Equipped with a surprisingly large and watertight IMAX camera, director Howard Hall and his crew traveled to the deep reaches of Papua New Guinea, Australia and Indonesia, in order to provide viewers with some of the most breath-taking shots of coral reef wildlife yet captured on film.
Under the Sea IMAX Overview
As the lighthearted words of comic actor Jim Carrey narrates everyday life in the coral reefs of Oceania, viewers are treated to 40 minutes of crisp and colorful shots of a multitude of exotic sea creatures. Among them we see cuttlefish, symbiotic groupings of shrimp and fish working together to build safety nests, magical looking sea dragons (think of a larger, more versatile sea horse), gobies, sea turtles, sea lions as well as everyone's toothed favorite, the Great White Shark.
By moving from one region to the next, director Hall and crew not only show us the incredible diversity permeating the underwater kingdom of the South Pacific, they also inform us how little possibility of survival remains for this multitude, due to man's overproduction of carbon dioxide which is slowly killing the coral reef, an important source of renewed material and nutrition for its indigenous population.
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