Echoing what others have said, I saw this movie when I was about 16. I only saw it the one time, the original broadcast in 1978, but it has remained lurking in my memory ever since. The music, the situations, the cheesy effects . . . The doomed romance element still makes my heart ache. For a cheap little Rankin-Bass production, this film is remarkably effective. This one *seriously* needs to be released on DVD.
The Bermuda Depths
1978
Action / Adventure / Fantasy / Sci-Fi / Thriller
The Bermuda Depths
1978
Action / Adventure / Fantasy / Sci-Fi / Thriller
Plot summary
Traumatized, orphaned college dropout Magnus Dens returns to Bermuda to find the cause of his father's mysterious death years before. At the Bermuda Biological Station, he finds Eric and Dr. Paulis, friends and colleagues of his late father, and joins them on a quest for gigantic sea creatures. He also meets Jennie Haniver, a mysterious young woman who was once his only childhood friend. Dr. Paulis' housekeeper, an island local, warns Magnus that Jennie is dangerous. The beautiful but vain young woman had sold her soul with the Devil centuries before and lives forever young deep in the waters of the Devil's Triangle (a.k.a. Bermuda Triangle). Nobody heeds the folklore and the researchers trap the giant sea turtle, setting the stage for a deadly confrontation with both minions of the Devil.
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Haunting memory
Wonderful and haunting love story...
I saw this movie when I was about ten years old back in the late 70s. I never forgot this movie. It comes on a couple of times a year and I always seem to catch it right at the end. I wish they would release a DVD of this movie. It's a cult classic if not a classic outright. It was beautifully shot and though some of the special effects are outdated, it doesn't really subtract from the movie.
Rayvyn
A crazy movie!
Oh man, when Rankin/Bass and Tsuburaya Productions do a movie together, they do it weird. And none of their collaborations are quite as strange as this one, a movie that features a ghost girl, childhood trauma and, of course, a kaiju turtle.
It was written by William Overgard, who created the comic strips Steve Roper and Mike Nomad and Rudy, as well as writing scripts for several of these collaborative films like The Last Dinosaur, The Ivory Ape and Bushido Blade. He also wrote episodes of ThunderCats and Silver Hawks. He worked with Arthur Rankin Jr.* on this story, too.
It's directed by Tsugunobu "Tom" Kotani, who was behind all of these strange American/Japanese films. And by strange, I mean this one is the most out there.
Magnus Dens (Leigh McCloskey, who was in Inferno and now paints art based on occult, alchemical, and esoteric themes) is asleep on an island when he is awoken by Jennie (Connie Sellecca) who claims to know him. He's been dreaming of his childhood and she may be the girl he remembers from it, the love of his life who watched a turtle hatch on the beach with him and craved J+M into its shell before she rode that giant turtle into the sea and disappeared forever. This happened n the very same night that a monster emerged from the cave beneath his house and killed his father!
Our hero also has a job working alongside another childhood friend, Eric (Carl Weathers),for marine biologist Dr. Paulis (Burl Ives!). Paulis informs him that Jennie doesn't exist and is the name of a legend in which a beautiful but vain woman was saved from a storm by a mysterious god and given eternal life at the cost of never again being able to live on land.
Between a harpoon shooting bazooka known as Horror, women with green glowing eyes, the mid-movie appearance of a giant turtle wiping out most of the cast and a total downer ending, this movie really was made for me. I can't even imagine what people thought of it when it ran on ABC on January 27, 1978.
*Rankin loved Bermuda so much that he moved there after making this.