Tuesday, August 27, 2019

The Meg (2018)

The Meg (Dir: Jon Turteltaub, 2018). 




Bigger isn’t always better, as this mega Jaws clone proves. 

Jason Statham stars as Jonas Taylor, a washed up, alcoholic rescue diver held responsible for the death of two submarine crew in a botched rescue attempt. Called upon once again to rescue the crew of a stranded submersible, Taylor finds himself up against the Megalodon, a 75 foot shark thought to be extinct and soon heading for the coast of China! Is he up to the task? Will he end up as a Megalodon's dinner? Does anybody really care?

For those who have dreamed of a movie where Jason Statham battles a prehistoric beast, your wishes have come true. There is little more to 
The Meg than Statham vs Shark, although for some that will be enough. 

Director Turteltaub’s movies rarely take themselves too seriously and The Meg benefits from his light touch. Once it gets going, the action barely sags and it never gets bogged down by the sort of fist clenching emoting that these movies have a tendency to. However, the flipside of this is that The Meg is populated by a few too many underwritten, cardboard cut-out characters and relies a little heavily on concepts and situations familiar from many other, much better, movies. 

There are some positive aspects to the movie, but most of these are technical. The computer generated special effects are impressive and while the audience has little investment in the characters to care one way or another if they end up as sharkbait, it is fun to see them get chomped on, one by one, by the massive Megalodon.

Statham, once again giving the impression that he is a bit of a better actor than the role allows, acquits himself well as the remorseful action hero. Stand out among a less than stellar supporting cast is Li Bingbing as mission supervisor and potential love interest Suyin. 

If it’s thrills you want, there are plenty, but it’s a shame that filmmakers tend to forget that movies like this don’t necessarily have to be the empty-headed entertainments they so often are. The original 
Jaws (Steven Spielberg, 1975) is testament to that. It's not a bad film by any means and is entertaining while it lasts. But the formulaic, cookie cutter approach to filmmaking fails to lift it above any other number of forgettable action flicks. 

Still, if rampaging monster movies are your thing it is certainly worth a look. If, like me, you have a soft spot for Jaws 3 (Joe Alves, 1983), you might enjoy this equally silly shark saga.



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