Search

The Underwater City

1962, Movie, NR, 78 mins

starstarstarstar
Interesting perhaps only to those with a grave interest in architecture and interior design, THE UNDERWATER CITY is about as exciting as watching seaweed grow. This below-sea-level nonsense has people inhabiting the sea floor in a domed city that eventually collapses and leaves only the two starfishy-eyed lovers--Lundigan and Adams--alive, prepared to build again. Filmed in Eastmancolor, Columbia decided to release this picture in black-and-white for some unknown reason. Bad... read more leave a comment
Year: 1962
Rated NR

User Rating: (Be the first to rate!)
Add Your Rating: 1 stars2 stars3 stars4 stars5 stars

Cast
William Lundigan: Bob Gage
Julie Adams: Dr. Monica Powers
Roy Roberts: Tim Graham
Carl Benton Reid: Dr. Halstead
Chet Douglas: Chuck "Cowboy" Marlow
Paul Dubov: George Burnett

 

more The Underwater City cast & details

An engineer builds the world's first underwater city by using a team of crack frogmen to...
Paid | CinemaNow
Length: 01:18:00
Posted: 12/24/2008
An engineer, a psychologist and several other disparate types take part in an experiment to...
Paid | Amazon Video on Demand
Length: 01:19:00
Posted: 12/14/2008
Loading...

The Atonement House and More Movie Questions

The Atonement house mysterious movies and an actor after more than fame Ask FlickChick Question This may sound shallow but after seeing the movie Atonement which I thought was really good and moving the thing I keep thinking about is the house Is it a real place and if so can you tell me anything about it SethFlickChick Tallis House the site of the terrible family betrayal in Atonement is a real house and the filmmakers shot both interiors and exteriors there This is often not the case Crews frequently use the exterior of one place and either build sets for the interiors or shoot them someplace else The house is Stokesay Court which stands on 1000 acres in Shropshire some three hours north of London it was built in 1891 in whats called the Jacobethan style which combined elements of English Renaissance Elizabethan and Jacobean architecture The style is often dismissed as vulgar and ugly in part because it was favored by newly minted mil read more

Advertisement

Advertisement