Last Breath: Real-life
drama of the North Sea diver who cheated death
Stephen Applebaum tells the story of Chris Lemons, left trapped without oxygen for half an hour on the seabed, and the rescue bid mounted by his colleagues in what is diving’s most dangerous industry
Last Breath (Image Courtesy of Dogwoof)
Imagine being stuck at
the bottom of the North Sea, with an emergency supply of air that is
quickly running out, and no immediate help available. Such was the
predicament that diver Chris Lemons was plunged into on 18 September
2012, when the umbilical cord that connected him to a diving bell,
providing him with gas for breathing, hot water, communications and
electricity, snapped, during routine work on a drilling structure at
the Huntington oil field, 115 miles east of Peterhead, Aberdeenshire.
What happened next
became a sensation inside the global diving community. People were
keen to know how Lemons’s employer, Bibby Offshore (now renamed
Rever Offshore), had dealt with the situation, so the company
commissioned a short industry film, Lifeline, from Floating
Harbour Films, in 2013, to, says the production company’s website,
“highlight the potentially extreme consequences of an incident in
the workplace”.
This has now been
developed into Last Breath, a feature-length documentary which
uses convincing reconstructions, original footage (there was a wealth
of it, captured by different devices in the water and on board the
Diving Support Vessel Bibby Topaz), and gripping interviews with
some of the key people involved, including Lemons’s team mates,
Dave Yuasa and Duncan Allcock, and dive supervisor Craig
Frederick, to create a nailbiting tale of survival against the odds.
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