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zakruti.com » Knowledge, science, education » WIRED
Ocean Explorer Breaks Down 24 Ocean Scenes From Movies & TV

Ocean Explorer Breaks Down 24 Ocean Scenes From Movies & TV

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
Aquanaut Fabien Cousteau breaks down clips from movies and tv about ocean exploration, and explains just how accurate they really are. Are submarines really yellow like The Beatles's Yellow Submarine? What makes the Titanic shipwreck so legendary? Can sharks be as intelligent as the ones seen in Deep Blue Sea? How much was The Life Aquatic based on Jacques Cousteau? 00: 00 - Intro 00: 17 - The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou 00: 43 - Pirate of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl 01: 30 - Finding Nemo 02: 06 - The Beatles: Yellow Submarine 03: 01 - Into The Blue 04: 05 - Star Wars: Episode 1 The Phantom Menace 05: 29 - The Abyss 06: 37 - The Meg 07: 45 - Aquaman 08: 41 - Titanic 10: 01 - Open Water 10: 45 - Finding Nemo 11: 13 - Into The Blue 11: 52 - 20, 000 Leagues Under The Sea 13: 00 - Jaws 13: 20 - The Big Blue 14: 07 - Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life 14: 45 - Deep Blue Sea 15: 10 - 47 Meters Down 16: 11 - The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou 17: 12 - The Abyss 17: 52 - Men of Honor 18: 34 - Lost 19: 04 - The Day After Tomorrow
Date: 2022-07-07

Comments and reviews: 10


I'm sorry but i need to rant about the pirates of the carribean clip:
[rant/]
IT'S A BOAT.
THE DEFINING CHARACTERISTIC OF A BOAT IS THAT IT IS LIGHTER THAN THE VOLUME OF WATER IT DISPLACES.
Either it has enough buoyancy to float while containing two people, in which case they would not be able to hold it down, or it does not, in which case it is an awful boat (and certainly not made of wood.
They are displacing an enormous volume of water, and neither wood nor human bodies are denser than water (which is why both float. It would take a lot of metal weighs to keep that boat at the bottom. Exactly the same amount it would take to sink it.
[/rant]

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The liquid breathing in the Abyss is not a perfected or commercially available technology, but it is theoretically possible. In fact the scene where they put the rat in the oxygenated liquid and it breathed it was not simulated. They used actual oxygenated fluid and the rat actually breathed it. They did not use it on Ed Harris, though. While it has been shown to be feasible to breath oxygenated fluid it is not without health risks. Pneumonia in particular is a risk afterwards because it is very difficult to remove all of the fluid.
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1: 20 I would've liked if he would've mentioned that an important part of that underwater breathing is the fact, that the air bubble in the boat is actually pressurized by the water, otherwise your lungs would not be capable of expanding against the water pressure.
Like going there and breath withj through a hose to the surface you would not be able to breath in, just because the water pressure on your lungs is way to strong.

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I love your comparison of humans and sharks. people paint these beautiful creatures as monsters but in reality humans are even worse than any instinctual apex predator that are doing nothing more than one defending themselves or 2 trying to eat. There are occasional rouge animals that are injured old or otherwise impaired in almost every instance of shark attack or most carnivores that have to actively chase a meal donn that runs
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I remember reading a sci-fi book written in 1960 but set in 2013 called -Secret Under the Sea- set in an undersea lab where the characters had small -atom powered- mouthpieces that functioned as gills and allowed someone to stay underwater indefinitely, which the author predicted were-would-be? invented in the 80's. I'm still waiting.
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He's spot on about the scuba tank in Jaws. Mythbusters covered it. On the upside down boat he was right to worry about the buoyancy and the weight of the boat. Mythbusters covered that too, and it would take an enormous amount of weight to keep the boat at the bottom. Great scene, but not something you can do practically.
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I kind of wish that they showed him Underwater. It's a popcorn movie like the Meg, but I think it's a lot more grounded. Also, more people should watch it. Its basically a happy medium between Alien and Aliens, except, well, underwater. And Kristin Stewart is pretty good as the Ripley-like character.
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a iceberg sinking the Titanic is laughable. Especially when the captain ignored all warnings of not going full speed in a area that's known the be frozen. When families who opposed the rothschildren die and the families who support them get off the voyage before it ever leaves is just too much coincidence.
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I had the pleasure of meeting Jean-Michel Cousteau when I was 17 while aboard The Paul Gauguin in Tahiti. He gave me some good life advice, at the time I didn-t really appreciate the experience for what it was. Now that I-m older and wiser (the ripe age of 28) I can see how amazing that chance meeting was!
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Homeboy does NOT watch movies lol. I'm surprised he didn't specifically mention perfluorocarbon. That's what was used on Hippy's rat in The Abyss. Back when animals had it rough in the film industry. lol. I remember as a teenager watching The Abyss and thinking liquid breathing with PFC's was real.
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