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Sisters vs. sharks makes for fun summer escapism

- By Cary Darling Fort Worth Star-Telegram

We’re going bigger cage.

The “Jaws” jokes write themselves with “47 Meters Down,” a surprising­ly effective shark-in-the-dark thriller that makes for frightenin­gly fun summer escapism. Horror director Johannes Roberts (“The Other Side of the Door”) knows what the audience wants in a film like this — two sisters trappedin a dive cage surrounded by sharks — and gives it to them, straight no chaser.

Appropriat­ely, he wastes little time on exposition. Lisa (Mandy Moore) and Kate (Claire Holt, “The Vampire Diaries”) are two Americans on vacation on theMexican coast. Uptight Lisa is trying to deal with a bad break-up, inspiring her younger sister Kate to take her out on the town to drown her romantic sorrows and stop sulking.

That’s where they meet two good-natured, goodlookin­g locals — Benjamin (Santiago Segura) and Louis (Yani Gellman) — who convince them that they need to dive with sharks to make their trip reallymemo­rable. These guys just happen to knowa boat captain who, for a little cash, will take them out to the to need right spot.

Lisa is reluctant but Kate is totally up for hopping on a sketchy boat run by a scraggly expat American (Matthew Modine) — who looks like he’s on the run from several U.S. government­al agencies — with two random dudes they just met while dancing and wearing beer goggles.

Guess they didn’t see last summer’s shark movie, “The Shallows,” because before you can say “shark week,” Lisa and Kate are in a cage underwater marveling at the beauty of all the fish. Just when Lisa is starting to think her fears are unjustifie­d, a mechanical mishap sends the metal box plunging into the depths and the captain can’t immediatel­y reel them back in. That’s when the oohing-and-aahing quickly turns to panic and pleading.

Working froma script he wrote with Ernest Riera, Roberts keeps ramping up the tension and it mostly works, evenwhenap­lot device or two might seem to contradict common sense. Coming in at a breezy 89 minutes, the film doesn’t allow much time to dwell on them anyway.

On top of that, “47 Meters Down” is a technical marvel. The first film to be shot at the MPAA rating: Running time: Opens: 60,546-square-foot water tank at the Pinewood Dominican Republic Studios, it absolutely makes members of the audience feel like they’re at the bottom of the ink-black ocean with Lisa and Kate. And the sharks look real and really hungry.

The movie lacks the emotional resonance of that other stranded-in-theocean cinematic experience, “Open Water,” from 2003. That was a film that lingered in the memory long after the lights went up, partly because it was based on a true story about a couple whose dive-boat left them to perish in the middle of the sea. And “47 Meters Down’ is no “Jaws” but it doesn’t aim for camp like the “Piranh” movies either and feels less voyeuristi­c than “The Shallows”

None of that makes “47 Meters Down“any less entertaini­ng and unsettling in a popcorn-thriller way. Like the old ad for “Jaws 2” said, “Just when you thought it was safe to go back in thewater.”

 ?? HANDOUT ?? Mandy Moore, left, and Claire Holt star in Johannes Roberts’ “47 Meters Down.”
HANDOUT Mandy Moore, left, and Claire Holt star in Johannes Roberts’ “47 Meters Down.”

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