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00:00The End
00:33That's it, wear it out nice and easy
00:42What's the depth, please?
00:44Five, four, zero fathoms
00:46Is that all?
00:47We also like speed, but not at the expense of safety
01:02How far is he now?
01:04Five, four, six
01:05Six, fathoms, sir
01:06Anything wrong?
01:08Sonar's been picking up echoes
01:09Of what?
01:10Whales, in full migration
01:12Veering this way
01:14That could be what wrecked your deep sea lab
01:17Captain, this is sonar
01:18Whales approaching
01:19Vering 070
01:21Range 5,000 yards and closing fast
01:24That's close enough for me
01:25I'm aborting the dive
01:26Chief, stop the winch
01:27Stop engine
01:28No, please, you can't
01:30Admiral, you can't
01:32It's too risky
01:32Bring it up, Chief, fast
01:34Full reverse
01:49Hello, Alpha One
01:52Come in, Alpha One
01:54The dive is aborted
01:55We're bringing you up
01:58What does he say?
01:59Please stop talking in English
02:00He's saying a lot of stuff in Russian
02:01I can't make it out
02:02Let me see
02:03Just a minute, ma'am
02:04It's all right, Chief
02:05Better talk
02:11Alexei, Katya
02:13Nothing will be calm
02:14Nothing will be calm
02:15The ship will be calm
02:16Captain, this is sonar
02:18The whales are all around us
02:19And moving fast
02:20A couple of them are starting to die
02:21Rig for possible collision
02:23Get that bell up in a hurry
02:24Rescue team
02:26Lay down at the aft missile room
02:27On the double
02:52Voyage to the bottom of the sea
03:01Starring Richard Basehart
03:06David Hedison
03:15Voyage to the bottom of the sea
03:41The bell is approaching the hull, Captain
03:42Open the belly hatch
03:43And prepare to take her aboard
03:44Right, sir
04:06Skipper
04:08Look at this
04:13There's no need for you to watch this
04:16Okay, Koloski
04:17Crack the hatch
04:22Come on, move, Koloski
04:26Take it easy
04:27Easy now
04:50How long will it take?
04:52How long will what take?
04:53To fix the damage
04:56Get ready for a new dive
04:58There's no time to talk about another dive
05:01Don't you ever expect to accept some risk?
05:05Only when necessary
05:07The bell has to be repaired
05:09Then there's a problem of picking just the right man for the dive
05:13When the bell is repaired, I'll go
05:40When will it be ready?
05:41It's ready now, ma'am
05:43At least it's ready for testing
05:45At least it's ready for testing
05:46How long will that take?
05:48I guess you have to get with Daddy on that
05:51Daddy?
05:52Who else?
05:53You take this elevator down too soon and it's a wipeout for all hands
05:57You dig?
06:01That young man, what dialect does he speak?
06:04Hey, ma'am
06:05That's Riley
06:08He's a surfer
06:10Surfer is one of the United States
06:11Well, yes, ma'am
06:13It's a state of being like way out
06:17I see
06:19You seem to be in need of an interpreter, Doctor
06:24Admiral, why is there delay in testing?
06:27We're waiting for the whales to clear out of the test area
06:30You know as well as I do that when they're migrating, they have a one-track mind
06:34They don't go around here, they go right through
06:37How soon?
06:38At the end of this week, at the earliest
06:40Impossible
06:41Dr. Markova, we're scientists, we're not guinea pigs
06:44We don't ask a man to lay his life on the line unless every avoidable risk has been eliminated
06:50Perhaps in your country, not in mine
06:54You have my sympathy
06:56I don't want your sympathy
06:59Only cooperation
07:02Once before I went over your head to my government
07:05And yours
07:07I'm ready to do it again
07:09Doctor, you've seen the results of one collision with a whale
07:12Well, if you've been a little more patient than your colleague, you'd still be alive
07:16Alexis was more than a colleague
07:19He was my very good friend
07:29This is a joint project
07:33With the cost of how many more lives?
07:37What will be the cost in lives one day
07:39If we don't go back now, before it's too late
07:43But be realistic, Doctor
07:45A few more days and we may do it safely
07:47A few more days
07:49Hundreds of migrating whales will have passed through this area
07:52I doubt very much if there'd be enough left of our laboratory to put into a teacup
07:58We must salvage what we can at any cost
08:02If you are too tender-hearted to risk a man
08:05I shall go myself
08:16Kowalski
08:17Would you volunteer to go down in this thing as it stands?
08:21Sir?
08:24Are you asking me or
08:26Telling me?
08:28Just asking
08:37Yes, sir, I would
08:39All right
08:40You've got yourself a pilot
08:44Thank you very much
08:45No, no, not him
08:47Me
08:55The great sperm well
08:58Equipped by nature with a homing device
09:00That makes you sooner look like a primitive child's toy
09:07For the first time we will have a chance to learn how it functions
09:10And how to adapt lessons for use either in submarines
09:13Or for the automatic harvesting of giant underwater crops
09:19Doesn't that excite you at all?
09:22You know perfectly well that it does
09:26Perhaps you resent sharing this work with my country
09:30Oh, it may be that, um, as yet we don't need it quite as desperately as you do
09:37You call yourself a scientist?
09:39Why, even this submarine of yours is nothing but a horse and buggy
09:43Compared to what could be achieved within a few years
09:47If bureaucratic thunderheads like yourself
09:50Weren't always shivering about the possible loss of a human life
09:55We'll call it a weakness if you like
09:57But we happen to believe that every life is important
10:01Admiral, this is a war we are fighting
10:03A war to keep up with the population explosion
10:06Before it wipes us all off the map
10:09Dr. Markova, I've been fighting this, uh, war of yours
10:13At least as long as you have
10:14But I also know that each time there's an accident or a casualty
10:18It sets us back far more than if we'd waited until it was safe to proceed
10:23Admiral, this is the exec
10:24All systems ready to lower away
10:27Ready
10:28Anytime you are
10:35Chip, how close are we to the undersea lab?
10:39Pathometer reading 930, straight down
10:42Very well, fill the airlock
10:44Pressure, 1.5 atmospheres
10:46Pressure, 1.5 atmospheres
10:49Aye, sir
10:51Ever been in the bathysphere, underwater?
10:54Alexis was the adventurous one
10:56I was strictly love and test tube
10:57But from now on I'll be both
11:01But you have to realize we'll be down there at least three and a half hours
11:04Now once we're down, no matter what happens
11:06There's no quick way we can get back to the surface
11:09You have time to back out
11:11All right
11:11Got it
11:17Go and go and go and go now
11:38Thank you
11:53Water!
11:58Ah, use an umbrella.
12:02I think...
12:03No, the pressure on the outside is squeezing the two halves together so tightly,
12:08it's forcing all the remaining moisture out of the joints.
12:10Of course, if the pressure should increase beyond a certain point...
12:25They're out of visual range now.
12:27Pick it up on sonar.
12:29Aye, sir.
12:30Sweep radius one mile.
12:31Report anything large enough to make even a smudge on the screen.
12:33You understand?
12:34Yes, sir.
12:35Now, as soon as he reports a blip, you try and pick it up on visual.
12:38Aye, sir.
13:07Can you go any lower?
13:09What?
13:11Uh-huh.
13:26Seaview calling Apple One. Urgent. Repeat. Urgent.
13:30Go ahead, Seaview.
13:31We're picking up a blip on sonar. It could be a whale. A big one.
13:35How close?
13:35Less than a mile.
13:39Headed which way?
13:40Straight at you, from the looks of it.
13:42Well, keep tracking up.
13:44Aye, sir, but it seems to be traveling at a fantastic speed.
13:47How fast?
13:48What's its speed?
13:53Estimated 50 knots, sir.
13:56I know this sounds unbelievable, Admiral, but it's an estimated 50 knots.
14:00I believe you. Haul us back up.
14:02No, only one more minute. I must have a full report of the damage.
14:06Another time.
14:07There won't be another time. You know they won't.
14:10Another day and all this will be destroyed.
14:12Sorry.
14:30Seaview to Apple One.
14:31Whale within 900 yards and closing fast.
14:35Admiral.
14:37Yes, Lee?
14:38I'm going to expel 100 gallons of shark repellent.
14:40Now, it won't scare him off, but a big blind him just long enough to miss you.
14:44You better wait till he gets close.
14:46Right.
14:49Depth 410. Keep it steady.
14:51Aye, aye, sir.
14:52Missile room? This is the captain.
14:54Chief Sharkey here, Captain.
14:55Load 100 gallons of shark repellent. Number 3 tube. Expel on signal.
15:00Aye, aye, sir.
15:08Ready to expel, Skipper.
15:14All right.
15:16Let it go.
15:16Go.
15:18All right.
15:27Let it go.
15:32Go.
15:50Brace yourself.
16:03Go.
16:04Go.
16:10All right.
16:16Go.
16:18Go.
16:20Go.
16:20Go.
16:21Go.
16:21Go.
16:22Go.
16:23Go.
16:33The End
17:00Crash dive. Set a pursuit course and overhaul that whale.
17:04All right, sir. Prepare to dive.
17:34We're at flank speed now, catching up. Can we put a torpedo in them?
17:37No. If we kill a whale, they're finished too.
17:40You don't believe they're still alive in that thing? They couldn't be.
17:42Why not? The bell's watertight, isn't it? They've got oxygen. There's still a chance. A good one.
17:47He knows we're after him. He's trying an evasive action.
17:50All right, stay with him. No matter what he tries, you keep on his tail. I'm going to miss him.
17:54All right, sir.
18:13Range 870. 870.
18:17Number two. Delayed action.
18:19Ready to load, sir.
18:20Load the warhead with 500 cc's of anodyne.
18:22We've got it right here, Skipper.
18:23Now, wait a minute. Make it three-quarters strength.
18:25I don't want to paralyze the whale completely.
18:27He'd sink like a rock and we'd never see him again.
18:29Aye, aye, sir. Three-quarters strength it is.
18:30Rally, load the warhead.
18:33Skipper.
18:35But how do we get the Admiral out of there?
18:37We go in after him.
18:38How else?
18:39Will you see Kowalski?
18:42Man, that'll make writing a hot tube seem like kid stuff.
18:54Range 75 yards and closing fast.
19:01At 50 yards. Give orders to fire.
19:04Right.
19:09Range 65 yards.
19:1455 yards.
19:16Range 50 yards.
19:2048.
19:2145.
19:24Now!
19:25Fire two.
19:27Fire two.
19:29Fire two.
19:30Fire two.
19:31Fire two.
19:32Fire two.
19:34Fire two.
19:36Fire two.
19:38Fire three.
19:42Fire two.
19:45Fire two.
21:58Do you have the slightest idea of where we are?
22:18There is no whale now in existence big enough to swallow this.
22:25The Arcteus city.
22:27Long ago extinct.
22:30Well, to revive a terrible joke, you know it and I know it, but perhaps he doesn't.
22:36After all, our ancestors weren't skeptical about the story of Jonah.
22:40They knew that there were fish big enough to swallow a man.
22:44Ancient history.
22:46Myths.
22:47Sorry.
22:48I didn't mean to taunt you with a book you've never read.
22:51The Bible?
22:52I've read it.
22:53I am not ignorant.
22:56Jonah, of course, was a very poor sailor.
22:58Though perhaps he would have made a good admiral.
23:09How do we get out?
23:11We can't sit here and wait.
23:16I thought a few moments ago the whale suddenly quieted down.
23:21They may have just gone to sleep, but on the other hand, someone might have put him to sleep.
23:28Even if they have put him out for a moment.
23:31How will you men get us out of here?
23:34Before the air gauge hits zero.
23:47Now this is the cross section of the whale's anatomy.
23:52Do we go right into them, sir?
23:55Pass those teeth and that's right, right in here.
23:59And that's wild.
24:01Sir.
24:03Are just the three of us enough?
24:05Oh, I think so, Kowalski.
24:07You, Riley and myself.
24:32You, Riley and myself.
24:33Large whale dead ahead.
24:34Collision course.
24:36Evasive action.
24:37Hard left rudder.
24:38Man, dig that fish.
24:40Brace yourselves.
25:06All systems and emergency power.
25:09Steady as you go.
25:11We better keep dodging.
25:12No.
25:12Keep on his tail.
25:13I'm trying to beat him.
25:14It's the only way to make sure he won't sink.
25:18Missile room.
25:18This is the captain.
25:19Tube number four.
25:21Stand by the fire.
25:30Fire four.
25:50He's down on the ledge quite as a baby.
25:54Hard right rudder.
25:57Come about in a full 360 degree turn.
26:15The cable in position?
26:16Yes, sir.
26:17A titanium cable with a five-inch hook.
26:19You'll find it right next to the airlock outside.
26:21It's light, but good and strong, sir.
26:24Good.
26:27All systems normal.
26:28Have a man stand by the winch with a fire hose.
26:31Just in case the friction on the cable heats it up too fast.
26:34We'll handle everything on the sensor.
26:36You ready?
26:37Aye, sir.
26:37Let's go, Skipper.
26:38What's the pressure in the airlock?
26:39One point four seven.
26:40Very well.
26:42We have perfect trim.
26:44You'll be able to swim right into the jaws.
26:45Well, let's hope they stay open.
26:48I need to try and cut our way through a 15-foot wall of bone and blubber.
26:52Sir.
26:53Excuse me.
26:54But couldn't we keep his jaws propped open with a couple of those five-inch steel girders we got stored
26:59for collision?
27:00No, he'd snap one of those like a toothpick.
27:02Now, once we're inside, if you see him tighten his jaws, fire another charge of anesthetic.
27:07Half strength?
27:08Half strength.
27:09Just behind the skull.
27:10You got it?
27:10Right.
27:11All right.
27:11Let's get to work.
27:13Sir.
27:16Just don't you worry, sir.
27:20And you two.
27:22Just, uh, just bring back these suits in one piece.
27:26You understand?
27:27All right, Chief.
27:39Take care now.
28:06All right.
28:07Take care now.
28:33Diving party in the water.
28:35They have visual contact with the whale now.
29:06So, let's find out what the whale is being.
29:39You still have contact, Sparks?
29:41It's getting fainter.
29:42The skipper said they'd just entered the whale's jaws.
29:45Don't lose contact.
29:47I'll do my best.
30:38I'll do my best.
30:43I'll do my best.
30:50I'll do my best.
31:38I'll do my best.
31:40Missile room, tube four.
31:42Five hundred cc's anodyne, half charge.
31:44Prepare to fire.
31:45Ready on four.
31:47Fire four.
31:48Fire four.
32:10What's it?
32:40You all right?
32:43You're hurt.
32:45It's just a whack on the head, I'll survive.
32:51Air. No air.
32:56There's no shortage of oxygen yet.
32:59I can't breathe. The gauge is wrong.
33:03It's a constriction of a windpipe. They're plain scared.
33:11Get it.
33:14Take a couple of swallows of this.
33:20Swallow.
33:25Oh. Oh. Thank you.
33:36We've got to... We've got to come to a decision now.
33:39For what? How to die?
33:44There are two possibilities.
33:46We could use the rocket launcher to try to blast our way out of here.
33:50We can? Then what are we waiting for?
33:54For the last possible moment.
33:56Because the odds would be about ten to one against us.
33:59Ten to one. Percentages. Statistics.
34:02Even with your life hanging by a thread.
34:07Admiral, you are the perfect bureaucrat.
34:11Katia Markova, do you have any idea of how deep we are?
34:14Well, I don't.
34:16Even if we blasted the bell out of here with the grenade launcher, we'd still have to fight our way
34:20out.
34:21And we'd have to try to swim to the surface.
34:23If we were too deep, we'd be crushed.
34:25What's our other choice?
34:27Well, we could discharge the petroleum and the ballast tanks.
34:31Perhaps that might irritate the whale's stomach enough so that he'd try to disgorge us the way...
34:37The way the great fish did to Jonah after three days.
34:42I don't want to tend my life on the accuracy of a fairy tale.
34:47Well, actually, Jonah wasn't the only man to ever make it back to the belly of a whale.
34:53More fairy tales.
34:54No, no, no.
34:55That's a pretty well-documented case about an English sailor named James Bartley.
35:00And he spent 24 hours in the stomach of a sperm whale back in 1891.
35:06And he got out alive, bleached, white as a bone, and quite mad.
35:14Charming.
35:15Well, which is it to be?
35:18Neither one.
35:19For the moment, I prefer to wait.
35:21For what?
35:22For Captain Crane to come and send a squad of volunteers right into the jaws of a whale?
35:28Well, what would you suggest that we do?
35:30Bury it out?
35:32Launch the explosive.
35:33Have done with it.
35:37But I'm afraid that if we launch the explosives, we might kill anyone attempting to rescue us.
35:45You told me your people believe every life is precious.
35:51Then why should they risk a single life for ours?
35:55Yes, that's just the point.
35:56But it's because every life is important that they'll risk anything to try to save us.
36:15Have you re-established radio contact with the Captain?
36:18We were reading each other five by five till the whale closed its jaws.
36:21I guess those radio signals got smothered in all the tons of blubber.
36:24Keep trying.
36:25Yes, sir.
36:41No!
36:42Put the knife away!
36:44He'll be squeezed to death!
36:45Another pain reaction like the last one and we'll all be dead!
36:57Wait a minute!
36:58I'll use a shortwave unit.
37:00Ultrasonic waves!
37:02It'll relax the muscular constriction!
37:15Wait!
37:16What's your risk?
37:20Oh!
37:22Ah!
37:22Hmm.
37:26Oh!
37:28Oh!
37:29Oh!
37:30Oh!
37:30Oh!
37:31Oh!
37:32Oh!
37:34Oh!
37:55Now wait here whatever happens don't make a move for at least five minutes either of you unless I signal
38:1422 minutes left
38:18So it's in
38:20It's still no sign
38:23What sort of a sign were you expecting?
38:27Too bad your book of Jonah wasn't more specific
38:31About the procedure he employed
38:33Oh well it is it's quite specific
38:37Really?
38:39He simply and quite sensibly I suppose
38:45Addressed himself to the author of his temporary misfortune
38:52When I was cast mere into the depth into the heart of the seas
38:57I went down to the bottoms of the mountains
38:59The earth with her bars closed upon me forever
39:04Yet hast thou brought up my life from the pit
39:07Of course all we have is this side of the story
39:11Oh he was called Jonah Ben Amatai
39:12The son of the truthful one
39:16He must have been pretty good at his job
39:19Otherwise the lord wouldn't have sent him to try to save the corrupt city of Nineveh
39:25Just as you went down to the heart of the seas
39:27Just as you went down to the heart of the seas to try to save your laboratory
39:30And I will save it
39:36Now you've done it
39:42We've got 16 minutes of air left
39:4316 minutes to get this thing fixed
39:54I can't get my foot loose
39:59I'll cut you loose
40:01You heard what the captain said
40:02Put that knife away
40:04The captain ain't here now
40:06Better wait till he comes back
40:13Call it
40:14You want to make this a real flake out?
40:16You want to die here?
40:18You hurt that whale and everybody's gonna die
40:21No, no
40:36The captain has 13 more minutes of oxygen left
40:39He's still alive
40:42Any contact with the captain?
40:44No, sir
40:45Keep trying
40:47Another 10 or 12 minutes and they might as well turn back
40:51If they can
41:17The bell's up ahead
41:19Pass that bell
41:21What happened?
41:23My foot
41:23I can't get it loose
41:26Leave me that ultrasonic
41:32What's wrong with it?
41:34I don't know
41:35I'll have to use something else
41:37Try to force a reaction
41:38But you said
41:39We'll have to risk it
41:40You better brace yourself
41:41The pain's out to make him do some violent things
41:44Inside and out
41:53Stand some billionimus
41:55You better brace all this shit
42:01You better brace
42:05What?
42:11All this shit
42:14Maybe
42:15You better brace you
42:15Do couple of guards
42:29I dropped the cable.
42:31The hook dug in.
42:33It's okay.
42:36Drop the valve here.
42:38Now while we're still alive.
42:44We've only got seven more minutes, Riley.
42:46Can you free that hook?
42:48Can't budge it.
42:49Too much tension.
42:50It won't help to get back to the valve if we can't hook it up.
42:53Now keep trying.
43:08Can't you do it any quicker?
43:16Can't you do it any longer?
43:16Six minutes left to go.
43:18Wouldn't it take us almost that long to reach the surface?
43:21Yeah.
43:22If we're blown free.
43:24If we can manage to scramble out of the barrel.
43:26And if we're not too deep to fight our way back to the surface.
43:29And if we are too deep?
43:31You better follow the example of Jonah.
43:35What's that?
43:37Pray.
43:39Hard.
43:42Will it work now?
43:44Keep away.
43:45Do you want to wait until we're out of oxygen?
43:48Frankly, I'm still willing to gamble.
43:50There's someone out there trying to get to us.
43:53Someone who'd be killed if we fire this too soon.
44:02Got it, Skipper.
44:04Do it.
44:05Hold it.
44:29Looks like we'll have to blast our way out after all.
44:32Just hope we can make it.
44:33Now the explosion should blow us free from the whale the way an ejector seat does in a jet airplane.
44:39Just hope it doesn't blow out these portholes too.
44:44I suppose if there had been a rescue party.
44:47It's too late for that now.
44:53Admiral.
44:54Yeah.
44:56The man who died in this bell, Alexis.
45:01Next month we were to be married.
45:05Before he went down, he said to me, almost his last words, people like us, like you, we should be
45:17friends.
45:32Now take a deep, deep breath.
45:34On a count to three, hold it as long as you possibly can.
45:41One, two, three.
46:14One, two, three.
46:38Get out the cable, fast. Don't lock the drum until he's at 2,000 feet of cable.
47:07Did you get the cable attached?
47:09Aye, aye, sir.
47:24Get out of here.
47:43All right, lock the wood. Lock it.
47:52Do we follow him, Mr. Morton?
47:54No. We'll try to reel him in and hope he doesn't break the cable. Start reeling in the cable at
48:003 feet per second.
48:01Call me if you feel him fighting. Aye, aye, sir. Reel in 3 feet per second.
48:36He's starting to fight him.
48:42Keep reeling him in.
48:55Can you reel him in, Chief?
48:58I don't know, sir. He's fighting it pretty hard.
49:01Keep pulling him in. Yes, sir.
49:10Get out of here.
49:23Slow it. Let me be out.
49:50down there that's right ma'am particularly your impressions my impressions were recorded long ago
49:56recorded i went down to the bottoms of the mountains the earth with her bars
50:03closed upon me forever yet as thou brought up my life from the pit
50:20well
50:25yeah
50:26yeah
50:26yeah
50:30yeah
50:31yeah
50:33yeah
50:33yeah
50:35yeah
50:47yeah
50:50yeah
50:51yeah
50:53yeah
50:56yeah
51:01The End
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