Goliath Awaits (1981)
Actors:
Jean Marsh (actress),
Jeanette Nolan (actress),
Irene Hervey (actress),
John Carradine (actor),
Kirk Cameron (actor),
Eddie Albert (actor),
John Ratzenberger (actor),
John McIntire (actor),
Christopher Lee (actor),
Mark Harmon (actor),
Robert Forster (actor),
Alan Fudge (actor),
Frank Gorshin (actor),
George Duning (composer),
Emma Samms (actress),
Plot: During World War II the passenger liner "Goliath" is sunk by a German submarine. Portions of the ship's hull remain airtight, and some of the passengers and crew survive. Over the decades they build a rigidly regulated society completely isolated from the surface world, until in contemporary times a diving team begins to explore the wreck.
Keywords: 1940s, closed-society, diver, murder, ocean, ocean-liner, sea, ship, ship-wreck, sunken-ship
Genres:
Adventure,
Drama,
Romance,
Sci-Fi,
Thriller,
Taglines: Miracle of survival or underwater hell? 40 years ago it sank, now... Goliath Awaits. The depth of danger is measured in blood...
Quotes:
Seth: I don't need a list to recognize this one, Peter. 1000 feet long, three stacks. Only one ship she could be. Goliath.
Paul Ryker: [tapping message from inside Goliath] Goliath. On board, 337. Danger. Air toxic. Beware McKenzie.
Adm. Wiley Sloan: 337 people... after 40 years? I'll be damned.
John McKenzie: When the torpedoes struck, I was aft in the main engine room, with Dan Wesker. Somehow, we made our way forward to the temporary safety of the air pocket. The people had panicked, were trying to reach the top deck unaware that it was now completely underwater. Out of a total of almost 1900 passengers & crew, only 240 managed to survive. The captain and most of the ship's officers were gone, and the rest of us were faced with certain death as our oxygen supply ran out. But then I remembered the auxilliary engine room forward. If anything was to be done, it would have to be there. We made our way down to G Deck. The lights were on, which indicated that the generators were still operating. But the key was the Scotch boilers. They had to be kept fueled, and although Goliath had almost a million barrels of oil in her bunkers when she went down, we had to determine how much was left, and whether the pipes that carried it were still intact. The original venting system had been destroyed, so it was necessary to put on gas masks to protect us against carbon monoxide until we could find a way later to vent it overboard. Luckily, most of the bunkers were still undamaged as were the conduit pipes, and those that went, we later repaired. By my calculation, we had less than 48 hours to replenish our oxygen supply. Water being composed of two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen, the problem was solved for the time being by electrolysis, which separates the two. But by doing so, we were also releasing hydrogen, which was extremely volatile and could blow the ship apart. It became necessary to vent it outwards through the hull. By now, the pressure inside Goliath had equalized with the pressure outside, so the water was held back. After many hours, the job was finished, which meant we had some air to breathe. We had a shipment of barrel lime aboard, which we spread around to soak up the carbon dioxide we were breathing out, and until we could later construct a more permanent air scrubbing system. There was plenty of food & water aboard, and the forward staterooms were intact. Now that the crucial problems had been temporarily solved, the people settled down... to wait.::Dr. Sam Marlowe: And here we are.
Peter Cabot: Then you tell me why no one has challenged him to change his system.::Paul Ryker: How? With armed guards walking around & people believing how great he is? You'd end up in jail if you did. Like me. Or worse. You suddenly die of an affliction peculiar to Goliath. Mysterious affliction called Palmer's disease. And always fatal.
John McKenzie: I propose a deal. If your admiral will call off this ill-advised rescue mission, I will deliver this packet to you immediately.::Cmdr. Jeff Selkirk: Otherwise?::John McKenzie: Otherwise, I will reveal its contents to the entire world.::Cmdr. Jeff Selkirk: Mr. McKenzie, you're a great man, sir. A lesser man could never have done what you've done and hold it all together as long as you have. However, your bargain is beneath contempt. The President of the United States will reject it. Admiral Sloan will reject it. And I for them, here and now, reject it.
John McKenzie: [to Dan Wesker] We've created a very special world down here, you and I. And I don't intend to let it die.
Peter Cabot: For years, he's been murdering people, and you've known about it.::Dr. Goldman: No.::Dr. Sam Marlowe: Yes, you have, and you've condoned it.::Dr. Goldman: My father... he started it all. The Supreme Council insisted. When he died, I didn't want to know. I couldn't face the truth.::Dr. Sam Marlowe: So you let Wesker & his thugs do it for you. Just like the Nazis.::Dr. Goldman: It was a matter of survival! There were too many mouths to feed.
Peter Cabot: Sir, the only thing that has happened down here is that you have been responsible for the death of innocent people.::John McKenzie: Have I? [produces a top-secret packet intended for the President of the United States] These are the papers that your government wanted so badly. The real infamy is here... in these pages. Your presidential envoy was afraid that Britain would not be able to stand up against the German assault. So, in order not to take the risk that the Royal Navy would be lost to Germany, he recommended to your President that the United States Navy would open fire on the British ships. And sink them, regardless of any loss of life. The document, and the maps with it showing all the different locations of all the different British vessels wasn't delivered, as you know. And England survived. So who is the greater criminal? Why should I believe that life up there in your world is any better than life down here on Goliath?
Ronald Bentley: [explaining his reason for staying behind] You people mentioned you watched my old films on television. That was the real me... young, vibrant, everybody's hero. The way I want to be remembered. Every good actor knows when it's time to get off. But, do let my agent know, will you, old chap?::Cmdr. Jeff Selkirk: Yes, sir. The William Morris Agency.::Ronald Bentley: You remembered! I always did have trouble with my lines. Much preferred swordplay.
Screaming Mimi (1958)
Actors:
Reed Howes (actor),
Frank Marlowe (actor),
Paul E. Burns (actor),
Thomas Browne Henry (actor),
Hank Mann (actor),
Heinie Conklin (actor),
Philip Carey (actor),
Sayre Dearing (actor),
John L. Cason (actor),
Franklyn Farnum (actor),
Terry Frost (actor),
Paul E. Burns (actor),
Alan Gifford (actor),
Sol Gorss (actor),
David McMahon (actor),
Plot: Exotic dancer Virginia Wilson sees a man get shot moments after he tries to knife her in a shower, so she goes to Dr. Greenwood a psychiatrist for therapy. He falls in love with her and takes over her life, although she insists on continuing her career at the El Madhouse nightclub. The club's tough owner is none other than Gypsy Rose Lee who plays 'Gypsy' and sings an incredibly bad song ("Put the Blame on Mame") when Virginia is late one night. The traumatized Virginia is suspected of a series of murders. Each victim had purchased a contorted sculpture of a woman called the Screaming Mimi, which was created by her step-brother Charlie who was also responsible for shooting her attacker. It's up to a handsome columnist Bill Sweeny to figure it all out.
Keywords: ambulance, apartment, attack, backstage, based-on-novel, brother, dance, dancer, dancing, dog
Genres:
Drama,
Film-Noir,
Thriller,
Taglines: Suspense around every curve! The strip-tease murder case!
Quotes:
Bill Sweeney: How tall are you, Yolanda?::Virginia Wilson aka Yolanda Lange: With heels or without?::Bill Sweeney: With anyone. Me, for instance.