Crimson Tide
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Tony Scott
Denzel Washington
Gene Hackman
George Dzundza
Viggo Mortensen
James Gandolfini
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
When a volatile Russian nationalist and a rebel faction of the former Soviet Union Army seize control of a nuclear missile base, it triggers the greatest global emergency since the Cuban Missile Crisis. With the world on the brink of disaster, the USS Alabama sets sail, patrolling Russian waters with enough nuclear firepower to start World War III. As the crisis escalates, the unthinkable occurs: the Alabama is given an order to launch its nuclear missles. In the resulting chaos, two dedicated naval officers--the Alabama's seasoned commander, Captain Frank Ramsey, and his brilliant executive officer, Lieutenant Commander Ron Hunter--clash over the validity of their orders and vie for control of the sub.
Director
Tony Scott
Cast
Denzel Washington
Gene Hackman
George Dzundza
Viggo Mortensen
James Gandolfini
Ryan Phillippe
Matt Craven
Vanessa Bell Calloway
James Lesure
Ronald Ramessar
Ricky Schroder
Tommy Bush
Rocky Carroll
Billy Devlin
R.j. Knoll
Armand Watson
Daniel Von Bargen
Christopher Birt
Dennis Garber
Matthew Barry
Victor Togunde
Steve Zahn
Brent Goldberg
Jim Boyce
Danny Nucci
Richard Valeriani
Dale Andre Lee Everett
Chris Ellis
Scott Grimes
Ed Fitzgerald
Scott Burkholder
Michael Chieffo
Lillo Brancato
Jaime Gomez
Bob Stone
Earl Billings
Robin Faraday
Angela C Tortu
Eric Bruskotter
Michael Milhoan
Michael Weatherred
Rad Daly
Henry Mortensen
Trevor St. John
Jacob Vargas
Warren Olney
Marcello Thedford
Sean O'bryan
Mark Christopher Lawrence
Ashley Smock
Kai Lennox
Troy A Cephers
Crew
Michael Adler
John Agalsoff
Jennifer Amerine
David Anthony
Pete Antico
Michael D Antunez
Robert Arnold
Linda C Azevedo
Bob Badami
James Balker
Bob Baron
Matt Barry
David Bartholomew
Kevin Bartnof
Scott Beattie
Johnny Beyers
Andrea Bottigliero
John W Brilhante
Jerry Bruckheimer
Tom Bruggeman
Thomas R Bryant
Fred Burke
Emma Burnham
Rob Burton
Paul Calabria
Scott Campbell
Robert Camron
Eddie A Canett
Darren A Caperna
Anjelica Casillas
Ray Cavalluzzi
Patti Cerrari
Matthew B. Chamberlin
George M Chappell
Michael Chavez
Rick Chavez
Linda R Chen
Kevin Clark
Ellis Cohen
Alan Colbert
Midge Costin
John Cucura
Tonia Davall
Robert Dawson
Sandy De Crescent
Dan Deleeuw
Al Demayo
Dennis Dewaay
Jim Dickson
Jim Dickson
Robert Bruce Dickson
Tony Diep
Aafred A Disarro
Amy L Disarro
Mitch Dobrowner
David Dresher
Rob Dressel
Janet Earl
Tzarina V Edillon
John Ellingwood
Juno J. Ellis
Warren Farinia
John Paul Fasal
Steven E Fegley
Dominic Fidelibus
Brenda Finster
Kevin Fitzgerald
Andrew Form
Crys Forsyth-smith
Lucas Foster
Michael Fottrell
Bruce L. Fowler
Wendi Friedman
Marva Fucci
Jan Garner
Duffy Gaver
Tom Gibson
Nick Glennie-smith
Nick Glennie-smith
Jennifer Good
Eric Gotthelf
John E Gray
Shai Greenberg
Harry Gregson-williams
Rhonda Gunner
Randy Gunter
Sean Hargreaves
Barbara Harris
Matthew Harrison
Hendrik Hartono
Jerry Heiss
Richard P Henrick
Richard P Henrick
John Hess
John Hinkle
Dennis Hoffman
Richard Hollander
Christopher Holt
Christopher Holt
Clayton Holt
Conn Horgan
Denise Horta
Frank Howard
Rick Howe
Paul Hulme
Fred Iguchi
Dream Quest Images
Deborah Johnson
Linden Johnson
Mark Benton Johnson
Rick Johnson
Suhail F Kafity
Will Kaplan
William B. Kaplan
Dan Kaufman
Tracy L Kettler
Vanessa Kirby
Rick Kline
Hilary Klym
Cecil Kramer
Dennis J Laine
Harry Lam
Jeffrey Laplante
Pat Latona
Ernest H Lauterio
Richard J Lawrence
Chris Lebenzon
Sean Lee
Thomas R Lee
Melonie Lewis
Brian Liberman
James Likowski
Anthony J Lipin
George L. Little
Adam Lovell
Daniel E Maltese
Christopher L. Marino
Todd Marrero
Eric L Marshall
Johnny M Martin
Victoria Martin
Pere Martinez
Charles A May
Jeanne Mccarthy
Karen Mcelhatton
James Mcgeachy
Don Mcgovern
Ladd Mcintosh
Dennis Mckeehan
Gregory L Mcmurry
Carl Mergenthaler
Mark J. Meyers
Alan Meyerson
Duane Mialiwocki
Mickey S. Michaels
F Hudson Miller
Michael Mills
Claudio Miranda
Danny Moder
Mike Moder
Tony Moffett
Gene Molnar
Craig Moore
Suzette Moriarty
James J Murakami
Peggy Names
Nick Navarro
Jim Nickerson
Mike Norville
Paul O'bryan
Kevin O'connell
Alan Oliney
Maggie Ostroff
Marlo Pabon
R J Palmer
Michael Papac
Chuck Picerni Jr.
Steve Picerni
Craig Pointes
J Michael Popovich
Larry Potoker
Gary Price
George Prior
Bob Putynkowski
Joe Ramsey
Chris Reynolds
Charlene Richards
Jay Rifkin
Edwin Rivera
Demian Rosenblatt
Shea Rowan
Catherine Rowe
Thomas J Ruffner
Greg P. Russell
Nicole Sampogna
Earl Sampson
Guy Sappington
Martin Schaer
Christopher Schiavo
Michael Schiffer
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Editing
Best Sound
Best Sound Editing
Articles
Crimson Tide
Washington was not the first choice for the role of the young, by-the-books Naval officer who clashes with a hardened veteran commander inclined to act from his well-honed instincts when their submarine, ordered into Russian waters to stop a potential nuclear attack against the U.S., loses radio contact with the topside world. Val Kilmer had been sought but declined, a decision he later regretted, and Brad Pitt was also considered. Al Pacino had been considered for Hackman's part as the ship's commander. The two roles fit well within the tradition of the Navy film format, pitting two very different men of different generations against each other in times of crisis, a plot element evident in such movies as Mutiny on the Bounty (in all its many versions) and Run Silent, Run Deep (1958).
There is a direct reference to the latter film in a scene in which the crew quizzes each other about submarine movies. That bit was purportedly written by Quentin Tarantino, who also contributed a character name as a tribute to a former video store co-worker. Although Michael Schiffer received the only screenplay credit, several other writers were brought in at various times to punch up the script, including Robert Towne, who wrote Chinatown (1974) and Scott's other Tom Cruise movie, Days of Thunder (1990), and Steven Zaillian, an Oscar® winner for Schindler's List (1993).
Because of the mutinous actions in the plot, the U.S. Navy refused to cooperate with Scott's request to get authentic footage of a submarine in action. As luck would have it, he found out that the USS Alabama - the same ship featured in the movie (thus, the title, which is the nickname of the University of Alabama football team) - was scheduled to ship out of Pearl Harbor within days. Scott and his crew flew to Hawaii and chased the sub via yacht and helicopter for six miles with cameras running. The Alabama's commander tried to get them to clear off and finally submerged, which was exactly what Scott wanted.
The technical adviser on the picture was Captain Skip Beard, who had once served as the commanding officer of the real Alabama. He also plays a small part in the film as a member of the Board of Inquiry.
Director: Tony Scott
Producers: Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer
Screenplay: Michael Schiffer
Cinematography: Dariusz Wolski
Editing: Chris Lebenzon
Production Design: Michael White
Original Music: Hans Zimmer
Cast: Gene Hackman (Capt. Frank Ramsey), Denzel Washington (Lt. Commander Ron Hunter), Matt Craven (Lt. Roy Zimmer), George Dzundza (Chief of the Boat), Viggo Mortensen (Lt. Peter Ince).
C-116m. Letterboxed.
by Rob Nixon
Crimson Tide
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Winner of the 1996 NAACP Image Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture (Denzel Washington).
Co-winner, along with Mel Gibson's "Braveheart" (USA/1995), of the 1996 Golden Reel Award for feature film sound editing from the Motion Picture Sound Editors. Also cited for feature film ADR editing.
Dariusz Wolski was nominated in the feature film category of the Outstanding Achievement Awards (1995) sponsored by the American Society of Cinematographers.
Released in United States Spring May 12, 1995
Released in United States on Video June 5, 1996
Released in United States 1995
Released in United States September 1995
Shown at Venice Film Festival (Opening Night) August 30 - September 9, 1995.
Shown at Deauville Film Festival (opening night) September 1-10, 1995.
Some additional photography took place in France late February 1995.
Began shooting August 15, 1994.
Completed shooting December 1, 1994.
Released in United States Spring May 12, 1995
Released in United States on Video June 5, 1996
Released in United States 1995 (Shown at Venice Film Festival (Opening Night) August 30 - September 9, 1995.)
Released in United States September 1995 (Shown at Deauville Film Festival (opening night) September 1-10, 1995.)