Steel Sharks (film)

Steel Sharks
Directed by Rodney McDonald
Produced by
Written by
  • Rodney McDonald
  • William C. Martell
Starring
Music by David Lawrence
Cinematography Bryan Greenberg
Edited by W. Peter Miller
Production
company
Royal Oaks Entertainment, Inc.
Release date
1997
Running time
94 minutes

Steel Sharks is a 1997 American action film directed by Rodney McDonald and starring Gary Busey, Billy Dee Williams and Billy Warlock. It concerns a group of Navy SEALs who are captured and taken aboard an Iranian submarine from which they must escape to survive. The film was released straight-to-video.[1] Several scenes involving Navy helicopter, ship, and command footage from this film were used in the production of Crash Dive, Freedom Strike, Counter Measures and Agent Red.[2]

Plot

The film opens with a news report of a revolution that has overthrown the Iranian government. This coincides with the disappearance of an American UN chemical weapons inspector, Dr. John Van Tasset (Barry Livingston), in Iraq. The US is determined to stage a rescue in the fear that he will be used to develop weapons for the new Iranian government. A Navy SEALs team is recruited for the mission, but is down a member due to illness. Enter Bob Rodgers (Billy Warlock), a young SEAL fresh out of school. The SEAL team is flown out to an aircraft carrier in the Persian Gulf where we meet Adm. Jim Perry (Billy Dee Williams) who commands the fleet and the rescue mission. The SEAL team will be dispatched from a submarine to rescue the scientist from where he is being held in Iran.

Upon arrival at the submarine Cmdr. Bill McKay (Gary Busey) is introduced and the SEALs are quickly sent off to rescue Dr. Tasset. They stalk quietly through the Iranian compound killing everyone they meet. After rescuing Dr. Tasset from an interrogation, they try to sneak back to the US submarine but are discovered by a group of soldiers that alert the entire base. They get into a gun battle where one of the members of the team is killed and the others are ultimately captured. They are taken to a new secret Iranian submarine for safe keeping.

Onboard the Iranian submarine, the leader of the SEAL team is taken to Captain Reza Lashgar (Shaun Toub) who shoots him despite the protests of others on the crew. The sonar technician aboard the US submarine detects the sound of gunshots and Cmdr. McKay begins to follow the Iranian submarine. At the same time the SEAL Team realizes they have to escape to survive and plan an ambush of the guards, which works flawlessly. They split up, one group to head straight to the escape hatch and the other to communicate their escape to the US submarine. Through this electronic communication, Cmdr. McKay is aware that the SEALs have escaped and begins to hunt the Iranian submarine to buy time. They are engaged multiple times by the submarine, but expertly evade their torpedoes. With the help of Bob Rodgers' lucky coin, both groups of SEALs are able to reach the escape hatch and leave the submarine. Cmdr. McKay deftly leads the Iranian submarine down a narrow canyon, resulting in Iranian submarine striking the canyon wall with a torpedo and being sunk by the falling debris. Enraged, Captain Lashgar blows the ballast and the Iranian submarine rises for one last attack. Knowing the SEALs are safe, Cmdr. McKay torpedoes the Iranian submarine, destroying it.

Cast

Production

Producer Andrew Stevens wrote that Gary Busey had an insurance exclusion for exposure to horse saliva while working on Steel Sharks. Fortunately for the production of the film it was "set on a submarine, so there was little likelihood of that."[3]

The US submarine in the film is named the USS Oakland and is identified as SSN-798. This submarine identifier now corresponds to the Virginia-class submarine the USS Massachusetts, which is currently under construction. According to special thanks credits given at the end of the film the USS Oakland was portrayed by the USS La Jolla (SSN-701) and USS Portsmouth (SSN-707) and the supercarrier in the film was portrayed by the USS Constellation (CV-64) and the USS Nimitz (CV-68).

Reception

The film has received a 33% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes.[4] A review by The Movie Scene gave this film 2 out of 5 stars.[5]

The film was featured in the series We Found It on Watch Instantly on Grantland.com.[6]

Noted scholar Jack Shaheen included Steel Sharks in his book Reel Bad Arabs as an example of the "bad Arab character" and draws similarities between this film and the film Navy SEALs.[7]

References

  1. Steel Sharks Review RadioTimes. John Ferguson. Retrieved: 28/05/18
  2. IMDb Connections
  3. Stevens, Andrew (2016). Producing for Profit: A Practical Guide to Making Independent and Studio Films. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-138-12105-8.
  4. Steel Sharks at Rotten Tomatoes
  5. The Movie Scene Review
  6. Grantland.com
  7. Shaheen, Jack G. (2012). Reel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People (Revised and updated ed.). New York: Olive Branch Press, Interlink Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-623-71006-4. OCLC 928572276. – originally published in 2001
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