Deacon and takes Helen back to dry land while the Atoll explodes. Video gameA video game based on the movie was released on Super Nintendo, Virtual Boy and PC. While the Super Nintendo and Virtual Boy version were released by Ocean Software, the PC version was released by Interplay. The game received negative reviews as well as the Virtual Boy Game being marked as the worst Virtual Boy game ever released out of the 22 games in its short life. See also
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