Telegram
My Dear Friends, we have given our site a new look and upgraded its features. Now it’s even easier to use and better than ever. You’ll enjoy using it more than any other site!

A-Z INDEX

Black Sea (2014)

Black Sea
×
Movie Black Sea (2014)
Real Title Black Sea
Rating 6.3
Duration 115 Min
Aired 2014-12-05
Languages HINDI
Subtitle NA
Quality Bluray
Sources IMDB | TMDB

Countries

United Kingdom, United States of America, Russia

Genres

AdventureDramaThriller

Tags

SeaGoldCaptainSubmarineUnderwater

Directors

Kevin Macdonald

Stars

Jude Law, Karl Davies, Jodie Whittaker, Daniel Ryan, Scoot McNairy, Tobias Menzies

Writers

Dennis Kelly

Companies

Focus Features, Cowboy Films, Film4 Productions

Taglines

Taglines: Brave the deep. Find the gold. Trust no one.

Description

A rogue submarine captain pulls together a misfit crew to go after a sunken treasure rumored to be lost in the depths of the Black Sea. As greed and desperation take control on-board their claustrophobic vessel, the increasing uncertainty of the mission causes the men to turn on each other to fight for their own survival.

Reviews:

Author: John Chard
Clear the desk and clear the decks. There's a fabled Nazi U-Boat down in the depths of the ocean, aboard is gold, lots of gold. So it's time for a not so motley crew of submariners to go forth - in an antiquated submarine - and try to set themselves up for life. Naturally nothing goes as planned, there are hidden agendas, rival factions within, claustrophobia reigns supreme, will anyone survive? Will you want any of them to survive? Black Sea is not without problems, though the complaints about credibility and believability not being available? Well these are surely from folk who don't watch enough of, or understand the workings of, genre cinema of this ilk. Kevin Macdonald (director) and Dennis Kelly (writer) have crafted a tight and efficient submarine thriller. Characterisations are clichéd, with nods to other genre type of films evident, but the group dynamics pulse with danger and the inevitable peril sequences strike the requisite suspenseful chords. Black Sea doesn't define or reinvent the submarine thriller wheel, it just keeps the rotor shafts turning. Strong casting and earthy photography help matters, to make this - ropey accents aside - better than a time waster of a viewing. 6.5/10

Black Sea in Multiple Formats

Related POSTS

TRENDING MOVIES POST

TOP RATED MOVIES POST