The action-thriller Sanctum, from executive producer James Cameron, follows a team of underwater cave divers on a treacherous expedition to the largest, most beautiful and least accessible cave system on Earth. When a tropical storm forces them deep into the caverns, they must fight raging water, deadly terrain and creeping panic as they search for an unknown escape route to the sea. Master diver Frank McGuire (Richard Roxburgh) has explored the South Pacific's Esa-ala Caves for months. But when his exit is cut off in a flash flood, Frank's team--including 17-year-old son Josh (Rhys Wakefield) and financier Carl Hurley (Ioan Gruffudd)--are forced to radically alter plans. With dwindling supplies, the crew must navigate an underwater labyrinth to make it out. Soon, they are confronted with the unavoidable question: Can they survive, or will they be trapped forever?
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The problem is that because everyone is so professional - or should we say "cold-minded" - the movie lacks a lot of the paranoia and claustrophobia that one would expect in a movie such as this. I think it is a bit too much of a documentary, when it could have been a terrifying thriller. I could have been scared to death, and felt the agony and pain of the trapped people. But I do not. After the movie, I feel like discussing diving lamps and survival kits. So the movie looses a lot of the potential story, because it is so technical, professional and realistic. All in all, it is a finely made and good movie, and worth the rubles. But not much more. 2