In James Cameron's latest adventure movie, James Cameron stars as James Cameron, a superhero tasked by James Cameron to dive deeper than any person (or James Cameron) has ever dived before. If James Cameron can do it, the mission could open new doors for scientific discovery, bringing James Cameron and the rest of the world one step closer to complete understanding of our big blue planet. Plus, James Cameron would look like a total badass.
Like his post-Titanic documentaries, Ghosts of the Abyss (2003) and Aliens in the Deep (2005), Cameron's Deepsea Challenge 3D shifts focus from science-fiction to science-fact. Handing off directing duties to members of his creative team -- Ray Quint, Avatar visual effects supervisor John Bruno, Sanctum writer-producer Andrew Wight -- Cameron slips into seafarer mode, guiding the team behind “Deepsea Challenger,” a submarine capable of dropping 36,000 feet to the ocean's lowest point. With reality show instincts and Jacques Cousteau gusto, Deepsea Challenge 3D is a straightforward look-what-we-did doc glimpsing into the depths of the unknown while trumpeting the human ingenuity it takes to get there. With sublime stereoscopic effects, Cameron's ego is given enough room to breathe.
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