The friendship between a fisherman and an orphan boy disturbs others because of the dangers at sea.The friendship between a fisherman and an orphan boy disturbs others because of the dangers at sea.The friendship between a fisherman and an orphan boy disturbs others because of the dangers at sea.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 1 nomination total
Harry Cooke
- Bus Station Operator
- (uncredited)
Raymond Greenleaf
- Judge Tate
- (uncredited)
Eleanor Moore
- Secretary
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
Director Henry King continues to impress me. Having recently watched films of his as diverse as THE BRAVADOS, CAROUSEL, REMEMBER THE DAY, in DEEP WATERS I found yet another specimen of the director's versatility and expertise.
Shot in lovely B&W off the Maine seashore, DEEP WATERS contains some very realistic footage of action at sea, further enhanced by Dana Andrews and Romero looking very professional and knowledgeable as they handle boats, lobsters, and bad weather with consummate ease.
In fact, Andrews was at the top of his powers here, and this seems like a small film for such a great actor, but he goes about it manfully and wholeheartedly, and delivers a superb performance that brims with honesty.
Romero also does well as his Portuguese help who wants to turn to farming, or to mink or rabbit rearing, instead. In contrast, young Roddy McDowall likes the sea like his late father and uncle. However, he is under the charge of beautiful Jean Peters, who does not want the youngster to go to sea because of the dangers therein. Another spanner in the works is that the film opens with Peters and Andrews breaking off their engagement but clearly still feeling deeply for each other... and the wonderful Anne Revere as the no-nonsense boy's foster carer - a truly great short role.
Wonderful cinematography and editing. Well worth a watch. 7/10.
Shot in lovely B&W off the Maine seashore, DEEP WATERS contains some very realistic footage of action at sea, further enhanced by Dana Andrews and Romero looking very professional and knowledgeable as they handle boats, lobsters, and bad weather with consummate ease.
In fact, Andrews was at the top of his powers here, and this seems like a small film for such a great actor, but he goes about it manfully and wholeheartedly, and delivers a superb performance that brims with honesty.
Romero also does well as his Portuguese help who wants to turn to farming, or to mink or rabbit rearing, instead. In contrast, young Roddy McDowall likes the sea like his late father and uncle. However, he is under the charge of beautiful Jean Peters, who does not want the youngster to go to sea because of the dangers therein. Another spanner in the works is that the film opens with Peters and Andrews breaking off their engagement but clearly still feeling deeply for each other... and the wonderful Anne Revere as the no-nonsense boy's foster carer - a truly great short role.
Wonderful cinematography and editing. Well worth a watch. 7/10.
- adrianovasconcelos
- Nov 11, 2023
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhile filming, Jean Peters was met by a fan several times, who bombarded her with marriage proposals. Peters turned him down every time, but the man did not quit proposing until she informed him that marrying her would mean taking care of her family.
- Quotes
Hod Stillwell: Takes patience with a kid like that.
Mary McKay: Patience ain't my long suit!
- ConnectionsReferenced in Let's Go to the Movies (1949)
- How long is Deep Waters?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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