Austin American-Statesman

It’s Statham vs. shark, and you’re gonna need a bigger popcorn

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It’s as true in 2018 as it was in 1975: There’s no better way to beat the summer heat than a movie about a really, really big shark. From “Jaws” to “The Shallows,” moviegoers have been gobbling up flicks about treacherou­s fish for decades, and it’s time to meet our newest finned foe: “The Meg.” It’s the nickname for the megalodon, a prehistori­c shark bigger than a tour bus, but all you need to know about John Turteltaub’s watery summer action flick is it’s Jason Statham fighting a shark.

Based on the novel “Meg” by Steve Alten, the Chinese co-production has been smart with its cheeky marketing — “PLEASED TO EAT YOU” and “OPENING WIDE” splashed across posters of swimmers on floaties — and the film delivers on that sillystupi­d-summer-fun promise, while also exceeding expectatio­ns in terms of action and set-pieces. It’s far bigger than simple one-setting B-movies like “The Shallows” or “47 Meters Down,” boasting a large internatio­nal cast and several showdowns with the Meg that each are wilder than the last.

Our hero, Jonas (Statham), first encountere­d the Meg during a deep sea rescue mission and had to abandon two of his team members to save the rest. Blamed for their deaths and called crazy for his claims that “something was down there,” he’s now washed up and drunk on a beach in Thailand. But as the only person who has pulled off rescues that deep, he’s recruited for a mission at a research facility in the waters off Shanghai. The only reason he shows up is his ex-wife Lori ( Jessica McNamee) is piloting the research sub that’s been stranded by a large, mysterious sea creature in a deep sea trench.

Aboard the research facility are a motley crew of scientists and hangers-on, including father-daughter team Dr. Minway Zhang (Winston Chao) and Suyin (Li Bingbing), man-child billionair­e funder Jack Morris (Rainn Wilson), various techies (Ruby Rose, Page Kennedy, Masi Oka and Ólafur Darri Ólafsson), Jonas’s nemesis, Dr. Heller (Robert Taylor), and of course, a preternatu­rally precocious child, Suyin’s daughter Meiying (Shuya Sophia Cai). Every character comes face to face with the Meg multiple

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