Sunday, July 10, 2016

The Shallows (Film Review)

Ever wanted to see a film based around Jaws’ opening scene, except here, the lady survives the initial attack and fends off the giant great white?  Well here you go!

The Shallows is a fun summer thriller with a minimalist cast, a straight forward plot, and a scary great white shark.  The story follows a med student named Nancy (Blake Lively), who’s vacationing in Mexico after her mother’s recent death.  While there, Nancy goes surfing at a secluded beach her mom use to visit (Nancy’s fellow vacationing friend staying at their hotel due to the “Irish flu”), only to be attacked by a violent great white shark.  Her leg injured from its bite, Nancy scrambles on top of what summoned the shark: a humpback whale carcass.  The shark begins devouring the whale, forcing Nancy to swim to a surfaced rock formation far from the shore.  The refuge is temporary, however, and will submerge when high tide returns—forcing Nancy to create an escape plan before she becomes shark food.

The Shallows’ shark isn’t as big as Jaws, but it’s certainly more ravenous: devouring two people in under several minutes.  The film makes it a point to showcase several injuries the great white previously obtained from humans—a way to rationalize the shark’s violent behavior while subverting the “ferocious man-eater” theme associated with great whites.  The Shallows’ shark-based theme is far from original (one scene pays near-direct homage to Jaws’ finale), but it does have several distinctive ideas to add to the shark-survival cinema—such as the previously mentioned whale carcass scene, which the film displays in gory detail (Nancy using bloody, torn blubber as climbing holds).

There are several other characters throughout the film, but they mostly serve as background exposition for Nancy, or fodder for the shark.  Nancy is your standard, survival-thriller female: something rough has happened in her life, she’s feeling down, and it takes a series of ridiculous, life-threatening events (where our protagonist cannot catch a break) to bring back her confidence and strength.  Nancy’s medical background is a unique character trait that allows her to realistically handle injuries, yet aside from that her backstory is basic and trivial.  The film does an effective job, however, in displaying Nancy’s thought process, making her actions and motives comprehensible.

A minor, yet standout aspect is Nancy’s caution towards the two male surfers at the secluded beach.  The characters seem to be genuinely friendly and helpful (warning Nancy where not to surf), yet Nancy displays a realistic wariness towards these two strangers, politely declining their offer to surf on their side.  When the men head back to shore, Nancy remains in the water alone (setting up the remaining story) to apparently “catch one final wave”, yet her watchful eye as she observes them leave (tensing up as they walk past her backpack) suggests otherwise.

The surprise standout aspect in The Shallows is Nancy’s relationship with an injured Seagull (played by Steve the Seagull), who acts akin to Nancy’s Wilson as she grows an unexpected bond with the bird.  Amusingly, The Shallows’ most tense situation ends up being whether the seagull would make it out alive or not (my wife was on edge about it the entire film).  The Shallows is entertaining summer fun, advertising exactly what it gives: nothing more, nothing less.  It’s a good popcorn flick, but is best to go by its trailers when deciding if the premise will be interesting enough to spend money on.

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