Cast: Elisabeth Shue, Jerry O'Connell, Adam Scott, Ving Rhames and Jessica Szohr
Synopsis: In this 3-D action thriller, a new type of terror is about to be cut loose on beautiful Lake Victoria. After a sudden underwater tremor sets free scores of the prehistoric man-eating fish, an unlikely group of strangers must band together to stop themselves from becoming fish food for the area's new razor-toothed residents. But our heroine is seriously outnumbered, and with only one chance to save the lake and her family from totally being devoured, she must risk everything to destroy the aquatic carnivores herself. "Giddy, gory and gleefully tasteless fun."--St. Petersburgh Times
Running Time: 90 Minutes (plus 8-10 minutes of trailers)
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Reviews:
'Piranha 3D' redefines what 3D should be
By Drew McWeeny
First, let me pose a question to you: what would you expect, or more importantly want, if you paid to see a film in the theater called "Piranha 3D"?
The worst case scenario for a reaction to a movie like this would be, in my opinion, in difference. There's nothing more depressing for me to sit through than something mechanical and boring and perfunctory. When a film has no pulse at all, I find it more unpleasant to sit through than an enthusiastically terrible film. If someone really goes for it, but they fail completely, it's still worth seeing if only for that misguided passion. It's the films where it feels like all involved are just picking up a check and sleep-walking through the work that chip away at me each year.
Thankfully, Alexandre Aja is a lunatic.
He seems to have rebounded completely now from the rancid, joyless "Mirrors" with this fishsploitation joyride that does its best to entertain from the first shot to the last. It is shameless, in every way that matters, amazingly gory, packed with gratuitous nudity, and cheerfully unconcerned with padding at a brisk 82 minutes. The film starts with a silly celebrity cameo and a bunch of wink-wink in-jokes that will entertain fans who know the origins of the original '70s "Piranha," as well as a fistful of CGI and blood. That sets the tone that the rest of the film adheres to, and it seems like Aja's never been more comfortable than he is playing loose and ridiculous here.
I wouldn't call this a remake or a sequel to the Joe Dante "Piranha," but more like a really affectionate take on the same basic idea, filtered through a more contemporary sensibility. The film takes place on Lake Victoria, Arizona, an obvious stand-in for the popular destination of Lake Havasu. It's spring break, and horny drunken college kids descend on the small town with decadence in mind. The town's sheriff, Julie Forester (Elizabeth Shue), discovers a dead body that's been chewed to pieces, and her first instinct is to close the lake. What she doesn't realize is that an earthquake has opened a rift in the bottom of the lake, revealing another lake below it that's been shut off since prehistoric times, allowing crazy ravenous dinosaur piranha to run free and feed. Add in a sleazy amateur porn crew under the enthusiastic guidance of Derrick Jones (Jerry O'Connell) and a team of "seismologist divers" studying the effects of the quake led by Novak (Adam Scott), and you've pretty much got all the players in the mayhem that unfolds.
The film feels like it's been heavily edited, with pretty much all but the most basic story points left on the floor. No matter. The film offers up money shots, one after another, in myriad ways. O'Connell's sleazy porn producer (who I'm sure isn't remotely based on Joe Francis or Girls Gone Wild) brings two girls with him for a shoot on the lake, and the casting of Kelly Brook and Riley Steele borders on genius. Steele is a real porn actress and has no problem with nudity or underwater lesbian ballet, and Brook is an English lingerie model who is an architectural marvel. Honestly, forget about "Avatar." Kelly Brook butt-ass nekkid is the reason that 3D was created, and Aja takes full advantage of the potential. When the film's bloodletting finally kicks in, it's unrelenting, and there's one long sequence that may become infamous as one of the most spectacularly violent R-rated set pieces ever. It just keeps going and going, killing more and more people in crazier and crazier ways, and by the end, I was almost rattled by the sheer quantity of the violence. It's all played for "HOLY CRAP!" laughs, but it is brutally executed by KNB, and you can almost hear Greg Nicotero standing just off-camera and howling at everything he's getting away with.
The cast knows exactly what they're doing, and Elizabeth Shue and Adam Scott both walk away winners. Scott in particular seems to be having indecent fun striking a few action hero poses and reacting with droll alarms to the monster fish. Christopher Lloyd shows up for what is really just an extended cameo, but every line out of his mouth gets a laugh just because of the general lack of Lloyd in our lives lately. Ving Rhames doesn't have a lot to do, but he goes down swinging. O'Connell may never be able to convincingly shake off the scumbag after the enthusiastic way he and his cameraman (Paul Scheer of "Human Giant" fame) ply their trade and earn their punishment. Even the young cast, led by Steven R. McQueen and Jessica Szohr, acquit themselves as well as possible considering how generally thin the material is.
If you pay close attention, you'll notice there are fairly well-known faces who flash by so fast that they had to have suffered from post-production problems, and the film's 3D conversion is largely successful although still marred by occasional artifacts that prove this wasn't shot in 3D. It might as well have been, since so much of the film seems to have been specifically designed for the process, and the film seems well aware that when you're making exploitation, pretending to be classy about it is pointless. I took some guff for not like "The Expendables," but that's a film that wants it both ways. It isn't big and dumb enough as a big dumb action movie, and as a character piece about guys questioning their way of life, it's too undercooked. That middle ground just doesn't work for me, and the result was frustration. With "Snakes On A Plane," another film I've heard people compare this to, I don't think the film was ever unhinged enough to live up to that title. "Piranha 3D" doesn't have a thing on its agenda other than chaos, and it keeps throwing the silly at you until the last shock cut to black, an attitude that is to be admired in an age with marketing lies more often than not.
Copyright 2010 Hitfix
'Piranha 3D' is graphic, gratuitous and glorious
By Steve Persall, Times Film Critic
Hands down and body parts floating, the most irresistibly sick movie in years is Piranha 3D, which should be retitled Piranha 3D, Double-D and C for all the topless cuties director Alexandre Aja feeds the fish and audience.
This flick is Guignol at its grandest, with possibly the most gallons of fake blood ever smeared across the screen. Each crimson drop has something in mind besides nausea, and that's the rush of giving viewers a better reason to gag. I'm ashamed to admit how much Piranha 3D made me shake with laughter, or what exactly prompted it.
Like the almost final words of a sexist pig deserving what he gets (and where he gets it), followed by a shocking sight gag with no fewer than five punchlines. Or else a snapped cable shearing a sunbather diagonally so her left side slowly slides off. Even without bloodshed, you can't beat a nude underwater opera ballet featuring misplaced pole dancers holding their breath for several minutes.
That's entertainment, of a sort.
Piranha 3D is inspired by a 1978 grindhouse hit that itself was a goof of Jaws. Aja quickly gets that trivia out of the way with Richard Dreyfuss dressed in his Jaws costume in a motorboat, fishing on a lake. He gets a bite then gets bitten, after he's sucked into a whirlpool created by a seismic disturbance unleashing prehistoric piranhas. It's an astonishing sequence considering Aja's $24 million budget, proving 3D is more than flying dragons and 'toons.
Like Jaws, Piranha 3D is set in a vacation hotspot during a busy holiday, in this case spring break at Lake Victoria, Ariz. Elisabeth Shue plays the sheriff nobody takes seriously until it's too late. Her son Jake (Steven R. McQueen) is a nice kid roped into assisting a Joe Francis kind of guy (Jerry O'Connell) taping another Wild Wild Girls video during the weekend.
The latter subplot allows Aja to scan the party boats for flashers and strap a nude woman into a parasail so she can become piranha fondue. One thing you notice after a while is those thousands of gnashing teeth never miss snipping the straps of a bikini. They do prefer munching eyeballs and lower appendages, the better for Aja to display relatively intact upper torsos with entrails dragging.
Then just when it seems Piranha 3D can't take the breasts-and-blood routine any farther, Aja stages a massacre during a "Dying to Get Wet" bash to make viewers reel and hurl. Flesh eating fish are only the beginning. Steering a speedboat through dozens of swimmers already maimed and screaming isn't all there is, either.
But there isn't a mean bone in Piranha 3D's mangled bodies. This is giddy, gory and gleefully tasteless fun that drive-in icon Joe Bob Briggs would tell you to check out in a heartbeat. Me too.
Copyright 2010 St. Petersburgh Times
A very gory but equally funny remake
By David Edwards
Of all the terror-in-the-water movies that followed Jaws, perhaps the best was Joe Dante's Piranha in 1978, which neatly mixed chills with pitch-black comedy.
This loose remake turns up the dial on both, resulting in a very gory but equally funny guilty pleasure with a keen sense of its own ridiculousness.
With thousands of teens descending on an Arizona lake for a spring break, young Jake skips babysitting duties to party with a porn director and two models (including Kelly Brook), just as a horde of very hungry prehistoric piranhas start turning the waters red.
From its inventive deaths to a bit part from Richard Dreyfuss and Brook performing a naked underwater ballet, this sure doesn't amount to art. But director Alexandre Aja (The Hills Have Eyes, Mirrors) keeps the laughs and chills coming at breakneck speed.
For enjoyably trashy fun, it's leagues above most comedy horrors.
THE REEL LOWDOWN
IF YOU LIKED... Lake Placid, Frankenfish... YOU'LL LIKE THIS.