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Reviews of silent film releases on DVD home video.
Copyright © 2000, 2003-2004 by Carl Bennett. All Rights Reserved.

20,000 Leagues
Under the Sea

(1916)
on

The Universal Film Manufacturing Company was not known in the silent era as premier producer of motion pictures. Yet, in 1916 they produced a film that could not be made effectively without expensive special effects and special photography. (The novel had previously been made as short films in 1907 by Georges Méliès and in 1913 by French company Éclair.) Marshalling the expertise underwater experts Ernest and George Williamson, Universal financed the extensive production which would require location photography, large sets, exotic costumes, sailing ships, and a full-size navigable mock-up of the surfaced submarine Nautilus.

Many film viewers familiar with the Walt Disney Studios version of the story and will be confused by the mish-mash conjoining of Jules Verne’s Captain Nemo tale with his Mysterious Island novel, and by a claptrap Far East coda concocted by director Stuart Paton. The schitzoid intercutting of the two storylines has, at best, angular logic and disjointed flow. Charles Denver’s melodramatic dreams of conscience and a rather cartoonish Octopus are laughable. And the film is further hampered by Allan Holubar’s mawkish and self-conscious performance as Nemo. But there is extensive underwater photography, which must have amazed audiences in 1916, and there is good model special-effects work.

We were dumbfounded by a shot of a group of people stranded on an island, sitting and conversing at a dining table constructed of island debris, being served by the only surviving black man in the party.

Carl Bennett

1999 Image Entertainment edition

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1916), color-toned black & white, 101 minutes, not rated.

Image Entertainment, ID4666DSDVD, 0-14381-46662-1.
Full-frame 1.33:1 NTSC, one single-sided, single-layered DVD disc, Region 0, 5 Mbps average video bit rate, 192 kbps audio bit rate, Dolby Digital stereo sound, English language intertitles, no foreign language subtitles, chapter stops, snapper case, $24.99.
DVD release date: 26 January 1999.
Country of origin: USA

Ratings (1-10): video: 7 / audio: 7 / additional content: 0 / overall: 7.

This early DVD edition features a video transfer from a very-good (what appears to be) 16mm reduction print, with minor print damage consisting of scratches, scuffing, speckling and processing flaws. The print wear makes viewing some of the underwater shots a chore, with the scuffing taking away some of the light, murky images captured by the original photography. The transfer generally holds good tonal ranges from highlights to shadows, but is too tightly cropped. The opening title will be cropped off both sides on all television monitors, and a few times heads are cut off. Once again I step onto my soapbox to advocate windowboxing for silent era films on home video. It is distressing as a viewer to be distracted by actors’ heads and intertitles lost into a TV’s overscan area by tight cropping.

Overall, the disc is well-produced by David Shepard and Dean Duncan of Film Preservation Associates, with an orchestral-sounding music and solo piano score composed by Alexander Rannie and Brian Benison. Not generally known for catchy disc extras, this early silent film DVD features limited but interesting animated menus. The film is an important part of a well-rounded silent film collection, but most viewers will have to overlook the storytelling shortcomings for the groundbreaking special effects.

 
USA: Click the logomark at right to purchase
a Region 0 NTSC DVD of this edition from Amazon.com.
Canada: Click the logomark at right to purchase
a Region 0 NTSC DVD of this edition from Amazon.ca.
Other silent era science fiction and fantasy films available on DVD home video:
Aelita: The Queen of Mars (1924)
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920)
The Golem (1920)
The Lost World (1925)
Metropolis (1927)
Nosferatu (1922)
The Thief of Bagdad (1924)
 
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