| Deep Blue | |
|---|---|
| Directed by |
Alastair Fothergill Andy Byatt |
| Produced by | Alix Tidmarsh Sophokles Tasioulis |
| Music by | George Fenton |
| Edited by | Martin Elsbury |
| Distributed by | Miramax Films |
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Release date
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Running time
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90 minutes |
| Language | English |
| Budget | £2.8 million |
| Box office | US$30 million |
Deep Blue is a 2003 nature documentary film that is a theatrical version of the 2001 BBC nature documentary series The Blue Planet. Alastair Fothergill and Andy Byatt are credited as directors, and six cinematographers are also credited. The film premiered at the San Sebastian Film Festival in Spain on September 20, 2003. It screened in over 20 territories from 2003 to 2005 and grossed over $30 million at the box office.
Deep Blue is a theatrical version of the 2001 BBC nature documentary series The Blue Planet. BBC Worldwide and Germany's Greenlight Media co-produced the film. Alastair Fothergill and Andy Byatt are credited as directors, and six cinematographers were also credited: Doug Allan, Mike deGruy, Peter Scoones, Simon King, Rick Rosenthal, and Bob Cranston. The idea for Deep Blue developed from when a shorter version of The Blue Planet was cut for The Proms in 2002 and for which George Fenton composed a score. When BBC Worldwide partnered with Greenlight Media and the latter helped raise money for the film, the filmmakers reviewed over 70,000 hours of raw footage from The Blue Planet. Ultimately, a quarter of Deep Blue consisted of footage not shown in The Blue Planet. Producer Sophokles Tasioulis said, "There's not a single cut in the movie that's the same as the TV series." The film contains only 15 lines of narrative. Filmmakers enlisted Fenton to compose the film's score, which was performed by the Berlin Philharmonic in their cinematic debut. Voiceovers were also recorded for different countries. Production of the theatrical version cost £2.8 million, while marketing and distribution cost an additional £1 million.
Footage of Deep Blue was first screened at the Cannes Film Market on May 18, 2003. It premiered at the San Sebastian Film Festival in Spain on September 20, 2003. Variety reported, "'Deep Blue' world preemed at San Sebastian to applause Saturday."