yeah, we had to do the same thing with the Jupiter 2, because if you don't know, the ship was originally designed to ahve one interior level. and then they added the lower deck, power core, space pod bay, etc, so our solution was to enlarge the ship;s hull...I was also watching Leagues movie and noticed that almost none of the crewmen talked ever, except the first mate! You did a great job with your 3d model of the Nautilus...
@3dartistguy My ship is an amalgam of blur prints, a 36 inch model I have in my room, the movie itself and internet research. Taking the rooms from the movie plus several others that weren't movie (Crew bunks and lounge, etc...) and practiced placing them within the bounds of the ship. I re-ordered the main pump and reactor from the blue prints and arranged them to match a present time atomic submarine. The atomic reactor was the worst.
Stevie, you are a real fan, man. I wish to see a tour of the REAL Nautilus. You probably know about it- Oceanology. The true story of the voyage of the Nautilus, which I discovered is the yellow submarine (coated in the Holy Grail) and also a ELO submarine. Go figure. Oh, its also the real Tardis.
Hi Steve, how are things? I just watched the movie Journey 2 mysterious island. The Nautilus in that movie is quite different than the one in the 1955 movie...do you have any idea why?
I have never understood how the crew, much less the sub, was supposed to withstand the impact on a large sailing ship. The attack speed in the movie looked like at last 10 kts. Major structural damage would have occurred to the sub at that speed. How were crew members supposed to brace themselves. It's nothing but a fantasy
Sure, at the end of the movie the Nautilus became the personal touring boat Gabato. So it was tied up at the dock as a gag ending. One person could never manage the Nautilus as described by Vern or Disney. And HI Steve
Steve.....great video! But I have to disagree with you on the crew's quarters. To begin with, this was not a "naval enlistment". These guys were loyal companions of Captain Nemo. There were more than "27" of them. and they certainly would be "hot racking" it, while three prisoners had their own cabins, which were unused until their arrival. And the Nautilus didn't have "guests", so there was no need to have cabins set aside as guest rooms. The whole problem with Disney's design in general, is that the inside looks a lot more spacious than a submarine with a narrow beam would have. It looks more like the interior of a battleship.
+M35kriegsmarine Your right this not a traditional navel ship. But there are cooks, first officers and of course the captain. And they will be shown respect for their position (Nemo was), As for the count. After Nemo is shot the first officer gathers the crew together to show solidarity for the captain. A count would show approx. ten men and the first officer. I don’t believe critical men would be pull from station. So its an approx. number. I stand with nine on duty men plus 1 officer, plus 1 cook, with 3 shifts. Your right, way way too much open space within the body of the ship. But their shooting a movie. This is not the Nautilus I would build. Its a heart felt salute to Jules Vern and Disney for decades of great memories.
+Scifisteve1954 I suppose we all have our own interpretation. But Disney's film was very different from the book. I believe the crew had better facilities. Please keep in mind that the entire crew went to their personal sleeping quarters after Nemo's final speech.
+M35kriegsmarine Absolutely correct. The book was very different from the movie. But I used just one for inspiration. Also Nemo need dozens of men to build the boat, man the home base, and in the book he had bases around the world for refueling his batteries.
In the book, the Professor's "guest quarters" is actually the quarters for the Lieutenant, which is why it was placed next to Nemo's. The crew slept in barracks similar to crew quarters on modern submarines; this was towards the middle/rear of the Nautilus, followed by the engine room. His crew did not complain about Nemo and the Lieutenant getting their own private quarters - he was Prince Dakkar of India (as per the sequel, The Mysterious Island), and these men were his friends and members of his royal entourage, and so were fiercely obedient and loyal to him. In the book, the Nautilus was exactly 70 meters long (232'), but according to blueprints I have seen, the Disney sub was only 180' long - not at all like the book. Still a classic sub, though, all in all.
Still, the interior is very well done. I'd add some rails to the side of the bunks so people don't fall out. Is there really nothing beyond the dive room??? I could've sworn I saw two doors there in the movie.
Thanks -
It took sometime to design and then lay it out.
Very glad to see a fan enjoys it.
yeah, we had to do the same thing with the Jupiter 2, because if you don't know, the ship was originally designed to ahve one interior level. and then they added the lower deck, power core, space pod bay, etc, so our solution was to enlarge the ship;s hull...I was also watching Leagues movie and noticed that almost none of the crewmen talked ever, except the first mate! You did a great job with your 3d model of the Nautilus...
pure genius
Looks very cool! Thank you!
Fantastic
Part 2 is just as amazing.
Actually a tour of the Goff-Disney Nautilus. The submarine described by Verne was very different.
@3dartistguy My ship is an amalgam of blur prints, a 36 inch model I have in my room, the movie itself and internet research. Taking the rooms from the movie plus several others that weren't movie (Crew bunks and lounge, etc...) and practiced placing them within the bounds of the ship. I re-ordered the main pump and reactor from the blue prints and arranged them to match a present time atomic submarine.
The atomic reactor was the worst.
very cool !!!
How many crewmembers are there for the crew complement of the Nautilus?
Sorry for the delay. In the video I gave 27 as the number of crew members. Nine beds used in 3 shifts not including officers and cook.
Stevie, you are a real fan, man. I wish to see a tour of the REAL Nautilus. You probably know about it- Oceanology. The true story of the voyage of the Nautilus, which I discovered is the yellow submarine (coated in the Holy Grail) and also a ELO submarine. Go figure. Oh, its also the real Tardis.
fantastic
PLEASE DO A DIAGRAM 3D TOUR OF THE SEAVIEW SUBMARINE FROM VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA.ALSO THE FLYING SUB.
@robots42 Thanks for the compliment. I was wondering if you visited the 2 portion of the tour?
Hi Steve, how are things? I just watched the movie Journey 2 mysterious island. The Nautilus in that movie is quite different than the one in the 1955 movie...do you have any idea why?
I have never understood how the crew, much less the sub, was supposed to withstand the impact on a large sailing ship. The attack speed in the movie looked like at last 10 kts. Major structural damage would have occurred to the sub at that speed. How were crew members supposed to brace themselves. It's nothing but a fantasy
read the book
i heard that the actual Disney sets didn't mesh with the filming model. did you ahve to alter your blueprints in order to model your 3d Nautilus?
Sure, at the end of the movie the Nautilus became the personal touring boat Gabato. So it was tied up at the dock as a gag ending. One person could never manage the Nautilus as described by Vern or Disney.
And HI
Steve
will you make a video of SeaQuest the first one not the second version
Steve.....great video! But I have to disagree with you on the crew's quarters. To begin with, this was not a "naval enlistment". These guys were loyal companions of Captain Nemo. There were more than "27" of them. and they certainly would be "hot racking" it, while three prisoners had their own cabins, which were unused until their arrival. And the Nautilus didn't have "guests", so there was no need to have cabins set aside as guest rooms. The whole problem with Disney's design in general, is that the inside looks a lot more spacious than a submarine with a narrow beam would have. It looks more like the interior of a battleship.
+M35kriegsmarine Your right this not a traditional navel ship. But there are cooks, first officers and of course the captain. And they will be shown respect for their position (Nemo was), As for the count. After Nemo is shot the first officer gathers the crew together to show solidarity for the captain. A count would show approx. ten men and the first officer. I don’t believe critical men would be pull from station. So its an approx. number. I stand with nine on duty men plus 1 officer, plus 1 cook, with 3 shifts.
Your right, way way too much open space within the body of the ship. But their shooting a movie. This is not the Nautilus I would build. Its a heart felt salute to Jules Vern and Disney for decades of great memories.
+Scifisteve1954 I suppose we all have our own interpretation. But Disney's film was very different from the book. I believe the crew had better facilities. Please keep in mind that the entire crew went to their personal sleeping quarters after Nemo's final speech.
+M35kriegsmarine Absolutely correct. The book was very different from the movie. But I used just one for inspiration.
Also Nemo need dozens of men to build the boat, man the home base, and in the book he had bases around the world for refueling his batteries.
+Scifisteve1954 And he had them....but they are all leaving through attrition. He never recruited replacements.
In the book, the Professor's "guest quarters" is actually the quarters for the Lieutenant, which is why it was placed next to Nemo's. The crew slept in barracks similar to crew quarters on modern submarines; this was towards the middle/rear of the Nautilus, followed by the engine room. His crew did not complain about Nemo and the Lieutenant getting their own private quarters - he was Prince Dakkar of India (as per the sequel, The Mysterious Island), and these men were his friends and members of his royal entourage, and so were fiercely obedient and loyal to him. In the book, the Nautilus was exactly 70 meters long (232'), but according to blueprints I have seen, the Disney sub was only 180' long - not at all like the book. Still a classic sub, though, all in all.
@LocoRico89 Thanks, I was wondering if anyone was actually looking.
on which the program was created this animation
@Scifisteve1954 Life long fan of Verne, your welcome :-)
I think the paint would be all white, going by the book.Awesome rendering though!
Classy! Wish it was real
Well made video! But the French name "Jules" is pronounced "Shüll".
Yeah, your website seems to be down.
I just visitied "www.scifisteve.com"
It seems to be working
All I get is a black screen. Does the website not work on iPads?
For some reason my iPad won't let me access the page.
MAnuscript421 I can believe that. I never set it up for FLASH.
Still, the interior is very well done. I'd add some rails to the side of the bunks so people don't fall out. Is there really nothing beyond the dive room??? I could've sworn I saw two doors there in the movie.
LightWave
Steve
These would mame great toys......and mabe milrec. 1 each Branch. ( teehee)
poop