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Deadly Voyage

  • Episode aired Jun 15, 1996
  • R
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
688
YOUR RATING
Deadly Voyage (1996)
Deadly Voyage
Play trailer1:15
1 Video
7 Photos
Drama

When stowaways are found on board a Russian cargo ship, some of the officers and crew decide to dispose of them at sea. The last time they had a stowaway on board, the ship was fined heavily... Read allWhen stowaways are found on board a Russian cargo ship, some of the officers and crew decide to dispose of them at sea. The last time they had a stowaway on board, the ship was fined heavily and black marks entered into their records, when he made it off the ship into a foreign p... Read allWhen stowaways are found on board a Russian cargo ship, some of the officers and crew decide to dispose of them at sea. The last time they had a stowaway on board, the ship was fined heavily and black marks entered into their records, when he made it off the ship into a foreign port.

  • Director
    • John Mackenzie
  • Writers
    • Nick Davies
    • Stuart Urban
  • Stars
    • Omar Epps
    • Joss Ackland
    • Sean Pertwee
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    688
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Mackenzie
    • Writers
      • Nick Davies
      • Stuart Urban
    • Stars
      • Omar Epps
      • Joss Ackland
      • Sean Pertwee
    • 11User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Deadly Voyage
    Trailer 1:15
    Deadly Voyage

    Photos6

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Omar Epps
    Omar Epps
    • Kingsley
    Joss Ackland
    Joss Ackland
    • Captain
    Sean Pertwee
    Sean Pertwee
    • Ion
    David Suchet
    David Suchet
    • Vlachos
    Andrew Divoff
    Andrew Divoff
    • Romachenko
    Jean-Claude La Marre
    • Albert
    Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje
    Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje
    • Emmanuel
    • (as Adewale)
    Ilia Volok
    Ilia Volok
    • Petr
    Roman Varshavsky
    Roman Varshavsky
    • Yuri
    Chiwetel Ejiofor
    Chiwetel Ejiofor
    • Ebow
    Omanza Eugene Shaw
    • Anduse
    Henry Nartey
    • Moses
    Oscar Provencal
    • Charles
    Wakefield Ackuaku
    • Paul
    David Dontoh
    • Bob
    Maxine Burth
    • Agnes
    Michael Byrne
    Michael Byrne
    • Commissioner
    Ravil Isyanov
    Ravil Isyanov
    • Mikhail
    • Director
      • John Mackenzie
    • Writers
      • Nick Davies
      • Stuart Urban
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.6688
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    Featured reviews

    crimsontiger6

    Brutal and boring

    Brutal and boring. A bunch of thugs kill a group of refugees and one refugee escapes. It does not make a good movie. The best movies add something to the human experience, this is just boring low grade story telling. The fact that it is based on true events just makes it all the more tragic.
    jpyoyo

    An excellent movie!

    An excellent movie. I couldn't take my eyes off the TV screen for a second. It has a strong plot based on a true story, a story of stowaways, which I heard of only from news but never had a chance to have an indirect experience through a movie or any other medium. Every American, especially non-white immigrants can empathize with the characters who hop on a ship and take a risk for a better life in New York City. Even before they put a foot on the American land, they are confronted with the hate by the Russian crew, one of whom said that "niggers" are not welcome in the US--niggers' lives are not worth a dog's life or the oil they might have to waste for a stopping. How surprising and shocking it is for the Russian crew to adopt American white supremacists' hate towards blacks without any hesitation.
    8ccmiller1492

    Searing drama based on a true incident

    This searing drama based on a true incident concerns several ambitious African nationals who decide to temporarily leave their families by stowing away on an outbound ship. They think that if they successfully make the voyage they can better their lives by making enough money in New York to send for their families. Unfortunately for them, the ship that they select is a rundown Russian freighter which has already been heavily fined at a previous port for harboring stowaways. The captain and the first mate are determined not to let this happen again as their jobs are on the line. The group of blacks begin their harrowing voyage in the cargo hold and are eventually discovered, forced out of hiding and murdered by the ruthless mate (an outstanding performance by Sean Pertwee.) A few (convincingly terrified leader Omar Epps among them) manage to temporarily escape and are mercilessly pursued through the ship with their lives forfeit if they are caught. Altogether a riveting film which will have audiences biting their nails and gritting their teeth wondering how such dire events could take place in modern civilization.
    10cpattison

    How could such events happen?

    If you are interested in learning more about this sort of thing happening in modern civilization, there is an excellent book called "Outlaw Seas" or "The Outlaw Sea", and it describes, in story after story, how these things do happen. The lawlessness of the high seas is a reality for a number of reasons. One, many of the world's freighters are of questionable registry (nationality) and it's difficult to impossible to enforce international laws when the ships owners don't have an office in a real country. Two, many ship lines employ crews from dirt poor third world countries. The crews are often (like illegal immigrant workers) threatened and bullied into complying with questionable or illegal practices. Three, there is often a language barrier, not only between the officers and the crew, but also between the crew members themselves. The crew are rewarded for their compliance and their silence. Four, once committing an illegal act, the ships are able to hide in plain sight with little more than a fresh coat of paint. Anyway, it's fascinating reading.

    Horrifying story, excellent movie. Does anyone else notice how HBO seems to make the best and most important movies? Hollywood has trouble releasing enough Oscar worthy movies in any given year, so that several of the top 5 contenders usually come from Britain. Jerry Bruckheimer = the end of quality cinema.

    I loved the thoroughly evil performance by Sean Pertwee. I also, as usual, loved Omar Epps.
    1rch427

    Bleeding-heart claptrap

    I watched "Deadly Voyage" because David Suchet was in it, after enjoying him in the "Poirot" series. And Joss Ackland is always worth watching, so I went into the film with an expectation of it being a potentially worthwhile film. Alas, it was not to be.

    I won't bother critiquing the performances, the pacing, the cinematography or any other structural aspect of the film; others here have already given their opinions on those elements. The only thing I want to address is the film's message, since it proclaims in the intro that it's based upon a true story, and therein hangs the film's supposed importance.

    "Deadly Voyage" primarily focuses upon an impoverished black African man named Kingsley who wants to move to the US, because he believes that he can make money there. Nothing more, nothing less -- his motivation is utterly selfish. (Of course some people will prevaricate by saying that he was doing it for his family, but in fact he decided to have children on the income he could make in Ghana, so he really just created his own problem.) To that end, Kingsley decides to stow-away aboard a Russian freighter bound for New York. In the process of doing this, he faces harsh conditions, racist crew members and other challenges.

    But this is precisely where the film leaves me unsympathetic. Why should the audience be expected to care about Kingsley? Simply because he has a goal? Goals aren't such a rare commodity that his should be privileged above say, the goal of the ship's captain or the woman he left at home with his newborn child. Kingsley's goal is illegal in the eyes of the US Government. It is also illegal in that it steals from the Russian shipping company. If he makes it to the US, it would involve taking out of a system that he has not put into. And if he gets caught, the shipping company will be fined $45,000. I doubt very much that any of the stowaways care about what their chosen course of action is costing anyone else; they're clearly just out for their own gain. He could've spent the $1,000 he won in the lottery at the beginning of the film, for legal passage to the US, and applied for residency and a work permit. Instead, he takes the illegal (and dangerous) route.

    So since Kingsley's voyage is illegal, selfish and cannot be ethically justified, why should we care about him or his ordeal? Simply because he faces challenges? Why should his challenges be privileged above the challenge of the Russian shipping company getting to New York without stowaways? Because he's black and the shipping company is white? The reason seems to be because Danny Glover (the film's executive producer) and others involved want us to root for Kingsley, as if he's a hero on some sort of noble voyage. But once you accept that illegal immigration, theft and a fool's mission aren't noble at all, you can't really care about him.

    Before anyone plays the race card, I assure you that I would've felt the same no matter what ethnicity/nationality the involved parties were. Imagine if a British person decided to stow-away in a train headed for Bhutan, sneak across the border, and collect "unwanted" Buddhist antiquities, to bring back to Britain to sell. How much sympathy could the challenges he faced generate? Very little, I'd bet. So why should we feel different for Kingley? Because he's black? Because he's poor by American standards? The filmmakers are banking on us sharing their views that the ends justify the means, and that a shipping company being fined $45,000 is inconsequential compared to the remote possibility of an unskilled laborer earning slightly more in the US than he could've if he had just stayed in his own home country. I didn't buy it for a minute.

    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The story of Kingsley Ofosu who hails from Ghana, West Africa.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 15, 1996 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Viaje mortal
    • Production companies
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • Home Box Office (HBO)
      • Viva Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo

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