#Emily Haversham
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#underwater#Norah Price#Kristen Stewart#Emily Haversham#Jessica Henwick#Captain Lucien#Vincent Cassel#William Eubank#Bojan Bazelli
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You're Not Going Crazy. EVIL Has Snuck in Its Egg! "Cuckoo" reviewed! (Neon / Blu-ray)
Fresh Horror for the Taking! “Cuckoo” Available on Amazon! Moving to the Bavarian Mountains can be breathtaking, relaxingly scenic, and peacefully remote. For Gretchen, however, the involuntary move comes shortly after the death of her mother, and she’s forced to leave the U.S. with her father, stepmother, and half-sister to now live at the base of the German Bavarians where an isolated…
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#2024#Adam Wingard#Astrid Bergès-Frisbey#Bavaria#Bavarian Mountains#BBC#Ben Rimmer#blu-ray#Cuckoo#Dan Stevens#Dario Mendez Acosta#Downton Abbey#Embers#Emily Cheung#Emily Haversham#Euphoria#Eviienko#Fiction Park#Frauke Firl#Germany#Greta Fernández#horror#Hunter Schafer#Jan Bluthardt#Jessica Henwick#Josh Rosenbaum#Kalin Morrow#Ken Kao#Love and Monsters#Luz
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Underwater (2020)
“You have to make it, okay? You promise me.”
“I promise.”
#underwater#underwater 2020#john gallagher jr.#liam smith#whump#weak#suffocation#delirious#delirium#supported#collapse#supine#unconscious#injured#kristen stewart#norah price#jessica henwick#emily haversham#johnny gallagher#cuteguywhump gifs
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Jessica Henwick, photographed by Misan Harriman, colorized using palette.fm
#jessica henwick#crushes#beautiful people#knives out#the matrix#the gray man#underwater#iron fist#game of thrones#star wars#colleen wing#nymeria sand#bugs#suzzane brewer#jesika pava#emily haversham
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UNDERWATER (2020): EMILY HAVERSHAM
“ has anyone ever walked out there before? longer than to fix a pipe, i mean. ”
#underwater#underwater 2020#emily haversham#jessica henwick#jessicahenwickedit#jhenwickedit#mygifs#hi i adore her
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every single scene at the roebuck drill in underwater (2020) messes me up so much. it takes a lot to hit me this hard but it!! does!! the desperation and the panic and knowing that they’re out of time, i feel all of it!! everything with emily and norah like. break my heart it’s fine!! every single second leading up to that closing, every word, every shot,,, it hurts me in all of the best ways and this second viewing i was both panicked and ready to cry and i’m a wreck no i won’t elaborate
#and NO i wont shut up thanks!!!#no one touch me im a mess and something abt this film and characters i connect with so so much it hurts#underwater 2020#norah price#emily haversham
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Scientific and technical workers of Fallout: New Vegas - Angela Williams, Dr Keely, Senior Knight Lorenzo, Dr Emily Ortal, Chris Haversham, Dr Dala.
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jessica henwick gif pack
Be very surprised to see me shoot out some small gif packs before I disappear into my abyss again, and no, please stop screaming in there. I just had to gif this movie because Jessica looked so good!
In the following pack, you can find 65 gifs Jessica Henwick as Emily Haversham in the movie Underwater (2020). All of these gifs were capped and coloured by yours truly. Jessica is Chinese-Singaporean and English.
Tagging: @tasksweekly for Task 40: China.
Feel free to like and reblog this pack, and use it for your needs. Please be mindful of my rules, and don’t edit or crop these gifs into icons without my permission.
GIFS PAGE
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Kristen Stewart (as Norah) Jessica Henwick (as Emily Haversham) From the sci-fi thriller, UNDERWATER (2020)
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Underwater (2020) Review
Time: 95 Minutes Age Rating: Violence, horror scenes & offensive language Cast: Kristen Stewart as Norah Price Vincent Cassel as W. Lucien Mamoudou Athie as Rodrigo Nagenda T.J. Miller as Paul Abel John Gallagher Jr. as Liam Smith Jessica Henwick as Emily Haversham Director: William Eubank Disaster strikes more than six miles below the ocean […]Underwater (2020) Review
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Watery fun
Title: “Underwater”
Release date: In theaters Jan. 10, 2020; on disc/streaming April 14, 2020
Starring: Kristen Stewart, Vincent Cassell, Jessica Henwick, John Gallagher Jr., Mamoudou Athie, T.J. Miller, Gunner Wright
Directed by: William Eubank
Run time: 1 hour, 35 minutes
Rated: PG-13
What it’s about: A crew of underwater researchers must leave their station and walk along the ocean floor after what is thought to be an earthquake hits, but they discover something much more menacing during their journey.
How I saw it: “Underwater” wears its influences on its sleeves and does so enthusiastically. “Alien,” “The Abyss,” “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,” “The Poseidon Adventure,” “Godzilla,” H.P. Lovecraft, “Alice in Wonderland” – they’re all there in plain sight. “Underwater” was not made to reinvent the watery disaster/sci-fi monster movie. Instead, it serves up pure, visually stylistic, familiar, easily digested and quickly forgotten entertainment.
Kristen Stewart stars as Norah Price, a young woman who presumably has lived in an underwater station, the Kepler, for many years – though we are told that all sense of time disappears in a place as dark as the bottom of the ocean. She is the facility’s mechanical engineer and is carrying a heavy heart, having lost her fiancé in an underwater accident. She spends much of the movie working while wearing undergarments.
William Eubank, a veteran cinematographer directing his third feature film, wastes no time introducing the action in “Underwater.” Price has just finished, in voiceover narrative, telling us what life is like underwater and is preparing for another routine day when the station springs a leak -- not good given the immense pressure six miles below the ocean’s surface. Soon the station is imploding, and Price and colleague Rodrigo Nagenda (Mamoudou Athie) race to a safe place, then embark on a mission to find other survivors. Turns out four others besides themselves have lived, and they are stock movie characters – Athie’s Nagenda is the sensitive, calming presence; Vincent Cassell plays the captain, who is tough but fair; Jessica Henwick is Emily Haversham, a biologist’s assistant who seems overwhelmed and scared; John Gallagher Jr. is Liam Smith, a tough-guy engineer who is romantically involved with Haversham; and T.J. Miller is Paul Abel, who is the requisite comic relief in movies like this and carries with him a stuffed bunny (one of many “Alice in Wonderland” references).
Despite being given too-familiar characters to work with, the cast is strong, especially as the action amps up. The captain convinces them their only chance of survival is to leave the station, go all the way to the ocean floor and walk along a pipeline that will lead to the headquarters of oil drilling operation, the Roebuck. Their biggest concern, at least at first, is having enough oxygen to make the journey. As they soon learn (it was already obvious to the audience), it was more than an earthquake that rocked the Kepler. Underwater creatures, apparently riled up by humans destroying their habitat, stand in their way. The nature of the film is such that we know not all (if any) of the crew will make it to their destination alive.
Though it can be difficult to decipher what is happening at times in the murky waters, the action clearly is the strong suit in “Underwater.” Eubank and cinematographer Bojan Bazelli filmed it on dry land, in a former grocery store in New Orleans. Water was added digitally afterwards. The actors got help recreating the slowed movements underwater by wearing suits that reportedly weighed 100 pounds each. We are introduced to the creatures slowly; we don’t get a good look at a fully grown one until an hour into the film, and we don’t see the alpha creature (based on H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu) until the climactic scene. While the visuals are impressive, so too is the sound, which helps build the terror when it is not visually apparent.
The weak part of “Underwater” is the dialogue, though that is to be expected in a film like this. No one watches a sci-fi movie to hear Shakespearean prose. It is chock full of clichés and catch phrases, of course. Since the action starts immediately, the audience is slowly given bits of characters’ backstories; some of it connects, much of it does not. Haversham gives the prerequisite speech about man upsetting nature, and we have heard it all before many times over in the “Godzilla” movies. Haversham is the strongest character, though, because she realizes during the journey that she is capable of much more than she thought. She and Price, as the females in the group, form a strong bond during their quest. Miller is an acquired taste, to put it lightly. Most of his lines here don’t land (his style worked much better in the “Deadpool” movies), and they are either just quick toss-of profanity (like “f**k our lives”) or weirdly awkward (like when he calls Stewart’s character a “sweet, flat-chested elven creature”). It’s hard to imagine that latter line having been in the script, especially given reported accusations of inappropriate behavior by Miller in real life.
“Underwater” lasts just a shade over 90 minutes, making it more economical than similar movies. It is decent enough entertainment, derivative but mostly engaging, with some suitably scary creatures. It’s not Oscars material, but if you don’t ask too much of “Underwater,” you might not be let down.
My score: 59 out of 100
Should you watch it? It and some popcorn would suffice for a night of decent fun at home.
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Watch Underwater (2020) Online Free Streaming
Watch Underwater (2020) Online Free Movie Download
Title: Underwater
Year: 2020
Duration: 1h 35m
Rating: 5.8
Genres: Action, Sci-Fi, Horror
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Summary Underwater (2020)
A crew of oceanic researchers working for a deep sea drilling company try to get to safety after a mysterious earthquake devastates their deepwater research and drilling facility located at the bottom of the Mariana Trench.
An unknown, massive earthquake happens in a drilling station in the bottom of the Marianna Trench. A scientific crew must find their way across the ocean floor into another station under the threats of deep pressure, dark water, dangerous deep-sea creatures, and a constant lack of oxygen.
Synopsis Underwater (2020)
The film begins with images of the Mariana Trench and describing Tian Industries' intention to drill seven miles to the bottom for resources. Norah Price (Kristen Stewart), a mechanical engineer at the Keppler 822 Station, is brushing her teeth when the ceiling starts to trickle water. A large earthquake hits, and the Keppler starts to suffer catastrophic breach from the pressure. Price tries to wake everyone up but only she and another worker named Rodrigo (Mamoudou Athie) are able to escape the area and close it off, preventing further damage to the Keppler. Trying to find a way off the Keppler via escape pods, they encounter Paul (T.J. Miller) under the rubble and crawl through an access point to reach the escape pod bay. All of the escape pods have already been deployed, with Captain Lucien (Vincent Cassel) being the only person in the area when the three arrive. The surviving crew reaches a control base and find biologist Emily Haversham (Jessica Henwick) and engineer Liam Smith (John Gallagher Jr.). Trying to reach out via radio, they are unsuccessful in making contact with the surface. Lucien then recommends that they put on pressurized suits and walk one mile across the ocean floor to the Roebuck Station 641. They start to emerge from the station into a cargo elevator, but Rodrigo's helmet is faulty and cracks from the pressure, killing him instantly. The surviving crew see a distress beacon from one of the escape pods below, and Smith and Paul go outside to investigate. As Smith and Paul arrive at the location, the pod has been ripped open and a body lies in the rubble. Paul inspects the body, only for a hatchling creature to emerge from it and attack him. Smith is able to shoot and kill it with a bolt gun, and they bring it inside. Studying the creature's body, Haversham realizes it is a part of a previously undiscovered species. The five begin to set out towards the Roebuck Station, but as they are walking, the Keppler explodes, causing debris to fly towards them. Smith is hit by the debris, but Price and Lucien manage to save him and bring him inside. They are able to make it to the meet-point station by taking an access tunnel, allowing them to charge and clean their suits, but find that Smith's oxygen source is badly damaged from the debris. As they make their way through the access tunnel, Paul is attacked by a creature and is dragged underwater before being ripped out of his suit and killed. Before leaving the access tunnel, the team discover that Smith's damaged oxygen pod will cause him to have to breathe in toxic fumes from the explosion. Unwilling to leave another crew member behind, Price, Lucien and Haversham agree to help him walk, dragging him if they have to. The remaining four crew members press on and start their walk across the ocean floor, but another creature appears, dragging Smith into a cave. Lucien manages to pull Smith out, but then tries to go for Smith's bolt gun, allowing the creature an opportunity to drag Lucien up through the water and away from the other three. Price follows the creature and Lucien and is able to free him, but Lucien sacrifices himself so that Price may escape the increasing change in pressure. Price ends up at the abandoned Sheppard Station and finds that Lucien worked there beforehand, causing suspicion as to what Lucien really knew about these creatures and their involvement with the drilling stations. Price tries to make contact with Smith and Haversham, but to no avail. She then gets a new pressurized suit and leaves the Sheppard, continuing toward the Roebuck. Walking along the ocean floor, Price reunites with Haversham, dragging Smith towards the Roebuck Station, and proceeds to help. As they enter the station, they notice that there is a nest of creatures hanging from the ceiling and try to sneak by, but Haversham's suit, low on oxygen, begins to make noise, causing one of them to wake up and attack Price. Price is partially swallowed by the creature, but is able to kill it and break free, allowing them to continue their way into the Roebuck. The three are able to reach the escape pod bay, but Price discovers that only two work, with a third being damaged and unusable. Price and Haversham manage to get an ailing but still alive Smith into one of the pods, and Price eventually convinces Haversham to take the last one. As this is happening, a gigantic version of the creature that attacked them emerges from around the Roebuck, surrounded by even more creatures. The creatures start to follow the two escape pods, while the gigantic one begins to attack the Roebuck. Price, knowing she is already going to die, raises the energy levels of the core engines so that they may explode, killing all the creatures in the vicinity and allowing the escape pods to reach the surface safely. The film ends with images of newspaper articles depicting Tian Industries and their attempts to cover up the incident, silencing Haversham and Smith. The company goes on to say that they intend to expand their drilling efforts.
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Film : Underwater
Film Américain Première diffusion : 8 janvier 2020 Réalisateur : William Eubank Scénariste : Adam Cozad, Brian Duffield Acteurs : Kristen Stewart : Norah Price Vincent Cassel : le capitaine W. Lucien T. J. Miller : Paul Abel Jessica Henwick : Emily Haversham Mamoudou Athie : Rodrigo Nagenda John Gallagher Jr. : Liam Smith Gunner Wright : Lee Miller Année de sortie : 2020 Durée : 1h35 Genre : Catastroph…
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New Review from Jeff York of Creative Screenwriting Magazine: The Claustrophobic “Underwater” Doesn’t Go Deep Enough
Too many films have drawn inspiration from 1979’s Alien over the years, including countless C-list rip-offs not worth mentioning. The newest is actually an A-list production entitled Underwater and it stars Kristen Stewart in her first pure monster movie since the Twilight series made her an international star. With such talent comes superb production values, the kind you rarely see in the genre, and it’s an impressive looking film, by and large. Unfortunately, this riff on Ridley Scott’s classic misses on almost every other chance to do more, dig deeper and set itself apart from that long list of Alien imitators.
The short-shrift starts immediately by using expositional newspaper clippings to set up the backstory during the opening credits. The headlines tell us that a giant conglomerate called Tian Industries has built the Kepler 822 Station, an underwater digging rig to find new sources of energy. (Giant corporations are never good in these sorts of things.) We’re told that over a thousand workers live year-long 7 miles under the surface of the Pacific Ocean. One of them is Stewart’s mechanical engineer Norah Price.
Vincent Cassel
She’s introduced in skimpy skivvies as she brushes her teeth in a locker room bathroom. (Echoes of Sigourney Weaver’s Ripley wardrobe in Scott’s film are purely intentional.) Price is fit and fierce with a dyed-blonde pixie, and her voice-over talks about isolation and the unknown in such jobs. Then it’s off to the races after a minute or two as an earthquake rocks the station and destruction rains down upon her.
She and co-worker Rodrigo (Mamoudou Athie) manage to get to safer quarters, but not before seeing whole sections of the base collapse and kill a number of colleagues. Still, the two manage to rescue Paul (T.J. Miller) from under some rubble, and soon they join up with three other survivors: Captain Lucien (Vincent Cassel), engineer Liam Smith (John Gallagher Jr.), and biologist Emily Haversham (Jessica Henwick) to search for a way out.
With the station falling apart around them, and the threat of drowning or air pressure exploding their brains at any moment, that’s already a lot to jangle the nerves in this claustrophobic thriller. But rather than ape The Poseidon Adventure or Das Boot, the filmmakers want this to be another Alien, so screenwriters Brian Duffield and Adam Cozad stack the stakes with all kinds of alien sea creatures jumping out of the dilapidated station and dark waters. Too few exits, too many ways to die.
Jessica Henwick and Kristen Stewart
The premise, Stewart’s wardrobe, and even the lived-in “dirty” quarters of the station are already too on-the-nose in recalling Alien, but having the creatures go from baby aliens to a ginormous mother monster, well, that is simply too close to its 1979 inspiration. Perhaps Underwater wouldn’t have felt so derivative if there had been more character development, but the small cast is given very little to do in that department.
Stewart is spunky and knowing, but why does she seem to be the only one who’s got a handle on matters in every scene? Cassel, one of France’s best actors, plays a captain who feels less like a military man and more like a life coach. “Keep going!” and “You can do it!” are the gist of most of his dialogue. Henwick has her dramatic moments, swerving nervously between stability and panic, while Miller cracks wise for comic relief, but an excellent actor like Gallagher is given almost nothing to play. All of them spend too much time in their underwater diving suits, also reminiscent of the costumes in Alien, and that keep us arms-length from the actors in them all the more.
Director William Eubanks started in the business as a cinematographer and the look of the film is strong, vividly murky and foreboding. The film’s use of sound design makes all the jump scares effective, and the CGI is wholly convincing. You believe it’s all underwater, and not created in a post-effects suite. But by the time the remaining survivors are slowly schlepping along the floor of the ocean, counting down markers to the escape pods, the film has become just as much of a frustrating slog.
Both Alien and The Poseidon Adventure worked because they spent hefty screen time developing the characters before disaster struck. Those films also kept their protagonists in street clothes, for the most part, making them all the more vulnerable to the elements and perpetrators around them. There are moments when the characters here manage to escape the water momentarily, take off their diving helmets, and breathe. If only the film was willing to breathe more as well and take some real time with those in the story we’re supposed to be invested in.
Check out the trailer for Underwater below:
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HNR Review of Underwater
On this episode of Horror News Radio:
The Grue-Crew review… UNDERWATER (2020).
This is HORROR NEWS RADIO, the official GRUESOME MAGAZINE podcast. Back with Doc Rotten once again are the scariest, goriest, bloodiest co-hosts on the 'Net.
Dave Dreher, the lead news writer at Gruesome Magazine.
Award-winning filmmaker Christopher G. Moore.
Podcasting Rock Star & International Cosplay Queen, Vanessa Thompson.
HORROR NEWS OF THE WEEK
TRAILERS
BRAHMS: THE BOY II - February 21, 2020
https://gruesomemagazine.com/2020/01/09/trailer-brahms-the-boy-ii/
MORBIUS - July 31, 2020.
https://gruesomemagazine.com/2020/01/13/trailer-morbius-2020/
OCTOBER FACTION - January 23, 2020
https://gruesomemagazine.com/2020/01/12/monsters-are-on-the-run-in-the-trailer-debut-for-the-new-netflix-series-october-faction/
LOCKE & KEY - February 7, 2020
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EonRi0yQOE
TV
YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN musical on ABC
https://gruesomemagazine.com/2020/01/13/mel-brooks-and-abc-teaming-up-to-bring-young-frankenstein-to-the-network-as-a-live-tv-event/
CHUCKY (Child's Play) heading to SYFY
https://gruesomemagazine.com/2020/01/12/syfy-unwraps-a-new-series-and-its-a-good-guy-doll-chucky-heading-to-tv/
CLARICE (Silence of the Lambs) is heading to CBS
https://gruesomemagazine.com/2020/01/12/cbs-commits-to-new-the-silence-of-the-lambs-tv-project-clarice/
FEATURE REVIEW: UNDERWATER (2020)
(20th Century Fox)
After a young mother murders her family in her own house, a single mother and young detective tries to investigate and solve the case. Later, she discovers the house is cursed by a vengeful ghost that dooms those who enter it with a violent death. Now, she runs to save herself and her son from demonic spirits from the cursed house in her neighborhood.
IMDb
Director: William Eubank Writers: Brian Duffield (screenplay by), Adam Cozad (screenplay by)
Stars:
Kristen Stewart … Norah Price T.J. Miller … Paul Abel Jessica Henwick … Emily Haversham Vincent Cassel … Captain Lucien John Gallagher Jr. … Liam Smith Mamoudou Athie … Rodrigo Nagenda Gunner Wright … Lee Miller
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Check out this episode!
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Watch Underwater (2020) Online Free Streaming
Watch Underwater (2020) Online Free Movie Streaming
Title: Underwater
Year: 2020
Duration: 1h 35m
Rating: 5.8
Genres: Action, Sci-Fi, Horror
Click to Watch
Summary Underwater (2020)
A crew of oceanic researchers working for a deep sea drilling company try to get to safety after a mysterious earthquake devastates their deepwater research and drilling facility located at the bottom of the Mariana Trench.
An unknown, massive earthquake happens in a drilling station in the bottom of the Marianna Trench. A scientific crew must find their way across the ocean floor into another station under the threats of deep pressure, dark water, dangerous deep-sea creatures, and a constant lack of oxygen.
Synopsis Underwater (2020)
The film begins with images of the Mariana Trench and describing Tian Industries' intention to drill seven miles to the bottom for resources. Norah Price (Kristen Stewart), a mechanical engineer at the Keppler 822 Station, is brushing her teeth when the ceiling starts to trickle water. A large earthquake hits, and the Keppler starts to suffer catastrophic breach from the pressure. Price tries to wake everyone up but only she and another worker named Rodrigo (Mamoudou Athie) are able to escape the area and close it off, preventing further damage to the Keppler. Trying to find a way off the Keppler via escape pods, they encounter Paul (T.J. Miller) under the rubble and crawl through an access point to reach the escape pod bay. All of the escape pods have already been deployed, with Captain Lucien (Vincent Cassel) being the only person in the area when the three arrive. The surviving crew reaches a control base and find biologist Emily Haversham (Jessica Henwick) and engineer Liam Smith (John Gallagher Jr.). Trying to reach out via radio, they are unsuccessful in making contact with the surface. Lucien then recommends that they put on pressurized suits and walk one mile across the ocean floor to the Roebuck Station 641. They start to emerge from the station into a cargo elevator, but Rodrigo's helmet is faulty and cracks from the pressure, killing him instantly. The surviving crew see a distress beacon from one of the escape pods below, and Smith and Paul go outside to investigate. As Smith and Paul arrive at the location, the pod has been ripped open and a body lies in the rubble. Paul inspects the body, only for a hatchling creature to emerge from it and attack him. Smith is able to shoot and kill it with a bolt gun, and they bring it inside. Studying the creature's body, Haversham realizes it is a part of a previously undiscovered species. The five begin to set out towards the Roebuck Station, but as they are walking, the Keppler explodes, causing debris to fly towards them. Smith is hit by the debris, but Price and Lucien manage to save him and bring him inside. They are able to make it to the meet-point station by taking an access tunnel, allowing them to charge and clean their suits, but find that Smith's oxygen source is badly damaged from the debris. As they make their way through the access tunnel, Paul is attacked by a creature and is dragged underwater before being ripped out of his suit and killed. Before leaving the access tunnel, the team discover that Smith's damaged oxygen pod will cause him to have to breathe in toxic fumes from the explosion. Unwilling to leave another crew member behind, Price, Lucien and Haversham agree to help him walk, dragging him if they have to. The remaining four crew members press on and start their walk across the ocean floor, but another creature appears, dragging Smith into a cave. Lucien manages to pull Smith out, but then tries to go for Smith's bolt gun, allowing the creature an opportunity to drag Lucien up through the water and away from the other three. Price follows the creature and Lucien and is able to free him, but Lucien sacrifices himself so that Price may escape the increasing change in pressure. Price ends up at the abandoned Sheppard Station and finds that Lucien worked there beforehand, causing suspicion as to what Lucien really knew about these creatures and their involvement with the drilling stations. Price tries to make contact with Smith and Haversham, but to no avail. She then gets a new pressurized suit and leaves the Sheppard, continuing toward the Roebuck. Walking along the ocean floor, Price reunites with Haversham, dragging Smith towards the Roebuck Station, and proceeds to help. As they enter the station, they notice that there is a nest of creatures hanging from the ceiling and try to sneak by, but Haversham's suit, low on oxygen, begins to make noise, causing one of them to wake up and attack Price. Price is partially swallowed by the creature, but is able to kill it and break free, allowing them to continue their way into the Roebuck. The three are able to reach the escape pod bay, but Price discovers that only two work, with a third being damaged and unusable. Price and Haversham manage to get an ailing but still alive Smith into one of the pods, and Price eventually convinces Haversham to take the last one. As this is happening, a gigantic version of the creature that attacked them emerges from around the Roebuck, surrounded by even more creatures. The creatures start to follow the two escape pods, while the gigantic one begins to attack the Roebuck. Price, knowing she is already going to die, raises the energy levels of the core engines so that they may explode, killing all the creatures in the vicinity and allowing the escape pods to reach the surface safely. The film ends with images of newspaper articles depicting Tian Industries and their attempts to cover up the incident, silencing Haversham and Smith. The company goes on to say that they intend to expand their drilling efforts.
Click to Watch
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