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How ‘Waterworld’ Became the Last Big Action Film of its Kind

The big-budget action film doesn't deserve its notorious reputation

By MovieBabblePublished 4 years ago 3 min read
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Universal Pictures

July marked the 25th anniversary of Waterworld, but that is not the only thing celebrating an anniversary. It is also the 25th anniversary of what is considered one of the biggest big-budget flops of its era, and more impactfully it is the 25th anniversary of one of the last blockbuster films made almost entirely with practical effects. Waterworld truly was and still is in a sea all its own.

The murderous Deacon commands his troops of Smokers across the sea towards the Atoll, a floating island he believes protects the lost map to dry land. An army of jet skis soars across the water in a sympathy of bullets and flames as they attempt to gain access to the floating fortress.

Two huge ships then appear at Deacon’s command, these ships start to shift and morph into two large ramps. At another wave of his hand, water skiers come skimming across the water towards the ships being pulled by a small plane. All five skiers ride the ramp up and over the wall of the Atoll, landing safely on the other side of the walls. They all pop out of the water with guns beginning an immediate attack on the residents that thought they were safe only minutes before.

Watching Waterworld for the first time in a while, it was remarkable how this film has become a time capsule for how movies used to be made with spectacle in mind. Not to say that movies today don’t have spectacle, but there is a reason why Waterworld can still hold up as a decent action movie, but a movie like The Phantom Menace, that only came out a few years later, is nearly unwatchable today with the sets and many of their characters made entirely by computers.

Waterworld, takes place in the far future, centuries after the polar icecaps have melted covering the planet in water. The Mariner, played by Kevin Costner, is a mutated human/fish hybrid, that has evolved to all the water, but growing gills and webbed feet. His existence is nothing but survival at all costs. He does not have time to get involved in other’s affairs.

Enter Enola (Tina Majorino), a small girl who has strange markings on her back that are prophesied to point the way to dry land. When Enola and her guardian Helen (Jeanne Tripplehorn) find themselves in the care of the Mariner, it becomes a race to protect Enola and the way to dry land from the Smokers and their leader Deacon, played by Dennis Hopper.

Waterworld is mostly remembered for being a huge box office flop. Before the movie even came out, there were already numerous reports of its troubled production that caused its budget to balloon to an unprecedented amount of $175 million. Where the story usually ends is that, domestically, Waterworld only made $88 million, far below the $175 million budget. Realistically, the foreign market helped the movie out, and it ended with a worldwide gross of around $263 million. Add in VHS, TV, and DVD sales, and Waterworld has long turned a profit and continues to do so 25 years later.

With the success of films like Jurassic Park a few years before and the coming cost reliance on CGI, a “flop” like Waterworld was enough for most film studios to write off making movies the old-fashioned way with practical effects and giant action set pieces. Outside of a few exceptions, CGI still rules the roost when it comes to action movies.

It was refreshing to jump back into a time when creativity within Hollywood still thrived. Sure, Waterworld was originally conceived as Mad Max on the water, but it was still a large scale, a fantasy epic that was not based on an already established IP. Something that is rarely seen anymore on the blockbuster level.

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READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE ON OUR WEBSITE: https://moviebabble.com/2020/08/03/how-waterworld-became-the-last-big-action-film-of-its-kind/

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