The Freeman

'The Meg' is hiere and she's pleased to eat you For Masi Oka, who plays one of the crew members stranded in the sub, a good monster movie is enjoyable precisely because the audience feels safe as the carnage unfolds onscreen. “I think if you were watchi

In the 43 years since “Jaws’ scared a generation of cinemagoer­s out of the water and took a $470 million bite out of the box office, few shark movies have made much of a splash.

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The increasing­ly poor sequels to Steven Spielberg’s 1975 masterpiec­e launched their own era of corny aquatic monster movies, from The Asylum’s “Sharknado” series to more sober but uninspirin­g releases like “Deep Blue Sea” and “The Shallows.”

“The Meg” lunges out of the deep in US and Chinese theaters on August 10 with the aim of giving the genre back its teeth with a two-million-year-old megalodon five times the size of a great white.

“When you’re a kid, you think there’s a monster under your bed or in your closet, and monsters haunt us. They’re there in our darkest dreams,” one of the movie’s stars, American actor Rainn Wilson, told AFP.

“They are in the Jungian shadow part of ourselves. Humanity’s in some dark times right now and I think the monster movies and post-apocalypti­c monsters reflect that.”

Based on the best-selling novel “MEG” by Steve Alten, Jon Turteltaub’s movie stars Jason Statham (“The Fate of the Furious,” “The Expendable­s”) and Chinese actress Li Bingbing (“Transforme­rs: Age of Extinction”).

A deep-sea submersibl­e – part of an internatio­nal undersea observatio­n program – has been attacked by a massive creature and lies disabled at the bottom of

the deepest part of the Pacific Ocean with its crew trapped inside.

Former deep-sea rescue diver Jonas Taylor (Statham) is drawn out of selfimpose­d exile by a visionary Chinese oceanograp­her, Dr. Zhang (Winston Chao), against the wishes of his daughter, Suyin (Li), who thinks she can rescue the crew on her own.

Indelible impression

But it will take their combined efforts to save the crew, and the ocean itself, from this seemingly unstoppabl­e threat – a prehistori­c 75-foot (23-meter) shark known as the megalodon.

Wilson – best known as creepy salesman Dwight in NBC’s “The Office” – remembers being around 12 years old when he first saw “Jaws.”

“I had never seen a movie like that before. I remember it really made an indelible impression – it did on a lot of people,” he said during a press preview for the movie in Los Angeles.

“The filmmaking was just so beautiful and visceral and it was absolutely terrifying.” technology has improved beyond recognitio­n.

“Filmmakers are no longer limited by what you can do, it’s what you can think of,” he said.

As with many recent blockbuste­rs – including “The Great Wall,” “Transforme­rs: Age of Extinction,” “Furious 7,” “Skyscraper” and “Pacific Rim 2” – “The Meg” has significan­t Chinese funding, and much of the movie takes place in the Middle Kingdom.

The Hauraki Gulf in northern New Zealand doubled as China’s Pacific coast and much of the shoot took place in huge tanks at the Kumeu Film Studios in Auckland.

But the production moved to China’s Hainan Island for extensive sections of the movie and the beachside city of Sanya provided the setting for a climactic attack involving thousands of extras.

“China is an amazing place – vibrant, colorful and bright. The script called for a densely populated beach, and that’s Sanya Bay,” Turteltaub said.

“It’s not lacking for people, which was heaven for a giant shark movie.”

 ??  ?? A scene in the upcoming shark film “The Meg”
A scene in the upcoming shark film “The Meg”

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