The Guardian (USA)

Meg 2: The Trench review – Jason Statham v seamonster­s, round two

- Ryan Gilbey

“A relationsh­ip, I think, is like a shark,” says Woody Allen in Annie Hall. “It has to constantly move forward or it dies.” Ditto franchises. A prologue set in the Cretaceous period hints that Meg 2: The Trench will exceed the enjoyably tacky thrills of the 2018 seaborne monster movie by going weirder and wilder – a suspicion encouraged by the presence of Ben Wheatley (Sightseers, A Field in England) as director. In fact, the sequel alternatel­y treads water and splashes around franticall­y in search of an identity. Never settling on whether he wants his film to be Alien, Jaws, Jurassic Park or Sharknado, Wheatley serves up a bouillabai­sse of all four.

Battling a 75ft-long megalodon with an 8ft dorsal fin and five rows of teeth is another sort of formidable, remorseles­s beast: Jason Statham, who returns as shark-hunter and ocean-defender Jonas Taylor but still hasn’t decided whether to play the role with a cockney accent or an American one. While he’s mulling that over, he commandeer­s a submersibl­e on a research trip 25,000ft below, only to find the mission gatecrashe­d by megs and other assorted sea monsters. It’s the multiplici­ty of threats that scuppers any possible scares: everything from a giant squid and velocirapt­or-like land-dwelling lizards to a double-crossing entreprene­ur and a gang of rogue miners leave the meg playing second fiddle in its own film. Matters have come to a pretty pass when audience and characters alike see an exploding head as little more than a minor setback.

Intermitte­nt pleasures include a knowing reference to Jaws 2 and a Little Shop of Horrors-style shot gazing out from inside an open mouth, as well as plenty of “Hell no!” interjecti­ons from the endearing Page Kennedy as resident tech guy, DJ. And the film keeps Statham busy, whether he is taking to jet-skis for an impromptu midsea jousting tournament or scrambling along a pier as it’s being masticated. His deathless way with a line reading can still raise a smile. “Great – more megs,” is no one’s idea of snappy dialogue but his unimpresse­d cadence lifts it into the realm of the droll.

It’s just a shame the film makes him spend so much time playing dad to a teenage sort-of stepdaught­er, Meiying (Sophia Cai). Along with her uncle, Jiuming (Wu Jing), who thinks he can tame a megalodon, they end the film as a sitcom trio, suggesting a potential new direction for the third instalment. A radical rethink is needed, that’s for sure. Anyone for Meg vs M3GAN?

• Meg 2: The Trench is released on 4 August in the UK and the US

 ?? ?? Jaws of disaster … Jason Statham in Meg 2: The Trench. Photograph: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
Jaws of disaster … Jason Statham in Meg 2: The Trench. Photograph: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

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