The Hamilton Spectator

Sci-fi thriller by Hamilton filmmaker lands on Fantasy Network

‘Hell or Tide Water’ is a submarine flick with spies, killer robots and time travel

- DANIEL NOLAN SPECIAL TO THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR Daniel Nolan is a freelance writer who writes about film for The Hamilton Spectator. dannolanwr­ites@gmail.com

A Hamilton filmmaker who says he sort of stumbled into making a scifi thriller has had it picked up by an online network that would do J.R.R. Tolkien proud.

The Fantasy Network has picked up “Hell or Tide Water,” which was made by Scott Newman, a former CBC editor and Global TV documentar­y worker.

The Seatt l e - based net work, launched in 2018, is a privatelyo­wned independen­t film and TV distributi­on company for the fantasy genre. It has been called a global hub for independen­t fantasy films and series. The movie was made available Dec. 13.

“I was kind of looking at Crave or Netflix but this just seems to fit,” said Newman, 44. “It’s going to be big. They have a crowdfundi­ng aspect to the site. They are looking at series, I think it’s perfect.”

He describes his independen­tlyfinance­d movie, which has no big stars but features local talent, as a cross between “2001: A Space Odyssey,” “Under Siege” and “The Hunt for Red October.”

The plot is about a Norwegian energy company bringing oil through a British Columbia fiord in a giant submarine. There’s spies, action scenes, time travel and killer robots. The tag line on the movie poster says “Spirits Run Deep.”

The film was worked on by Amin Taghipour, a special effects technician from Iran who worked on such films as “Blade Runner 2049.”

“It was amazing,” said Newman. “I just bumped into him in Toronto. He was unemployed.”

The film was shot over 20 days in the summer of 2019 and Newman said it took him six months to edit. He filmed it at a welding firm on Frid Street — owned by his business partner Victor Bohm, who has a role in the movie — as well as on the Burlington Bay, at the Binbrook Conservati­on Area and at Digital Canaries Film Studios, which has more than 50 film sets at its Burlington Street East location.

Newman was inspired to write and make the movie after a visit to Chedoke Hospital to see its soonto-be demolished buildings, medical machines and boiler rooms. It made him think of submarines and some of his favourite movies like “Ice Station Zebra.”

“I didn’t intend to make a movie,” said Newman. “I intended to do something safer, but, obviously, art is dangerous.”

His movie has been shown on CHCH-TV twice this year. There is a two-and-a-half hour version — which Newman calls his “director’s cut” — and a 90-minute version.

Newman attended Mountview

Public School and Hill Park Secondary School. He took drama and English for one year at McMaster University and then graduated in 2001 from the media arts program at Sheridan College in Oakville.

He worked as a continuity editor on “The Red Green Show” and “Train 48” before he landed at the CBC and worked as an editor with such people as Peter Mansbridge and Wendy Mesley.

Newman is thinking about a sequel to “Hell or Tide Water.”

“The time travel at the end of the first film gives me lots of options,” he said. “I’m thinking of setting the next one 150 years in the future, so look out for more sci-fi, industrial espionage and, of course, killer robots.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY SCOTT NEWMAN ?? Actor Victor Bohm provided an electrifyi­ng performanc­e in “Hell or Tide Water,” which was written and directed by Hamilton’s Scott Newman.
PHOTOS BY SCOTT NEWMAN Actor Victor Bohm provided an electrifyi­ng performanc­e in “Hell or Tide Water,” which was written and directed by Hamilton’s Scott Newman.
 ??  ?? Left to right: Actors Michael Richard, Mark Bane, John Craig and Michelle Kathleen discussing strategy in the state room.
Left to right: Actors Michael Richard, Mark Bane, John Craig and Michelle Kathleen discussing strategy in the state room.
 ??  ?? Left to right: Actors Tony Bifano, Victor Bohm, Julia Kollek, Richard Newsome, and gaffer Jordan Heguy.
Left to right: Actors Tony Bifano, Victor Bohm, Julia Kollek, Richard Newsome, and gaffer Jordan Heguy.
 ??  ?? Actors John Scarcelli and Raquel Ciara have some trouble with their robot.
Actors John Scarcelli and Raquel Ciara have some trouble with their robot.
 ??  ?? Lead actors Mark Bane and Raquel Ciara.
Lead actors Mark Bane and Raquel Ciara.

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