What Waits Below

What Waits Below is a science-fiction adventure film (initially released under the title Secrets of the Phantom Caverns) released in 1984.[2] Directed by Don Sharp, produced by the Adams Apple Film Company, the film runs for 88 minutes and stars Robert Powell, Timothy Bottoms, and Lisa Blount.[3] The tagline for the video release of the film was "Underground, no-one can hear you die".

What Waits Below
Theatrical release poster using film's original title
Directed byDon Sharp
Produced byRobert D. Bailey
Sandy Howard
executive
Don Levin
Mel Pearl
associate
Jeffrey M. Sneller
Written byChristy Marx
Robert Vincent O'Neill
Based onstory by Ken Barnett
StarringRobert Powell
Timothy Bottoms
Lisa Blount
Richard Johnson
Anne Heywood
Music byDenny Jaeger
Michel Rubini
CinematographyVirgil L. Harper
Edited byJohn R. Bowey
Production
company
Adam's Apple Films
Release date
1984
Running time
88 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$6 million[1]

Plot

The US military is running a test for a special type of radio transmitter, to be used to communicate with submarines, in a deep system of caves in Central America. When the signal from one of the transmitters suddenly disappears, a team of soldiers led by Major Elbert Stevens (Bottoms) and cave specialists led by Rupert 'Wolf' Wolfsen (Powell) including scientist Leslie Peterson (Blount) are sent in to find out what happened.

Exploring deep underground, they stumble upon a tribe of albino cave-dwellers who have apparently been isolated from the rest of the world for thousands of years. The cave-dwellers are hurt by radio frequencies and are able to see in infra-red frequencies, tracking the explorers by their body heat.

Cast

Production

Sandy Howard produced the film with special effects designer Robert Bailey. "Sandy came to me and said, 'Bob, how'd you like to work on a picture that'll gel you out of those darkrooms you've been working in on all those effects?' So I said, ‘Hey, that sounds great'."[1]

Howard wanted to shoot the film in a real cavern to give the film "a special beauty and grandeur that has taken over one million years to develop, and which no Hollywood set could ever dare hope to recreate."[4]

It was the first American film for Robert Powell, who was cast in October 1983.[5] Powell described it as more than "another pulp movie. It's a romp, a more physical movie, and fun stuff for an actor."[1]

Filming

Filming started August 1983. Principal photography for the film took place in a former limestone quarry and in natural caves. It shot at Cumberland Caverns for about two weeks, then another two weeks were shot at Cathedral Caverns in Alabama. Several days were spent filming at Fall Creek Falls, too.[6][7]

Lisa Blout said "We would go into the caverns before dawn, stay there all day, and come out at night, so we never saw the sunlight, except for Sunday. "[8]

Accident

Production was briefly halted in late August when carbon monoxide produced by generators in the Cathedral Caverns location sent at least 17 people, including Sharp, to the hospital.[7][9]

Blout recalled the accident happened while her character was captured and tied up on a rise inside the cavern. "All the extras, as the Lemurians, were out in front of me, and 1 watched all these people just start silently falling over, fainting. as this wave of carbon monoxide came at them," she said.[8]

Blout said "All hell broke loose. We had little golf carts for transportation, and it was an immediate emergency situation of getting out, but these carts didn’t go that fast. We had very sick people, and it was a matter of determining who got in the first car out — youngest ones first. It was just total chaos. There were sixty people who went to the hospital."[8]

Blout said the cause was "one of those technical problems where the generator runningeverything backed up and started shooting fumes back into the cave. We had to shut down for a few days because of that, but we got through it."[8]

Production wrapped in late October 1983.[10]

Co-producer and special effects designer Robert D. Bailey said "Frankly, I underestimate the difficulty of shooting in the caverns. If I had it to do over again, I would not attempt to do such extensive filming underground." [4]

Release

What Waits Below was released on VHS in the United States in November 1985.[3]

gollark: Okay, that's just you using it wrong.
gollark: A panic/abort/crash/whatever is controlled and fairly safe.
gollark: Buffer overflows and stuff are more likely to lead to some sort of code execution issue.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: I mean, if your program just crashes, it's better than buffer-overflowing or something.

References

  1. Farmer p 27
  2. Vagg, Stephen (27 July 2019). "Unsung Aussie Filmmakers: Don Sharp – A Top 25". Filmink.
  3. "The Latest Hoopla". Daily News of Los Angeles. 8 November 1985. Retrieved 12 September 2009. What Waits Below: Timothy Bottoms, Robert Powell and Lisa Blount star in this science-fiction film about an unexplainable horror that waits below [...]
  4. Farmer p 24
  5. MAN WHO PLAYED 'JESUS' TO MAKE U.S. FILM DEBUT Mann, Roderick. Los Angeles Times 27 Oct 1983: oc_e1.
  6. "TV series not as profitable as concert dates". The Spokesman-Review. 31 July 1983. p. 13. Retrieved 12 September 2009. The SANDY HOWARD feature, which goes into production Aug. 8, be filming in Tennessee and Alabama locations.
  7. "Gas blame for illness, panic of set; Caves are being used to shoot sci-fi flick". Miami Herald. 23 August 1983. p. 3B. Retrieved 12 September 2009. Early indications were that generators used to power lights inside Cathedral Caverns were the source of the gas that touched off the panic late Saturday night. At least 17 people, many of them actors in the movie Secrets of the Phantom Caverns, were taken to area hospitals.
  8. Biodowrski, Steve (Spring 1995). "Lisa Blout". Imagi Movies. p. 51.
  9. Farmer p 25
  10. Mann, Roderick (27 October 1983). "Man who played 'Jesus' to make U.S. film debut". Los Angeles Times. p. E1. Retrieved 12 September 2009. Six years after making his initial impact on American audiences as the star of Franco Zeffirelli's 1977 TV film "Jesus of Nazareth," British actor Robert Powell has just finished his first American-made film.

Notes

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