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Last Breath

  • 2019
  • TV-MA
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
8.5K
YOUR RATING
Last Breath (2019)
A deep sea diver is stranded on the seabed with 5 minutes of oxygen and no hope of rescue. With access to amazing archive this is the story of one man's impossible fight for survival.
Play trailer2:20
1 Video
12 Photos
Documentary

A deep sea diver is stranded on the seabed with 5 minutes of oxygen and no hope of rescue. With access to amazing archive this is the story of one man's impossible fight for survival.A deep sea diver is stranded on the seabed with 5 minutes of oxygen and no hope of rescue. With access to amazing archive this is the story of one man's impossible fight for survival.A deep sea diver is stranded on the seabed with 5 minutes of oxygen and no hope of rescue. With access to amazing archive this is the story of one man's impossible fight for survival.

  • Directors
    • Richard da Costa
    • Alex Parkinson
  • Writer
    • Alex Parkinson
  • Stars
    • Duncan Allcock
    • Kjetil Ove Alvestad
    • Stuart Anderson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    8.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Richard da Costa
      • Alex Parkinson
    • Writer
      • Alex Parkinson
    • Stars
      • Duncan Allcock
      • Kjetil Ove Alvestad
      • Stuart Anderson
    • 96User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
    • 61Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official UK Trailer
    Trailer 2:20
    Official UK Trailer

    Photos12

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    Top cast25

    Edit
    Duncan Allcock
    • Self
    Kjetil Ove Alvestad
    • Self - Chief Engineer
    Stuart Anderson
    • Self
    Glenn Brunskill
    • Self - Life Support Supervisor
    Michal Cichorski
    • Self - Dynamic Positioning Officer
    Filippo De Filippi
    • Self - DPO
    Filippo De Filippi
    • Self - DPO
    Craig Frederick
    • Self - Dive Supervisor
    Jan Geelmuyden
    • Self - Captain
    Robert Goodwin
    • Craig Frederick
    Chris Lemons
    • Self - Saturation Diver #1
    Kenny Martin
    • Dave Yuasa
    Morag Martin
    • Self - Chris Lemons' Fiancée
    Duncan Allcock
    • Self - Bellman
    Frode Peder Natvik
    • Self - Chief Officer
    Florence Parkinson
    • Self - Child (1)
    Franklin Parkinson
    • Self - Child (2)
    Artur Pienkos
    • Self - DPO Second Mate
    • Directors
      • Richard da Costa
      • Alex Parkinson
    • Writer
      • Alex Parkinson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews96

    7.68.5K
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    Featured reviews

    10gherota

    And here we go to Oscars !

    A former diver myself, i know how it is . Good money , adventure, and then bang ! Trouble... Well done the script, directorship , and all the rest of the crew . This is raw emotions, this is real life folks, not some Rambo , not some Bond... This is every day people with trouble to solve and real stories to tell that will make you cringe , laugh and cry , and all that on the camera. So, of you go to Oscars , lot !
    8Bertaut

    A great story powerfully told

    Aside from space, there can be no working environment as potentially dangerous, perilously exacting, and psychologically isolating as the ocean floor. Colloquially known as "doing sat", saturation diving is a technique to reduce decompression sickness amongst divers who work at great depths for long periods. Living in either an onboard pressurised capsule or a self-sustaining pressurised underwater habitat, divers breathe a helium-oxygen mix that prevents nitrogen narcosis, transferring to and from the work site via a pressurised diving bell. Written by Alex Parkinson and directed by Parkinson and Richard da Costa, Last Breath is the latest in the man vs. nature subgenre of documentary filmmaking. Using a mixture of talking head interviews, black box footage, camcorder material, and excellently mounted reconstructions, the film plays like an underwater survival thriller. And although the directors' insistence on building to a predictable and overly manipulated pseudo-twist undermines the seriousness of the material somewhat, with the story needing no such embellishment, this is still a superbly realised film; tense and fascinating, informatively dealing with a subject about which the vast majority of people will know next-to-nothing.

    September 18, 2012; the commercial engineering ship Bibby Topaz is 115 miles off the coast of Scotland in the North Sea, assigned with testing the safety of a drilling manifold in the Huntington Oil Field. Descending in the diving bell are the relatively inexperienced Chris Lemons, the stoic David Yuasa (so much so, his nickname is "Vulcan"), and Lemons's mentor and father-figure Duncan Allcock. As the men descend, the Topaz is hit with bad weather, although not bad enough to cancel the dive (with dive supervisor Craig Frederick explaining, "we were at the limits of diving, but it wasn't undivable"). As Lemons and Yuasa begin working, Allcock remains in the bell to feed out the divers' "umbilicals"; a mass of cables that brings them warm water, light, and oxygen, and keeps them connected to the Topaz's computer and AV systems. At a depth of 300 feet, in pitch blackness, with ten times atmospheric pressure and temperatures just above freezing, without an umbilical, a diver can't last long. With the Topaz locked into position by its Dynamic Positioning (DP) system, everything is going well until the system inexplicably fails, something no one on the boat had ever seen happen. With winds now reaching 35 knots, causing 18-foot swells, the Topaz quickly begins to drift out of position, dragging the bell with it, which in turn drags the men via their umbilicals. Frederick immediately orders Lemons and Yuasa back to the bell, but Lemons's umbilical snags on the manifold, and after being pulled taut, eventually snaps. With only five minutes of emergency oxygen in his reserve tanks, and cut off from all contact with the bell and the surface, his crewmates are horrified to realise it will take them at least 30 minutes to return to their position and try to find him. That's if they can even regain control of the Topaz's DP at all.

    Although the talking head interviews are a little flat, the rest of Last Breath looks great, with the reconstructions so well done (it helps that the actual participants play themselves) that they blend seamlessly with the footage shot from the divers' helmet-cams and the Topaz's cameras. The film opens with "first-person" camcorder footage of Lemons giving a tour of the Topaz, explained naturally insofar as he and his fiancée, Morag Martin, tended to send one-another videos rather than writing emails or letters. This inculcates the audience immediately into the milieu, insofar as Lemons is literally explaining the workings of the job, especially important in introducing the concept of saturation diving. Once the repair begins, the film adopts an almost pseudo-science-fiction tone, with the foregrounding of unfamiliar equipment and complex ship computer systems, reminding me of something like The Abyss (1989) or Leviathan (1989).

    Also aesthetically important is the score by Paul Leonard-Morgan. Is he aping Hans Zimmer? Absolutely. But there are worse composers to emulate, and it's still an extremely effective score, a little overwrought in places, but it does its job admirably, especially in a scene which sees Yuasa set out to try to find Lemons, with Parkinson and Da Costa using Yuasa's narration over shots of each interviewee silently reflecting on the incident, and Morgan's evocative score swelling in the background.

    The film's structure is both its greatest strength and, perhaps, it's most significant failing. It's difficult to discuss this aspect without spoilers, but essentially, Parkinson and Da Costa introduce a twist of sorts in the last act, and the documentary then literally rewinds to give us the perspective of an interviewee we haven't seen up to this point. It's both an interesting and irritating technique; interesting insofar as you don't usually see that kind of structural trickery in a documentary, irritating because it's wholly unnecessary. The directors would have been better served to simply trust in the strength of their story, which is more than able to stand on its own, sans embellishments. And although it isn't as damaging as a similar example in Three Identical Strangers (2018), primarily because the surrounding material is handled more competently, with less crass emotional manipulation, it is nevertheless an ill-advised technique to introduce in a form supposed to eschew sensationalism and narrative chicanery. This is compounded by the fact that it's easy to see it coming, and anyone who spends more than 20 seconds looking into the film will have the twist spoiled, rendering it pointless at best, distracting at worst; running the risk of lessening the impact of the psychological effects that the incident had on the people involved. On the other hand, there's no denying that the structure adds to the mounting tension, I'm just not 100% convinced that the trade-off is worth it.

    This misstep notwithstanding, Last Breath is an excellent piece of documentary filmmaking. Although it's not quite up to the dizzying standards of something like One Day in September (1999), Bus 174 (2002), Touching the Void (2003), or Under the Wire (2018), there's still a lot to recommend it. Combining elements of the survival documentary subgenre with the aesthetic tropes of the submarine/submersible movie, the film admirably conveys what for these men is a normal working day; claustrophobia, isolation, an unforgiving environment. Cogently depicting the very strong bonds that form in such circumstances, the film presents a group of very likeable people who have as much respect for one another as they do reverence for the ocean in which they ply their trade. In one respect, it's a story of blue-collar solidarity, in another, it's a slick thriller. Providing plenty of material for the audience with which to empathise, Last Breath is as worth checking out for its quieter human elements as it is for its grandiose struggle against-the-odds storyline.
    10rivanerakaren

    Wow just wow

    One of the best true life documentaries i've ever seen. Couldn't take my eyes off the screen. Please watch this, you definitely won't be disappointed I'll always remember this one.
    8anamc-893-389072

    Fascinating

    Dramatic, without cinematic embellishment. Last Breath provides a rare look at a little known profession and an unemotional recounting of heroism after a catastrophic technological failure.
    8Calicodreamin

    Incredible Documentary

    An amazing story and a really well done documentary. The story is told in a really fantastic manner, with both real footage and some dramatizations, with the actual crew members involved in the saturation diving incident.

    It really keeps you in the moment and involved the story. Providing thorough descriptions of the event with first hand accounts.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The vessel in the picture is known as BIBBY TOPAZ, a Norwegian-flagged, 105 meter offshore support vessel built in 2007. Her International Maritime Organization (IMO) identification number is 9382815 (shown clearly on the chart display at 31 and 45 minutes into the film).
    • Connections
      Referenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 786: A Glitch in the Matrix + Greenland (2021)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 7, 2019 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Belgium
      • Sweden
    • Official site
      • Official Facebook
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Останній подих
    • Filming locations
      • Scotland, UK
    • Production companies
      • MetFilm Production
      • Floating Harbour
      • Umedia
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $29,319
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 30 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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