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  1. The vessel moves northward to Cape Horn and speeds to the Caribbean, arriving by April 20. There, they encounter a group of giant squid who attack the vessel and kill one of the crew members before they can drive the creatures back into the sea. After these challenges, Nemo grows sullen, silent, and absent.

  2. Lee Pfeiffer. 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, American dramatic film, released in 1954, that was the acclaimed adaptation of Jules Verne’s classic nautical adventure of the same name. Kirk Douglas, Peter Lorre, and Paul Lukas played the hapless trio of seamen who, while attempting to investigate a string of.

  3. Jul 18, 2017 · 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. In 1868, rumors of a sea monster attacking ships in the Pacific Ocean have disrupted shipping lanes. The United States invites Professor Pierre M. Aronnax and his assistant, Conseil, onto an expedition to prove the monster's existence. On board with them is the cocky master harpooner Ned Land.

    • 127 min
    • 34K
    • Jotter
  4. Aug 9, 2021 · This is accurately translated as Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the SEAS—rather than the SEA, as with many English editions. Verne’s novel features a tour of the major oceans, and the term Leagues in its title is used as a measure not of depth but distance. Ed. Contents. Color Plates Introduction Units of Measure. FIRST PART 1. A Runaway Reef 2.

  5. 1886: Rumor has it that there is a dangerous beast in the world's seas that regularly attacks warships and sends them to the bottom of the sea...The French p...

    • 127 min
    • 303.7K
    • Classic Studio
  6. テンプレートを表示. 『 海底二万哩 』(かいていにまんマイル、原題: 20000 Leagues Under the Sea )は、 1954年 の アメリカ映画 。. ジュール・ヴェルヌ のSF小説『 海底二万里 』を ウォルト・ディズニー が映画化した作品。. 日本における BVHE 版から発売された ...

  7. by Jules Verne. Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (French: Vingt mille lieues sous les mers) is a classic science fiction novel by French writer Jules Verne, published in 1870. It is about the fictional Captain Nemo and his submarine, Nautilus, as seen by one of his passengers, Professor Pierre Aronnax. Source: Verne, J. (1870).

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