Nautilus
A Thoroughly Enjoyable Romp On Amazon Prime

Introduction
We don't do binge-watching but on the second day of our holiday, we were looking for something not too taxing to watch. I had started watching this at home but here we just have guest access to Amazon Prime.
While looking on Amazon the first thing that came up was this puzzle box making me think of Hellraiser but it looks mightily impressive, though not totally relevant to this piece.
Where Nautilus Came From
This is inspired by Jules Verne's "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea"
When Verne was writing his science fiction stories there were no electronics or computers, although Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage were developing the difference engine, so all technology was analogue and therefore laying the foundations for the identity of Steampunk.
In 1954 when Disney released their take on Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea" people saw their first view of the Steampunk look although it had not been named as such.
So On To Nautilus
While lots of the visuals refer back to the 1955 Disney visualisation, the overall story reminds me much more of the "Pirates of the Caribean" series as well as "King Kong" with monsters and the evil of the East India Company taking over the world and the horrors caused by the British Empire.
Fiona and I never binge watch but we hit five episodes one after the other yesterday and that only stopped because it was getting late.
This is a thoroughly enjoyable series, the baddies are brilliant and thoroughly nasty in a pantomime way and Richard E. Grant is perfect as the evil White Rajah.
Halfway through this, I would recommend this to everyone.
Thank you for reading, and if you get the opportunity give this a try.
About the Creator
Mike Singleton π Mikeydred
A Weaver of Tales and Poetry
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Creationati
Call Me Les β₯ Gina β₯ Heather β₯ Caroline β₯



Comments (2)
Whoaaaa, it must have been really good for you guys to have watched 5 episodes Hehehehehehe
Good work on this review. I am thinking about re-reading 20,000 Leagues under the Sea and I remember watching it on The Wonderful World of Disney when I was a child. That octopus still scares me today. I guess some would compare it the Kracken.