Voted America’s Most Realistic Submarine Documentary Movie

I made this one hour primetime television special in 1989. At the time, it was a big deal for the American Navy to let me on one of their submarines. I loved the experience and the submariners. This documentary won the Blue Ribbon at the American Film Festival. In my opinion what makes this so realistic is the everyday life submariners experienced and how when they trusted me and the crew, they let me record how things were when no one was watching. I was impressed with how professional they were and how, though underwater for months at a time, they treated each other decently and with respect. As you can see in this documentary, smoking cigarettes at that time was just fine on a nuclear submarine. Just a few years later, those rules changed. And it was very strange to be on or should I say in a boat that carried or could carry nuclear weapons. It was strange to be completely disconnected from life on the surface. It takes a certain kind of person to be a submariner and I have deep re
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