The Hamilton Spectator

47 Meters Down is fun, if not very deep

- KATIE WALSH

After the surprising success of last year’s “girl with shark” thriller “The Shallows,” “47 Meters Down” seems to be posing the question, “what if ‘The Shallows’ ... but deep?” Because that’s exactly what it is, and it even tells you how deep right there in the title. This time there are two girls, not just the one, though star Mandy Moore is ostensibly the lead in this claustroph­obic underwater nightmare, directed by Johannes Roberts, written by Roberts and Ernest Riera.

Back in ’75, “Jaws” inspired audiences to stay out of the water, and thanks to “47 Meters Down,” cagediving might see a dip in popularity this summer. If there’s a message to be found in this film, it’s to never do things that scare you. It’s not worth the risk. Just stay at the resort, sipping cocktails at the pool. Being boring is better than being chum.

Fear of “boring” is what gets Lisa (Moore) into the water, against her better instincts, with her adventures­ome sister Kate (Claire Holt). The “b-word” was levied against her during a breakup, and that insult is what drives her to wildly overcorrec­t, setting off for a day trip cage diving with great whites with no scuba certificat­ion, in an unlicensed rust trap of a boat. Kate and Lisa have 30 seconds of a good time before they’re trapped in the cage on the ocean floor, surrounded by massive sharks.

Part of what made “The Shallows” fun to watch was Blake Lively’s resourcefu­lness and near superhuman prowess as she battled a shark atop a coral outcroppin­g. Moore, well, she’s relatable. Constantly hyperventi­lating, most of

her dialogue is high-pitched wheezing and whimpering, interspers­ed with descriptio­ns of things she’s doing: “I got the flashlight”; “the shark almost got me!” Physically, she’s better off waiting for the Coast Guard, and there’s something kind of sweetly realistic in her performanc­e. Mandy Moore is all of us.

While the script itself stays on the surface, merely serving the function to explain just how Lisa ended up in this situation, Roberts creates a few sequences that capture how vast, mysterious and terrifying the deep sea can be. Its depths are impenetrab­le, filled with terrifying­ly massive predators lurching from just beyond visibility. There is one stunningly beautiful shot, lit with a flare and a flashlight, but trapped on the bottom of the ocean, most of the film is a dark, murky, blueish grey, performers emoting with their eyes behind a mask. Even the sharks don’t get enough screen time.

“47 Meters Down” doesn’t have the campy sparkle that made “The Shallows” a cult hit, but it’s the kind of cheesy thriller that’s good for a few jumps, and a few chuckles at its own silliness. You may never scuba dive again, but “47 Meters Down” can offer a cooling aquatic thrill.

 ?? VVS FILMS ?? Mandy Moore’s cage diving experience in "47 Meters Down" might put a damper on the activity.
VVS FILMS Mandy Moore’s cage diving experience in "47 Meters Down" might put a damper on the activity.

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