Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe California coast is terrorized by two enormous prehistoric sea creatures as they battle each other for supremacy of the sea.The California coast is terrorized by two enormous prehistoric sea creatures as they battle each other for supremacy of the sea.The California coast is terrorized by two enormous prehistoric sea creatures as they battle each other for supremacy of the sea.
- Emma MacNeil
- (as Deborah Gibson)
- Takeo
- (as Michael The)
- Marine Biologist
- (as Dana Dimatteo)
- Japanese Typhoon Captain
- (as Larry Parrish)
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The good: Still trying to come up with something The bad: I know this is a low budget D-list movie, but come on - the effects and CGI were stunningly bad. They looked like they were done on my laptop over a weekend. They might have been acceptable in the early 90s.
To make it even worse, many of the CGI scenes were constantly repeated. Whenever the shark or octopus attacked, you usually saw it preparing or approaching for the attack several times using the exact same footage. Sometimes they even bothered to mirror image the scene to make it look different.
So many of the details were amazingly unrealistic. The dialogue was bad, the way people behaved and delivered lines, physics (as in what animals of that size could actually do), torpedoes were like firecrackers, etc.
Quality control was obviously lacking. When the shark approaches a battleship from the side, the ship is shown firing forward. Once, during a video call, for about a second a film crew member wearing a headset pops into existence beside the person on the call, and then disappears. The caller and those working in the background are obviously oblivious to this phantom man.
There was this laughably bad science scene where the main characters keep dumping vials of various colored liquids into test tubes of other colored stuff and then they all looked disappointed. This happened over and over for like 5 minutes. All without any dialogue or any clue as to what they were actually doing. We only knew they were looking for a "solution" to the problem of giant sea monsters. I guess dumping red goo into a vat of blue gunk and having it not turn a different color is not a solution to giant sea monsters. Gosh, I am glad they tried that, it might have worked! There was an embarrassingly bad romance side plot thrown in, and the build up to the final showdown was dull, and then that showdown was short and filled with repeats of the same footage over and over.
I almost never feel strongly enough about a movie to write a review, but for this one I had to. If I prevent even one person from seeing this movie, then I have done my job.
This is ineptitude at its comedic utmost, with a Plan 9 from Outer Space result: you either laugh at its level of inane silliness, hate it for the same reason, or just fall asleep while watching.
The plot: what plot? This script is pretty much a stew of ideas from other goofy monster monstrosities with pre-historic creatures occasionally showing up, brain-dead military that ineffectively shoot everything they have, useless scientists who apparently got their degrees from an on-line certification service, panicky mobs with screaming extras, hokey effects, intentionally moronic dialog, and pathetically atrocious acting. The cast knows it's campy to the extreme, and play along.
60 million years from now, when another species does archaeological digging, they may find a DVD of this. What will move them emotionally the greatest? The sensitive portrayal of "scientist" Debbie Gibson and the Japanese scientist guy making out in a broom closet? The said same scientists experimenting with different flavors of Gatorade (what were they trying to accomplish in that scene, anyway)? Perhaps the five minute struggle between the enormous sea creatures (only seen in periodic choppy three-second out-takes), or that dumb ponytail that Lorenzo Lamas still has?
Also, which of these inspired performances will be awarded the Oscar? The high-flying mega-shark that can swim at 500 knots, or leap 5 miles into the air and snag a plane moving at about 600 miles an hour? Or the big octopus, that swims around aimlessly with such precision? Debbie Gibson's line chewing while constantly pointing her nose directly into the camera? The mono-tonal Japanese scientist guy? Or Lamas, who utters delightfully uproarious quips in your ears every 15 seconds? Words in the English dictionary simply cannot adequately describe the sensitive portrayals in this film.
I hope future generations will experience this landmark cinema and utilize it as an insight of the sophistication of our present-day culture. I'd also like to see the looks on their faces.
I was so looking forward to this movie since i saw trailer but this movie was HUGE let down for me
You will have to seat thought 75 minutes of really BAD acting, (The acting is so bad that it make want to turn the movie off ) for the first Fight scene and I am sure they use the same scenes over and over and over again in the Fight it self was unbeliever RUBBISH and even bigger let down the whole movie
However You do get to see the Octupus and Shark before the Fight scene at different times out of the water!
I would rather watch Octupus 2 (2000) again instead of this!
2/10
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe first Asylum production to have a theatrical release.
- PatzerA group of hammerhead sharks swim near the Arctic. Hammerheads only swim in warm waters.
- Zitate
[Condor Airlines 747 experiences some turbulence while at 30,000 feet in the air. As a female passenger is advised by a flight attendant to put her seatback up, her fiancé is jolted by the sudden change in turbulence and he gets up]
Nervous Air Passenger: Whoa!
Flight Attendent: Please sit down, sir. It's just an air pocket. Thank you.
Nervous Air Passenger: We're getting married in two days.
Flight Attendent: You'll be fine.
Airline Captain: [On the intercom] All right, folks, please fasten your seat belts.
[as the 747 flies through the clouds, the male passenger suddenly looks out the window]
Nervous Air Passenger: Holy shit!
[the Megalodon jumps up from the sea to catch the 747]
- Crazy CreditsSpecial Thanks: BETSY AND BENJI
- VerbindungenFeatured in Bad Movie Beatdown: Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus (2010)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Mega Shark Versus Giant Octopus
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Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 722 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 28 Min.(88 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.78 : 1