Carmarthen Journal

BETWEEN A CROC AND A HARD PLACE...

AS CINEMAS BEGIN TO REOPEN, DAMON SMITH LOOKS AT WHAT’S ON THE BIG SCREEN, INCLUDING THE HORROR FLICK BLACK WATER: ABYSS

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THRILL-SEEKERS get far more than they bargain for in director Andrew Traucki’s bloodthirs­ty, waterlogge­d horror, which has the misfortune of surfacing in the wake of yesteryear’s infinitely superior woman-versus-alligator nail-biter, Crawl.

Set in the lush forests of Northern Australia, Black Water: Abyss contrives to trap five unfortunat­e souls below ground in a rapidly flooding cave with a voracious apex predator that hunts by vibrations in the water.

“Crocs are territoria­l. He’s not gonna be happy ‘til we’re all gone,” handily explains one thinly sketched character in Ian John Ridley and Sarah Smith’s script, which struggles to find a pleasing balance between edge-of-seat scares and heart-wrenching drama.

They follow the lead of Ridley Scott’s masterclas­s in sustained tension, Alien, and capsize gender stereotype­s es to promote female characters when the going gets tough.

The dimly lit, subterrane­an setting should allow Traucki to slowly crank up tension and conceal surprise attacks from his reptilian menace.

However, it’s painfully obvious when cast are poised to depart in a grisly fashion and we are braced far in advance for a creature to leap out of f the water and clamp its jaws around a torso to a symphony of reverberat­ing screams and crunching bones. Gung-ho thrill-seeker Eric (Luke Mitchell) and his level-headed girlfriend Jennifer ( Jessica McNamee) invite good friends Yolanda (Amali Golden) and Viktor (Benjamin Hoetjes) to join them on an expedition to a remote, uncharted cave system. Travel journalist Viktor, who is used to making up articles from the comfort of a hotel room, is concerned about the potential risks.

“I thought you said going into remission made you want to live life to the full?” ful calmly argues his gir girlfriend Yolanda. “Don’t you want to experience s something new?”

The plucky quartet are joined by Eric’s friend Cash (Anthony J Sharpe), who stumbled upon the cave w while searching for missing Ja Japanese trekkers.

A tropical storm blows in from the north shortly after the group abseil into the mouth of the cave and stumble upon a subterrane­an lake.

As rain lashes down, a nearby river floods its banks and Eric, Jennifer, Yolanda, Viktor and Cash are trapped below ground.

The disoriente­d adventurer­s find a potential escape route blocked by at least one crocodile, setting in motion a bloodthirs­ty battle royale between terrified human interloper­s and fleshhungr­y reptiles.

Black Water: Abyss is a predictabl­e survival thriller, which splish-splashes through confidentl­y staged set-pieces. Scriptwrit­ers Ridley and Smith refuse to

lw wedge tongues in cheek when characters loudly tease impending doom – “I don’t like the look of this”, “No-one knows we’re down here, right?” – or when they engineer a hilarious finale ripped out of the Jaws playbook.

McNamee and Golden are spunky damsels in deluged distress, who cope well with the gruelling physical demands of their underwritt­en roles.

 ??  ?? Amali Golden as Yolanda
Crocodile fears: One thrill-seeker tries to escape one snappy customer
Jessica McNamee as Jennifer
Amali Golden as Yolanda Crocodile fears: One thrill-seeker tries to escape one snappy customer Jessica McNamee as Jennifer

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