After the Cold War, a breakaway Russian republic with nuclear warheads becomes a possible worldwide threat. U.S. submarine Capt. Frank Ramsey signs on a relatively green but highly recommended Lt. Cmdr. Ron Hunter to the USS Alabama, which may be the only ship able to stop a possible Armageddon. When Ramsay insists that the Alabama must act aggressively, Hunter, fearing they will start rather than stop a disaster, leads a potential mutiny to stop him.
Denzel Washington
Lt. Commander Ronald "Ron" Hunter
Gene Hackman
Captain Franklin "Frank" Ramsey
Matt Craven
Lt. Roy Zimmer
George Dzundza
Chief of the Boat Cob
Viggo Mortensen
Lt. Peter 'Weps' Ince
James Gandolfini
Lt. Robert 'Bobby' Dougherty
Rocky Carroll
Lt. Darik Westergard
Jaime Gomez
Officer of the Deck Mahoney
Michael Milhoan
Chief of the Watch Hunsicker
Scott Burkholder
Tactical Supervising Officer Billy Linkletter
Danny Nucci
Petty Officer Danny Rivetti
Lillo Brancato
Petty Officer Third Class Russell Vossler Russell Vossler
Eric Bruskotter
Bennefield
Rick Schroder
Lt. Paul Hellerman
Steve Zahn
Seaman William Barnes
Marcello Thedford
Lawson
R.J. Knoll
Marty Sotille
Billy Devlin
Navigator
Matthew Barry
Planesman
Christopher Birt
Helmsman
Jim Boyce
Diving Officer
Jacob Vargas
Sonarman #2
Kai Lennox
Sonarman #3
Michael D. Weatherred
Radioman #1
Tommy Bush
Admiral Williams
Earl Billings
Rick Marichek
Mark Christopher Lawrence
Head Cook Rono
Michael Chieffo
Chief Kline
Ashley Smock
Guard #1
James Lesure
Guard #2
Trevor St. John
Launcher
Dennis Garber
Fire Control Technician
Vanessa Bell Calloway
Julia Hunter
Brenden Jefferson
Luke
Ashley Calloway
Robin
Daniel von Bargen
Vladimir Radchenko
Richard Valeriani
Richard Valeriani
Warren Olney
Anchorman
Rad Daly
Lt. Comdr. Nelson
Sean O'Bryan
Phone Talker
Victor Togunde
Sailor with Oba
Troy A. Cephers
Sailor #1
Armand Watson
Seaman Davis
Brent Goldberg
Phone Talker #2
Scott Grimes
Petty Officer Hilaire
Ryan Phillippe
Seaman Grattam
Dale Andre Lee Everett
Firing Key Runner
Angela C. Tortu
Ramsey Aide
Ronald Ramessar
Westergaurd Dad
Robin Faraday
Westergaurd Mom
Bob Stone
Bob the Magician
Henry Mortensen
Henry Ince
Chris Ellis
Additional Magician
Mo Gallini
Seaman Kuhne (uncredited)
Jason Robards
Rear Admiral Anderson (uncredited)
Marianne Hettinger
Board of Inquiry Member (uncredited)
Skip Beard
Board of Inquiry Member (uncredited)
Director
Tony Scott
Screenplay, Story
Michael Schiffer
Story
Richard P. Henrick
August 28, 2014
9
A mutiny thriller that delivers the goods wholesale.
Russian rebels have seized one of their government's nuclear missile bases and are threatening to attack the U.S.A. A patrolling US nuclear submarine is ordered to fire, but almost straight afterwards an incomplete counter order brings uncertainty. The submarine Captain and the Executive Officer come into conflict as to which order to follow, and thus the subs crew are torn as to which officer is right or wrong.
Directed by Tony Scott, one could be forgiven for thinking that Crimson Tide would be an outlandish ball of explosions and slaughter, thankfully it isn't, as Scott gives us one of the best underwater thrillers going. Scintilating characters are cloaked in dynamic claustrophobia, and this coupled with the ever increasing unbearable tension, makes this a must see for fans of films that are scary because of what might happen, and not because of what many blockbuster film makers actually show you.
This is not a standard good vs evil plot piece, or even a good vs insane cretin film, this pitches old school stickler for the rules Captain Ramsey against the deep thinking common sense purveyor Lt Commander Ron Hunter. Ramsey believes that the completed order, which is basically to blast the Russians before they blast us type thing, should be followed, Hunter on the other hand feels that the second incomplete order must be clarified before any action is taken, because after all this could be nuclear war! The film then twists and turns as the sub is divided into two factions, mutiny is rife, but what will the outcome be? Can the radio be fixed to complete the order? Will it be too late? All these questions are tensely drawn out by Scott to get the maximum impact from what is an admittedly standard global crisis in waiting story.
No shortage of machismo here either, brutishly brilliant is how I find Gene Hackman in this, his Captain Ramsey is the quintessential leader of men. Then there is Denzel Washington as Ron Hunter, eloquently spoken and a voice of reason, his ruggedness coming to the fore as the submarine starts to implode. There are few better sights in 90s cinema than watching Hackman & Washington go at each other the way they do here, starting off as just a fractious relationship, it then explodes into a war of belief and wills. It's through these pair that the film's neutral stance shines bright, what would we do in similar circumstances? Who would we follow? Both men ethically right, yet both men accountable for probable disaster.
This is a wonderful picture, a lesson in tough tension building that is perfectly wrung out by a rousing Han Zimmer score, with the only weak point being a multi written script that tries to fuse pop culture references with technical lingo, something which doesn't quite sit right. However, even that can't hurt the excellently unfolding sequence of events that closes quite brilliantly with a written piece that all of us should take note of. 9/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$53,000,000.00
Revenue:
$157,387,195.00