Agrega una trama en tu idiomaFollows a group of marine rescue experts as they protect the Queensland coastline from toxic spills, environmental hazards and marine wreckage.Follows a group of marine rescue experts as they protect the Queensland coastline from toxic spills, environmental hazards and marine wreckage.Follows a group of marine rescue experts as they protect the Queensland coastline from toxic spills, environmental hazards and marine wreckage.
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The first series of this show was great fun with likeable characters and interesting scenarios. Unfortunately the second series loses the magic with a new ops manager who takes the charisma and fun out of the show that made the first series so charming and good fun. Worth a watch, though.
Luke keeps stating Christopher is a $400k tank retriever, if you actually look online at the model of Christoper(M1070E1) its starting price in American Auctions starts at $15K, it may have been $400K when it was new 20 plus years ago, He really needs to stop bragging he owns a $400K piece of Machinery .Watching the recoveries they do, they are seriously dodgy and unsafe , no consideration of surroundings and especially safety of his team and others, I am surprised Work Safe has not investigated the company. He really needs to invest in proper training in Dogging and Rigging for himself and his team, and maybe a few other course instead of flying by the seat of his pants.
The lack of tools is incredible, they try to recover a little cabin cruiser. The little water pump is hired and due to go back, they tow it with a little dingy thing. Then don't even have a trailer to get it out the water. On the plus side they don't seem to be phased by the challenges plus a couple of cute girls who make the workday watchable.
One in the sea of line-of-work documentaries dressed up as reality shows. Salvaging wreckages sunk below sea or stranded on beaches is an interesting and worthy profession, to be sure, but I doubt one could milk more than an hour or two worth of watch out of it. Surely, every wreckage is a story of its own but once you get the gist of it there's no need to stick around as a spectator. Therefore the show banks on the likeability of the characters and interesting directing to stretch it over a season or more.
So are the characters likeable? Not really. And I'm not even sure if they're a genuine salvage crew or just actors. If they're just actors, all the worse for them. The main guy, who's also the boss, growls and speaks in thick accent so he's barely intelligible, which would be charming if there wasn't for his dour personality. There are two males in his crew: one is completely unnoticeable, while the other is supposed to be off kilter and funny, but only comes across as an irritating cliche. There are also two females: more an eye candy than useful in terms of salvaging. Their skimpy outfits are there to compensate for the fact that they're not given a lot of meaningful tasks. In terms of the profession, they could've done without the girls, but in terms of the show, they girls are salvaging it.
The director, editor and screenplayer try all kinds of trickery to present the job as dangerous, what with sudden zooms, cuts and contrivances. The characters narrate it in such a manner that you'd think terrible things happen to them all the time, but the camera just doesn't corroborate it. It probably is dangerous sometimes, but they can't really hide the obvious routine and mundanity behind all the occasional malfunctions of equipment and bouts of bad weather. There is an attempt to amp up the fun part of the job as well, but it boils down to watching the crew throw an occasional afterhour party or try pulling pranks on each other. Nothing that sets this particular profession apart from any other.
It would really be much better if it was presented straightforwardly, without all the makeup, the way documentaries used to be like. But nowadays everything has to be "exciting" and "intense" and "funny" and "MTV" and whatnot. I guess it's working for some since the series has entered it's third season already. But for this viewer it's just an uninformative waste of time - and a depressing watch, despite the gorgeous setting.
So are the characters likeable? Not really. And I'm not even sure if they're a genuine salvage crew or just actors. If they're just actors, all the worse for them. The main guy, who's also the boss, growls and speaks in thick accent so he's barely intelligible, which would be charming if there wasn't for his dour personality. There are two males in his crew: one is completely unnoticeable, while the other is supposed to be off kilter and funny, but only comes across as an irritating cliche. There are also two females: more an eye candy than useful in terms of salvaging. Their skimpy outfits are there to compensate for the fact that they're not given a lot of meaningful tasks. In terms of the profession, they could've done without the girls, but in terms of the show, they girls are salvaging it.
The director, editor and screenplayer try all kinds of trickery to present the job as dangerous, what with sudden zooms, cuts and contrivances. The characters narrate it in such a manner that you'd think terrible things happen to them all the time, but the camera just doesn't corroborate it. It probably is dangerous sometimes, but they can't really hide the obvious routine and mundanity behind all the occasional malfunctions of equipment and bouts of bad weather. There is an attempt to amp up the fun part of the job as well, but it boils down to watching the crew throw an occasional afterhour party or try pulling pranks on each other. Nothing that sets this particular profession apart from any other.
It would really be much better if it was presented straightforwardly, without all the makeup, the way documentaries used to be like. But nowadays everything has to be "exciting" and "intense" and "funny" and "MTV" and whatnot. I guess it's working for some since the series has entered it's third season already. But for this viewer it's just an uninformative waste of time - and a depressing watch, despite the gorgeous setting.
Awful show. The cast consists of a couple of moderately attractive women who don't like to work, I'm not sure if they like doing anything at all. Then you guy a main guy who acts as if he is the boss but has a brain the size of a walnut. They never know what equipment to use, they're extremely inconsiderate to the environment around them and I honestly feel embarrassed to live in the same country that this show is from. It's not factual to any extent, if you want a real salvage show, anything and everything is better than this show. Its like the wannabe homeland away equivalent of salvage shows.
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- Extreme Salvage Squad
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By what name was Aussie Salvage Squad (2018) officially released in Canada in English?
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