The Neptune Factor
The Neptune Factor, also known as The Neptune Disaster, is a 1973 science fiction film directed by Daniel Petrie, featuring underwater cinematography by Paul Herbermann. The film's special effects utilized underwater photography of miniatures with actual marine life.
Plot
Marine scientists prepare to leave their underwater ocean lab after an extended stay performing oceanographic research. An underwater earthquake interrupts their plans. Dr. Andrews enlists experimental sub captain Adrien Blake to survey the damage and rescue the oceanauts. He brings along chief diver "Mack" MacKay and Dr. Leah Jansen, fiancée of one of the scientists.Blake finds the lab has been ripped from its moorings and has tumbled down an unexplored, deep sea trench, presumably intact. With the lab's reserve air supply dwindling, the team descends into the unexplored trench and finds an incredible ecosystem populated with monstrously oversized fish.
After surviving encounters with unfriendly denizens, they find the lab partially intact, the surviving scientists breathing from scuba tanks and fending off giant, hungry eels. Diver Moulton sacrifices his life distracting the eels in order to enable the others to be rescued. The submarine returns to the surface with the two rescued scientists.
Cast
- Ben Gazzara – Commander Adrian Blake
- Yvette Mimieux – Dr. Leah Jansen
- Walter Pidgeon – Dr. Samuel Andrews
- Ernest Borgnine – Chief Diver Don MacKay
- Donnelly Rhodes – Diver Bob Cousins
- Chris Wiggins – Captain Williams
- Michael J. Reynolds – Dr. Hal Hamilton
- Mark Walker – Diver Dave Moulton
- Leslie Carlson – Brigs, Triton Radioman
- Stuart Gillard – Diver Phil Bradley
- David Yorston – Diver Stephens
Production
The film was shot from 25 September to 16 December 1972, on a budget of $2,500,000. The Canadian Film Development Corporation contributed $200,000 to the film's budget under the demand that Daniel Petrie be the director.
The nature of the Oceanlab underwater facility bears a resemblance to real-world projects of the 1960s such as the ConShelf Two project of Jacques Cousteau, NASA's NEEMO, and the US Navy SEALAB.