And Walter Mair’s score is exhilarating throughout. The shark attack makeup effects are fantastic, yet there’s a missed opportunity on the sunburning. The CGI shark looks great, then two-thirds through the movie, it doesn’t. The script is thoroughly B-grade, though written by an A-grade writer ( A Prayer Before Dawn’s Nick Saltrese). I mean, the acting is good, but not always. Now, Shark Bait is nowhere as good as Tremors, the dialogue in Shark Bait is especially atrocious, and awkward character side plots seemingly come out of nowhere.Įven taking that into consideration, I still finished James Nunn’s film satisfied on a couple of levels, and it feels like there’s a combination of many little things that teeter just right on the line between greatness and travesty. It felt like that scene in Tremors where a bunch of those characters get thrown from a collapsing roof and then stumble uncoordinated to find higher ground. One, in particular, had me riotously yelling at my tv when the characters all fell laughably far away from their jet ski. Okay, obviously, it’s not going to win any Oscars, but Shark Bait has its moments. You can probably guess what happens throughout the rest of the film, and I know I’ll probably be going against the grain here-but Shark Bait is still kind of great. Shark Bait doesn’t reinvent the wheel, and it even feels heavily influenced by the films Open Water, Deep Blue Sea, The Shallows, and, of course, Jaws. Like any sharksploitation film, this shark has an unrelenting obsession that seems more like a humanistic quality than a shark can even be capable of. Image Courtesy of Altitude FilmsĪfter an accident leaves a member of their crew wounded and both jet skis out of commission, the situation becomes even more dire when a shark begins circling. I suppose that should have been expected from the producers of other sharksploitation films, 47 Meters Down and Great White. Instead, Shark Bait was keen to know the audience’s needs: basic characters with zero backstories eager to put themselves in the film’s harrowing situation. The characters and scene on the beach recalled Blumhouse’s Truth or Dare, and I half expected the same forced confabulation and additional friend acquisition in an attempt to add an extra dimension to at least one of the characters. No lie, I was kind of happy there wasn’t an exhaustive amount of exposition. Shark Bait, like its trailer, makes the leap from the beach to the water extremely quickly, and within the first ten minutes, these young twenty-somethings try to keep the party going by stealing a couple of jet skis and head out of a cove and into the middle of the sea. Sure, he’s not warning her about a Cabin in the Woods or telling her and her friends, “You’re all gonna die up there!” but he may as well be. If you watched the Shark Bait trailer last month, you saw most of these moments, including a beggar (Manuel Cauchi) warning Nat about the danger in the water in extreme horror trope fashion. It begins on the beaches at a night party where spring breakers Nat (Holly Earl), her boyfriend Tom (Jack Trueman), best friend Milly (Catherine Hannay), and friends Tyler (Malachi Pullar-Latchman) and Greg (Thomas Flynn) are pretty intoxicated. And the movie almost entirely takes place on the water. Oddly, the vastness of the ocean can be described as a bottleneck location, but being marooned without options while being circled by a great white shark doesn’t get any tighter. Last month, I mentioned the Shark Bait trailer as a film worth looking out for because it provided a fun atmosphere for a bottleneck thriller. Those lesser odds are about to be the fate of a handful of friends who get stranded out to sea in the new film Shark Bait. Sharks are misunderstood creatures that are rarely a threat to humans, and while shark attack percentages are low, they are never zero. One of the greatest moments I’ve had at Horror Obsessive was presenting the yuletide aquatic B-movie Santa Jaws during our holiday watch party last year. I’m a huge fan of sharksploitation movies.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |