dash-22458
My son who is six years old thought this was the dumbest and stupidest movie Hes ever seen in his life
Stevieboy666
Part of a series of "Mega Shark" movies from The Asylum, this is the best of the bunch, but as the others are just so awful that's certainly not a recommendation! A 200ft shark can destroy giant warships, oil rigs, even has the potential to jump high into the sky & take out aircraft, all with great ease. Really??!! Yet somehow the only answer to kill this creature is to build a giant mechanical shark, which can amazingly be piloted by a single person! MASSIVE plot holes in here, too many to mention, though I will point out that in Australia, where much of the action takes place, vehicles drive on the left, NOT the right! Oh well, this is a crappy Asylum movie. The reasons why I have very generously rated this 4/10 however are down to the CGI being slightly better than in many other such bad creature movies, the film moves at a fast pace & in particular the relationship of the two lead characters, who happen to be a married couple (in the plot). Somehow this just about saves it.
Michael O'Keefe
Sci-Fi usually provides a doom and gloom situation involving a menace other than human. The terror is usually caused in part by a witless person or one that thinks they know more than the average humanoid. Shark season will always be the harbinger of fear. A megalodon shark is thawed from its frozen imprisonment, of course, by human haphazard handling. The big ass fish lives for another spree of terror. And its hunger makes waters unsafe for every person or thing that gets in its way. It just so happens that the navy has been testing its recent creation of a prototype shark-like submarine named Nero. But is the machine able to contend with the living and breathing, swimming killing machine? You choose the degree of ridiculousness. Starring are: Elisabeth Rohm, Christopher Judge, Matt Lagan, Steve Hanks, Robert Sisko and Paul Anderson as the voice of Nero.
gavin6942
A new mega shark threatens to destroy humanity. The government creates an exact robotic copy of the shark, either equal to or greater than the original. Now they must fight to the death while people and whole cities get in the way.The best part of this film was a brief scene that was an homage to the first film's best scene. This is, of course, a showdown between an airplane and a shark... a complete load of nonsense, but highly entertaining.Beyond that, nothing too exciting. I feel like there was more than the average effort put into the special effects, but most of this is nothing new and even by Asylum's cheap standards it is not as much fun as it could be. I get the impression Debbie Gibson shot all her scenes in one day, because she rarely interacts with anyone and is always standing in the same spot... this is even less than "phoning it in".