‘Shark Bait’ Review – Another Mediocre Shark Attack Movie That At Least Has Gory Bite – Bloody Disgusting

James Nunns Shark Bait earns its praise only by comparison in todays grim state of contemporary fin flicks. Anyone could record more thrilling aquatic horrors than 2021s Great White or 2022s The Requin with a handheld camera, a kiddie pool, and a Street Sharks puppet. Not since 2020s Deep Blue Sea 3 has shark cinema been shown any justice, but theres enough of an upswing in Shark Bait to inspire hope for the future. There arent any discernible qualities aside from the nature of capsizing and different swimsuits on characters, yet Nunn oversees enough bloody gore and special effects competency to rise above other indies that mistake Steven Spielbergs Jaws for splish-splashy childs play.

The only difference between The Reef or Open Water and Shark Bait is the method of oceanic isolation. In Shark Bait, five spring breakers steal two jet skis and ride them miles into Mexican coastal waters, where they stupidly collide while playing chicken. One buoyant vehicle sinks, Greg (Thomas Flynn) severely breaks his leg exposed bone around salt water, yikes and Tyler (Malachi Pullar-Latchman) might be concussed. Mexicos shorelines arent in sight, no matter the direction. To make matters worse (for dramatic effect), Kansas good-girl Nat (Holly Earl) finds out her boyfriend Tom (Jack Trueman) cheated with bombshell Milly (Catherine Hannay). Im sure the hungry and aggressive shark that surfaces will allow Nat, Tom, and Milly to sort through their emotional baggage in peace.

Friend of multiple Bloody Disgusting writers Chris Evangelista proclaimed on Twitter: CGI werewolves in movies should be illegal. Ill extend that sentiment to include sharks because indie horror films have since bastardized the art of aquatic horror with cheapo, Tomb Raider on PS1 lookin predators from the depths. The Shallows or 47 Meters Down get away with digitizing their swimming villains because they have the funds to execute lifelike animated sharks that look the part so lets get to the point. Whats up with the titular shark in Shark Bait?

Maybe the films executive producers learned a lesson after scoring rave reviews with 47 Meters Down and then heaping criticism with Great White. Nunns background as an action director (frequent Scott Adkins collaborator) and his special effects teams efforts dont equal the computerized greatness of The Shallows but dare I say Shark Baits torpedoing terror doesnt look that bad in most glimpses? The moments where an underside attack means Big Chompy attempts to swallow everyone on the jet ski but ends up clamping down on legs, unable to bite through the fiberglass hull, are its weakest visual shots. Were right back to The Requin or Great White when water splashes, snouts thrash, and an unfortunate-looking animated beast just doesnt belong in frame. Elsewhere, Nunn uses darkening seabed depths or frantic quick cuts to give us something more ferocious and more natural.

Again, maybe this is coming from a sufferer of multiple horrendous cinematic shark attacks in recent memory (King Shark aside) but Shark Bait generates a monster worth fearing in tension-drenched bursts.

Screenwriter Nick Saltrese attempts what many have before: convince audiences that characters are dumb enough to get themselves stuck in shark-infested waters. Thats less successful, as still-drunk partiers ignore local warnings and steal rentable vehicles only to slam them together miles (and miles) from shore. Once stranded, its hard to sustain their bickering, and schemes unfold with the most predictable outcomes. Like, of course Nat is adrift, crammed onto a two-person at best vessel with her cheating scumbag lover and their friend, his last sexual partner. This soap opera tactic adds nothing because Shark Bait isnt 2022s latest Shakespearean epic. Nor are survival instincts anything but foolish because plots must advance or, more correctly, Nunn must endanger victims to stain the waters red. Performances are never offensive, but character arcs are soggy with stuck-at-sea clichs, and theres never any attempt to elevate Shark Bait.

Why does the shark continue to pursue? How did Nats tourists travel so far away from land on jet skis? Why do the dum-dums keep separating themselves? Because you watch shark flicks for the feeding frenzies! No matter how filmmakers chum the waters.

To Shark Baits credit, cinematography saturates all the deepest aqua blues and electric bathing suit colors, so its never outright ugly to behold. Better yet, inflicted wounds when the shark attacks get vastly more gruesome than one might predict. A significant death as one character clings onto another for dear life their body submerged waist-down as crimson clouds sell whats happening below is pretty freakin exceptional for gore fans. Other moments of excitement are more about panicking swimmers bouncing into the air like a SeaWorld trick gone wrong, but that extreme glimpse of gore albeit VFX heavy is still a rad dielight for horror fans. Nunns highs reach for the sky, but lows find the Mariana Trench.

Shark Bait is another mediocre at best animal attack movie that adheres to countless tropes which plague the genre. Its markedly better than the last few guppies but aint worth a trophy mount. Its never as hoot-and-holler enjoyable as Shark Night 3D or terrifying as The Shallows. Shark Bait is an appetizer and not a very filling one but if youre craving blood as bright as Kool-Aid and a holdover shark movie until the next exceptional subgenre example? Maybe youll find that jet skis and Kansas City Chiefs trivia (dont ask) add enough to shark formulas worth a quickie genre snack.

Shark Bait is now available on VOD outlets.

Visit link:
'Shark Bait' Review - Another Mediocre Shark Attack Movie That At Least Has Gory Bite - Bloody Disgusting

Related Post

Reviewed and Recommended by Erik Baquero
This entry was posted in Horror Movie. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.