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Terror Beneath the Sea

Original title: Kaitei daisensô
  • 1966
  • TV-PG
  • 1h 19m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
681
YOUR RATING
Terror Beneath the Sea (1966)
HorrorSci-Fi

A group of surface dwellers comes upon an underwater city ruled by a mad scientist and his amphibious servants.A group of surface dwellers comes upon an underwater city ruled by a mad scientist and his amphibious servants.A group of surface dwellers comes upon an underwater city ruled by a mad scientist and his amphibious servants.

  • Director
    • Hajime Satô
  • Writers
    • Masami Fukushima
    • Kôichi Ôtsu
  • Stars
    • Shin'ichi Chiba
    • Peggy Neal
    • Franz Gruber
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    681
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hajime Satô
    • Writers
      • Masami Fukushima
      • Kôichi Ôtsu
    • Stars
      • Shin'ichi Chiba
      • Peggy Neal
      • Franz Gruber
    • 21User reviews
    • 30Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos161

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    Top cast30

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    Shin'ichi Chiba
    Shin'ichi Chiba
    • Ken Abe
    • (as Sonny Chiba, Shin-ichi Chiba)
    Peggy Neal
    • Jenny Gleason
    Franz Gruber
    • Commander Brown
    • (as Frank Gruber)
    Gunter Braun
    • Captain Bob
    • (as Gunther Braun)
    Andrew Hughes
    Andrew Hughes
    • Professor Howard
    Erik Neilson
    • Dr. Rufus Moore
    • (as Enric Nielsen, Erick Nielson)
    Beverly Kahler
    • Luisa
    Hajime Satô
      Mike Danning
      • Dr. Josef Heim
      • (as Mike Daneen)
      Hideo Murota
      • Henchman
      Kôji Miemachi
      • Chan
      • (as Tsuneji Miemachi)
      Hans Horneff
      • Bill Sirville
      • (as Hans Hornef)
      John Crane
      • Richard
      • (as John Kleine)
      Jacques Enghien
      • Scientist
      Akemi Fuji
      • Researcher
      B. Hariura
      • Officer E.
      Brown Keller
      • Officer B.
      Ichirô Mizuki
      • Naval Base Engineer D.
      • Director
        • Hajime Satô
      • Writers
        • Masami Fukushima
        • Kôichi Ôtsu
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews21

      4.7681
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      Featured reviews

      3planktonrules

      A monster film mostly for young kids and bad film fans.

      Sadly, before Sonny Chiba made the wonderful martial arts films that made him so famous throughout the world, he starred in a bazillion films--including some real turkeys like INVASION OF THE NEPTUNE MEN (in the bottom 100 films on IMDb). Despite a fairly respectable current score of 5.5 on IMDb, TERROR BENEATH THE SEA is also one of these early bad films. Now it isn't nearly as terrible as INVASION OF THE NEPTUNE MEN (but what is?!), it's still mighty bad and a film only for kids and the curious.

      The film involves Chiba and a cast of Westerners and Japanese investigating some strange creatures in the ocean. They look like a poor man's version of the Creature from CREATURE OF THE BLACK LAGOON--rubber body suits painted silver with putty-like faces. It turns out that they are the creation of a mad megalomaniac (Dr. Moore) who has learned to change humans into practically anything he'd like. Using a mind control device, these cheesy monsters do his bidding. And where does this crazed genius live? Yep, 3000 feet under the ocean--and it's up to Chiba and the US Navy to stop this crazy and his freaky friends. They never really explain how the subs are able to go that deep and Chiba's stupid red-headed sidekick wants to swim from there to the surface (they'd be crushed like grapes by the pressure almost immediately). Maybe originally they mean 300 feet and it was mis-dubbed!

      The film looks very Japanese when it comes to the underwater battles and sub. There are lots of fires and explosions(!) under water and much of it looks really, really cheap--like they were created by someone who built the cities for the Godzilla films. Oddly, despite these silly special effects, some of the underwater diving scenes were very well done and filmed well and the color throughout the film was lovely--very vivid and clean. The costumes also aren't bad (other than the silver-suited freaks).

      The film is entertaining silliness that bad movie fans and kids will like, but I can't imagine anyone else sitting through this odd film. Well,...at least it IS different!
      3jamesrupert2014

      Silly soggy tokusatsu

      Ken and Jenny, a doctor and a reporter (Shin'ichi (Sonny) Chiba and Peggy Neal), stumble across the undersea lair of a megalomanic and his army of surgically-modified amphibious cyborgs with which he plans to conquer the world. This juvenile offering from Toei Studios features a mostly Western cast alongside action-hero Chiba (chop-socky fans will be disappointed at the dearth of athletic fights) with a near amateur performance by Neal (to be fair, she has little to work with and spends most of her screen time trying to look horrified). The film contains some reasonably well done underwater miniature work but the centerpiece, the scaly cyborgs are laughable when seen clearly, especially when their costumes are torn. The gilled minions are controlled by the chortling villain through a control box with apparently three settings (off, work, and fight) and are ostensibly brainless (or so we are told) yet seem to know how to effectively use guns. There is an entertaining (if not very convincing) transition scene in which nefarious Doctor Heim (Mike Daneen) creates a cyborg (courtesy of a lot of squishy stop-motion shots intercut with numerous close-ups of Jenny looking increasingly horrified). A later transformation scene involving the heroes leaves the two leads running around with what appears to be pieces of latex stuck to their chins (much to Jenny's horror). There a couple of action sequences involving the undersea-base's defenses vs. An attacking submarine (apparently armed with the X4, a weapon that could "blow up the whole ocean") leading to a finale that includes all of the expected climactic tropes. The film suffers from some editing problems (the scenes in which the heroes are to be transformed seem to be out of sequence or partially deleted) and the overall production including the sound, music, and cinematography, is substandard even for a low-budget Japanese techno-adventure targeting a young audience. I have a fondness for (and a high tolerance of) Japanese science fiction films but 'Terror Beneath the Sea' is pretty awful, even when compared to Toho's dreadful 'Latitude Zero' (1970) or Peggy Neal's other tokusatsu outing, the extremely goofy but entertaining 'The X from Outer Space' (1967).
      Dethcharm

      Never Trust A Fish-Man With A Loaded Gun...

      In AGENT X-2: OPERATION UNDERWATER, a mad scientist is bent on world domination through his army of cyborg-mutant fish-men. Only Sonny Chiba and his scuba partner can save the Earth from hideous totalitarian control.

      They'll have to stay strong as they encounter the scientist's terrible gun-toting sardines!

      This movie is loaded with enough cheeeze to fill 10 nuclear submarines! Is it absurd? Of course, but it's also highly entertaining...
      3spencejoshua-22736

      It's a great comedy.

      This is a fun adventure flick that conjures up feelings of nostalgic Japanese horror. It's not scary but will keep you in stitches during the viewing and long afterwards. This film would fit nicely into a "films so bad...they're good!" library. It's worth at least one viewing if only for the laughs and the special effects.......oh, they're great!
      4kevinolzak

      Seen on Pittsburgh's Chiller Theater in 1974

      1966's "Terror Beneath the Sea" is a forgotten sci-fi from Japan, less surprising once you learn it's from neither Godzilla's Toho, or Gamera's Daiei. It's actually a Toei production, one of three that made it to American shores, with "Magic Serpent" and "The Green Slime" better remembered. Apart from future martial arts star Sonny Chiba, we have teenage blonde Peggy Neal, who went on to star in Shochiku's "The X from Outer Space," who promptly disappeared from the scene. The Gill Man costumes are initially intriguing, but become obvious through repetition, though the prospect of human beings being transformed into amphibian cyborgs manages to produce some effective moments. Director Hajime Sato really struck paydirt with his final film, 1968's "Goke Body Snatcher from Hell" (also from Shochiku), as nightmarish a combination of horror and sci-fi as any made in Japan. "Terror Beneath the Sea" aka "Water Cyborgs" was frequently seen on television through the late 70s (not much since), airing three times on Pittsburgh's Chiller Theater from 1974 to 1978.

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      Related interests

      Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
      Horror
      James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
      Sci-Fi

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        This was Peggy Neal's motion picture debut.
      • Goofs
        During one of the fight scenes (after control of the cyborgs is lost) one of the cyborg costumes is clearly torn below the shoulder, exposing the stuntman's skin.
      • Crazy credits
        The American version's opening credits constantly overlap each other and fade in and out.
      • Alternate versions
        Made in 2 versions with Japanese version having more violence and international version having longer English language performances.
      • Connections
        Featured in Chiller Theatre: Terror Beneath the Sea (1975)

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      FAQ14

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • July 1, 1966 (Japan)
      • Countries of origin
        • Japan
        • Italy
        • United States
      • Languages
        • English
        • Japanese
      • Also known as
        • Agent X-2: Operation Underwater
      • Filming locations
        • Toei Studio, Japan
      • Production companies
        • K. Fujita Associates Inc.
        • Ram Films Inc.
        • Toei Company
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 19m(79 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.33 : 1
        • 1.66 : 1

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