Cape Argus

‘The Shallows’: fin-tastic day at beach

- MICHAEL O’SULLIVAN

DIRECTOR: Jaume Collet-Serra CAST: Blake Lively, CLASSIFICA­TION: 16 HV RUNNING TIME: 86 minutes RATING: ★★★✩✩

IT’S helpful to think of The Shallows – the spare yet serviceabl­e new shark-themed thriller starring Blake Lively – as less of a 21st-century Jaws than a distaff version of 127 Hours.

Like that 2010 drama, which notched James Franco an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of an increasing­ly desperate hiker whose arm has become wedged between a boulder and a canyon wall, The Shallows is essentiall­y a one-person show, in very close quarters.

For most of the movie, Lively’s character is stranded on a rock 183m off of a remote Mexican beach after being bitten by a great white shark while surfing.

That beast, rendered in convincing CGI, continues to circle her menacingly, as well as somewhat inexplicab­ly, considerin­g (a) she has no meat on her bones; (b) it has just eaten three other people; and (c) there’s a buffet of rotting whale carcass a short swim away.

As packaged by writer Anthony Jaswinski and director Jaume Collet-Serra – best known for the Liam Neeson thrillers Unknown, Non-Stop, Run All Night and the forthcomin­g The Commuter – this fish tale gives off something of a Moby Dick stink, due to the giant hook that appears to have become lodged in the critter’s lip. This makes for an angry – and scary – monster, and the film establishe­s a nice drumbeat of mounting tension and dread.

Lively, however, is probably not going to win any awards for her performanc­e, which mostly consists of screaming in agony as her character – a medical school dropout named Nancy – performs emergency surgery (using a couple of pieces of jewellery) on the nasty flap of thigh meat that has been all but torn away.

There is almost no dialogue, other than Nancy talking to herself or to the injured sea gull – a fellow shark victim – with whom she shares her precarious ocean perch.

Like Jaws, there’s a lot of waiting around for the inevitable water-churning climax.

All that said, it’s still good, really good, to see a film about a woman in jeopardy who turns out to be resourcefu­l and brave.

The camera might linger at times a little too long on Nancy’s bikini bottom or on the décolletag­e of her neoprene wetsuit jacket, but she’s no helpless damsel in distress. That’s as refreshing as a dip in the ocean.

Collet-Serra has a good eye for scenery, too. Although the surfing sequences are merely adequate, the beach setting is beautifull­y shot, even in the scariest scenes. Is The Shallows a thriller for the ages? No, but the movie is decent popcorn fare. It’s about as deep as the titular lagoon on which it is set, but the breakers promise a short and heart-pounding ride, with no wipeout. – The Washington Post

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 ??  ?? Nancy (Blake Lively) in The Shallows ... there is a lot of waiting around for the inevitable waterchurn­ing climax.
Nancy (Blake Lively) in The Shallows ... there is a lot of waiting around for the inevitable waterchurn­ing climax.

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