The Return of Captain Nemo / The Amazing Captain Nemo | |
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DVD cover bearing the film's theatrical title: The Amazing Captain Nemo
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Based on | Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea novel by Jules Verne |
Written by | Norman Katkov Preston Wood Robert C. Dennis William Keys Mann Rubin Robert Bloch Larry Alexander |
Directed by | Alex March Paul Stader |
Starring |
José Ferrer Burgess Meredith Mel Ferrer Lynda Day George |
Music by | Richard LaSalle |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of episodes | 3 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Irwin Allen |
Producer(s) | Arthur Weiss |
Cinematography | Lamar Boren |
Editor(s) | Bill Brame |
Running time | 180 minutes (television) 102 minutes (theatrical) |
Production company(s) | Irwin Allen Productions Warner Bros. Television |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | March 8 – 22, 1978 |
The Return of Captain Nemo (theatrical title: The Amazing Captain Nemo) is a 1978 American science fiction adventure television miniseries directed by Alex March and Paul Stader (the latter directed the underwater sequences), and loosely based on characters and settings from Jules Verne's novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. It was written by six screenwriters including Robert Bloch and has been considered an attempt by producer Irwin Allen to duplicate the success of his Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea.
During naval exercises in 1978, Captain Nemo (played by José Ferrer) is found in suspended animation aboard his submarine Nautilus beneath the Pacific Ocean. Revived by members of a modern-day US Government agency, Nemo is persuaded to rescue United States interests and in so doing battles Professor Cunningham, a typical mad scientist played by Burgess Meredith.
Not originally aired as a movie, it was divided into three parts ("Deadly Blackmail", "Duel in the Deep" and "Atlantis Dead Ahead") expanded somewhat with about 45 minutes of additional footage over the three episodes to become a very brief action series. Sometimes described as a "miniseries", it was intended to be the first story-arc in an ongoing serial. Ratings were dismal, and the series never materialized.
Instead this proved to be Irwin Allen's final foray into weekly science fiction television.
Robert Bloch makes no mention of the series in his autobiography (Once Around the Bloch) but commented on it in an interview: "I did an episode for a show about five years ago which was an abortive attempt at a science-fiction series (Editor’s note: The Return of Captain Nemo). The network gave the go-ahead on it, and they were going to do a four-part story. They assigned each individual episode to a different writer. You had four writers working, neither one of them knew what the other ones were doing, and they had a three-week deadline! And it went off the air after those first four weeks." Bloch's segment (co-written with Larry Alexander) was titled "Atlantis Dead Ahead" although in the theatrical release there are no titles for individual segments of the story.