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Deep Blue Sea review

Posted : 3 years, 1 month ago on 3 April 2021 01:38

Cmon it’s a shark film with Samuel L motherfucking Jackson. What else could you ask for? The acting, scares, kills, humor are great but the effects are kind of lame. Still fun to watch either way


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Screw the critics - I love it!

Posted : 10 years, 9 months ago on 13 August 2013 07:36

"What you've done is taken God's oldest killing machine and given it will and desire. What you've done is knocked us all the way to the bottom of the goddamn food chain."

Flawed as it definitely is, 1999's Deep Blue Sea is a rare type of big-budget summer extravaganza that fulfils its promise of delivering fast-paced, entertaining action with genuine panache. Nothing about Deep Blue Sea is original or groundbreaking in any way, but the production was overseen by blockbuster extraordinaire Renny Harlin, whose previous pictures include Die Hard 2: Die Harder and Cliffhanger (let's forget about Cutthroat Island). As a result, it's unfailingly enjoyable, and it doesn't feel its lengthy 100-minute running time. If Deep Blue Sea was released in 2013, it would have been produced by the SyFy channel, with zero budget and no skill behind it. Luckily, it was made in 1999, when studios still put money into R-rated B-movies. And thank goodness for that, as the resulting picture is a blast of pure good-natured fun.


On a floating research facility in the middle of the ocean, marine biologist Dr. Susan McAlester (Saffron Burrows) is seeking to find a cure for Alzheimer's Disease by harvesting the brain matter of Mako sharks. In order to glean more protein from the fishes, the scientists genetically engineer them, which results in heightened intelligence. Susan's corporate funder Russell Franklin (Samuel L. Jackson) agrees to a weekend expedition to the lab to check on progress. With most of the staff having left for the weekend, only a skeleton crew remains, including Susan, shark wrangler Carter Blake (Thomas Jane), engineer Tom Scoggins (Michael Rapaport), scientist Jim Whitlock (Stellan Skarsgård), religious chef Preacher (LL Cool J), and lab assistant Janice Higgins (Jacqueline McKenzie). Unfortunately, a violent storm arises, and a series of circumstances results in the base being severely damaged and partially flooded. With a number of gigantic, intelligent Mako sharks craving the taste of their captors, the science crew are left to fend for their lives as they attempt to get to the surface and escape.

The big issue which faced screenwriters Duncan Kennedy, Donna Powers and Wayne Powers was how to structure a shark attack movie without recreating Steven Spielberg's Jaws. Fortunately, the writers admirably overcome this, using Mako sharks as opposed to Great Whites, and creating a new plot and setting, not to mention introducing scientifically-altered sharks with increased smarts that are capable of more than the average beasties. In fact, the writers instead borrow from another famous Spielberg movie: Jurassic Park. How creative. Deep Blue Sea is well-structured for a B-movie, with a fair amount of build-up before all hell breaks loose and we get into the action. Once the mayhem commences, it never relents, progressing from one shark set-piece to the next at a brisk pace. Unfortunately, Deep Blue Sea is less successful in terms of dialogue and characters. The roster of characters here have little dimension to them; they're established as plot pawns, and lack satisfying individual personalities. The chatter, meanwhile, is standard, one-note action film speak, lacking the spark of wit which bolstered Jurassic Park.


Deep Blue Sea deserves plaudits due to the lack of sentimentality that's displayed towards the characters. None of the players are safe here, leading to unexpected and shocking character deaths. Most notable is a memorable scene in which a character delivers a very cheesy, melodramatic speech imploring the rest of the characters to stop bickering and work together to survive. It's the standard action film speech, meant to denote a key turning point in the narrative, but, before the character can finish, a shark emerges and pulls him underwater to be ripped to shreds. It underlines that anyone can be killed off, no matter their star status or how important they ostensibly look to be. The actors are fine, doing what they can with the material. LL Cool J is the only one who really shines, as he has the best dialogue and the best character, not to mention he's the most charismatic. Jane, meanwhile, is solid as well, establishing himself as strong leading man material. Also of note is seasoned veteran Jackson placing forth a fairly colourful turn, while Rapaport, Burrows and McKenzie are likeable as well.

Deep Blue Sea is a B-movie at heart, but Harlin had an A-grade budget at his disposal. $60 million was no small chunk of change in 1999, and in this day and age it's unheard of for an R-rated action movie to be produced for such a lavish sum. Production values are competent here, and Harlin is a gifted action filmmaker, staging exhilarating set-pieces with confidence and skill. The R rating is a huge benefit, giving Harlin leeway to go nuts with graphic depictions of shark attacks. Water turns red when someone is taken, and the sharks rip characters apart in a gory fashion. It's glorious. Furthermore, it's hard to overstate the effectiveness of the animatronic sharks here. The twenty-four years separating Jaws and Deep Blue Sea yielded tremendous advancements in cinematic special effects, allowing for practical sharks that are flawless in movement and detail. At times, you could swear that Harlin and his team must have thrown real sharks into tanks with the actors. Funnily enough, to date no other shark film has equalled or surpassed the animatronics here, which is bewildering. However, the movie's digital sharks are not nearly as successful. A few moments here and there look somewhat convincing, but, for the most part, the CGI is obvious and slipshod. Jaws overcame its fake-looking shark by keeping it hidden for the most part, but Harlin is too concerned with in-your-face money shots.


To be sure, it's disappointing that Deep Blue Sea is not on the same level as Jurassic Park, which merged genuine awe and excitement with an engaging sense of humanity and intelligence. Deep Blue Sea is instead closer to the film's sequel, The Lost World, with Harlin more interested in big action scenes than substance. But, to the movie's credit, it's a big success, guiltlessly trashy and undeniably fun, even if it is thoroughly ludicrous. Deep Blue Sea is the very epitome of summer entertainment; stuffy critics relentlessly lambaste it, but it's executed with enough energy, excitement, charisma and skill to render it an enjoyable guilty pleasure that gives you plenty of bang for your buck.

7.3/10



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Only Jaws... but much faster

Posted : 13 years ago on 30 April 2011 07:48

Well, what can i say? I've always been a fan of Samuel L. Jackson and this film is one of his good moments! Actually, this is, in some ways, better than JAWS because it has a more violent shark! Anyways, it was a good-time off with this film but surely not of the greatest i've seen... It could've done better!


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An average movie

Posted : 13 years, 2 months ago on 8 March 2011 12:59

To be honest, I wasn't expecting anything really brilliant with this movie but I thought that the title was rather catchy and, I don't know why, I thought it could be entertaining. Eventually, I really had some mixed feelings about the damned thing but, all in all, I think it was still rather disappointing. Basically, Renny Harlin keeps making B-movies and this one was not an exception even if it actually had some potential. Indeed, there were a few cool scenes (especially the infamous one involving Samuel L. Jackson, it was just really awesome, I won't spoil it but you really need to see this) but the whole thing was still rather lame. Indeed, the sharks looked really cheap, the action scenes were nothing great and above all, the story was just really idiotic. Ever since, for the last 15 years, Renny Harlin would manage to make some even more underwhelming features with maybe ‘Cleaner’ as a notable exception but it was still nothing really impressive. To conclude, it is a rather average shark movie and it is not really worth a look, expect maybe if you are a desperate shark movie fan and, even in this case, you'd better re-watch 'Jaws' instead…


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Hard to swallow

Posted : 16 years, 11 months ago on 12 June 2007 02:51

This is a very silly film in which almost everybody gets eaten. LL Cool is pretty entertaining, but everybody else is pretty forgettable even Samuel L Jackson. People expecting a high tech jaws (which is probably what they where aiming for) might be disappointed. I think they jumped the shark as it where.


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