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Hostile Waters
Starring: Rutger Hauer , Martin Sheen , Max von Sydow , Colm Feore , and Rob Campbell Director: David Drury Manufacturer: Hbo Home Video ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD Similar Items: ASIN: B0002ERXAY Release Date: 2004-09-14 |
Description
When a U.S. submarine accidentally collides with an armed Soviet sub spying off the coast of America, it sets off a suspenseful chain of events that could lead to all-out nuclear war. Based on true events, this ' 'taut thriller' ' (People) raises the action stakes on a crisis that heated the Cold War at sea up to boiling point.Customer Reviews:
Hostile Waters.......2007-06-12
Courage Under Water.......2006-03-16
I was interested.........2004-12-24
I Bought It For Dom!.......2004-10-03
Take it or leave it.......2003-02-09
(Note: If you are buying this movie for the performance of Dominic Monaghan [as I admit I did], don't waste your money on it. He is hardly shown and has ONE line. Just a heads-up)
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Science of the Deep - Episode 3: The Hostile Deep
Manufacturer: Discovery Channel ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD ASIN: B000NVL7EO Release Date: 2007-03-02 |
Description
The Science Channel presents three new, original one-hour specials following marine scientists as they pursue cutting edge science and technology in the deep frontier. It is the most hostile, alien place on Earth. It endures incredible pressures, perpetual darkness, extreme cold. The place is the abyssal depths of our oceans and the seafloor below. Many believe that we know more about the surface of the moon than the bottoms of our oceans. For centuries it was thought that the ocean depths was a barren desert, devoid of all life. But in recent decades, deep-sea technology has enabled marine scientists to explore the abyss and they've made surprising finds. Not only does a variety of life thrive in the depths, but along the tectonic fault lines that crisscross the ocean floor are sites of countless hydrothermal vents spewing out hot sulphuric gases and other energy rich chemicals. In the late 70's it was discovered that organisms near these deep-sea vents, many new to science, were living by an entirely different system. Instead of using the sun to produce energy through photosynthesis, deep-sea bacteria, in the absence of all sunlight were using chemosynthesis to convert energy from the hot chemicals (as high as 400-degrees C) pouring out of the earth. It was the first time scientists documented life sustained by energy from earth, not the sun.DVD: