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'Aliens of the Deep' sinks in the end

Kyle Chidester

Date created: 2/14/05 Section: ENTERTAINMENT
Have you ever wondered if there is life on other planets? If so, have you ever wondered how it got there? Or how it got to this planet, for that sake? I know that these sound like some pressing spiritual questions, but I'm not here to discuss that (at least not today). I'm here to discuss the film "Aliens of the Deep" by director James Cameron, a film with the main focus of (attempting to) answering these questions.

The film is a documentary on a team of "explorers," made up of both marine biologists and astrobiologists, who are looking for clues at the bottom of the ocean to generate new theories about life on other planets. Until recently, the dominant theory on how life is generated was with the process of photosynthesis, but since we've come to be able to explore deeper into the oceans, we've found places that have absolutely no sunlight yet have thriving life forms. How?

ccording to the film, they generate around these sulfide structures called hydrothermal vents. These vents form over hot magma, which, after coming in contact with the cold bottom water, precipitate minerals. These minerals, in turn, support expansive underwater ecosystems.

This may sound cool to all those science geeks out there, but this is the entertainment section. What about those going to a movie for that? Good thing this flick is being played in IMAX 3-D theatres. The underwater sequences are amazing. The first image of an underwater creature is an iridescent jellyfish-like thing. The way it flows through the water is breath taking. It almost looks like ribbon, swirling like a dancer.

The film even has some jumpy spots when an octopus bursts in front of a sub. There are many more beautiful images of strange undersea creatures. But some of the most intriguing sequences in the film are of the hydrothermal vents. The sulfide structures take on some very immense formations, and the black clouds that spray out of them are ominous and intimidating. It is strange to think that it's all minerals.
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