Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWildlife photographer Terry and her brother Art go to Venezuela for a photo shoot. They hire Jim Pendrake to guide them through the jungle. However, the trio run afoul of evil local hunter C... Tout lireWildlife photographer Terry and her brother Art go to Venezuela for a photo shoot. They hire Jim Pendrake to guide them through the jungle. However, the trio run afoul of evil local hunter Caribe.Wildlife photographer Terry and her brother Art go to Venezuela for a photo shoot. They hire Jim Pendrake to guide them through the jungle. However, the trio run afoul of evil local hunter Caribe.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Avis à la une
An hour and a half of nothing, but awkward silences with some weird guy, who isn't weird enough to be scary.
I thought there was no way $5 could be too much for a movie.
Damn I was sooooo wrong. It was very hard to watch the whole thing.
Don't fool yourself. Its not so good that its bad. Its not even that kind of movie.
Its nothing. an hour and a half of absolutely nothing.
PIECE OF CRAP!!!!!!!!
Like Jack Palance and Henry Silva, William Smith is one of those presences that no matter how much you hate, you have to respect, and deep down inside, no matter how good you are, or think you are, you wish you were. Nothing phases them, and they're in complete control of their destinies. If someone bothers them, they are eliminated, and if they want someone, they reach out and grab them. This is one of those films that fully endorses that mythology, in Smith's character, Caribe.
The film is an intriguing blend of 'Deliverance' and 'The Most Dangerous Game'. It's no masterpiece by any stretch of the imagination, but it's nowhere near as bad as people make it out to be. And it's no ripoff to Dante's thriller, because it came out six years beforehand (and three years before 'Jaws' made this type of movie so popular). What is very difficult for me to grasp is that around this same time, in an even more desolate area of South America and with even more temperamental actors, Werner Herzog was making a masterpiece in 'Aguirre, the Wrath of God'...
It's an early 70's Crime Thriller of sorts set in the jungles of Venezuela instead of the big city streets.
Besides not being the piranha-fest most people were hoping for, this crime-thriller type of movie moves too slow for most people's liking and not enough happens.
The hurried turn of events at the end is kind of lackluster and even non-realistic in how it happens in many ways.
It's kind of like the end was thrown on quickly when they realized they had enough other footage to pad the movie out to 90 mins., or they were running out of time and money. There's plenty of animal stock footage, diamond mining footage, and a pretty much pointless motorcycle race.....
The ending was kind of predictable too once there were only a few players left and some resolution of the conflict evolving was inevitable.
I wanted to like the movie more, but it just was weaker than it should have been on too many fronts, probably why it's a bargain title or thrown in on multi-title DVD's so cost of it should be around $1 or so to see it.
Poor camera, lousy acting and just plain horrid storyline...
There was very little here that was even worth watching... How this movie even got released is beyond me.
Make sure the movie you buy is the one you want... and not this one.
The movie I bought was labeled "Piranha" and not "Piranha, Piranha!" which is what it actually is... This is the only way they sold this movie at all.
Peace Out.
William Gibson directs this poorly acted, scripted, and pause-ridden suspense thriller that is easily lost in the shuffle of modern day cinema. The low budget is very obvious as Gibson riddles the film with overlapping scenes of birds, birds, and more birds to fill time. We are even shown unending scenes of diamond mining and bike racing, leaving nothing to develop characters or story. We are even shorted on the title of this film as there are only two mentions of the flesh eating fish.
Back-stories are underdeveloped leaving us a lack of emotion for the main characters and building an emotionless climax that only gave us hope that the film was over. Nothing was worth saving in this film, unless you enjoy studying birds from different countries (outside of the one that the film takes place). Gibson missed the entire focus of this film and the final result reminds us of a preschooler's first collage where there were tons of images, massive amounts of glue, and no real structure.
Grade: * out of ****
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesPeter Brown and William Smith previously worked together on the TV Show LAREDO 1965-1967 portraying Texas Rangers.
- GaffesAfter Caribe is attacked by the piranha and his head slowly disappears under the surface, the prop head is not only still visible underneath the water, but it bobs up again just before the dissolve to the sunset.
- Citations
[After their race, that Caribe won]
Art Greene: Congratulations, Caribe.
Caribe: Another try?
Jim Pendrake: No, thanks.
Caribe: So, who wants to see the diamonds now?
Art Greene: Terry, do you wanna see diamonds?
Terry: Not only see them, I want to make pictures of them, my Dear!
Caribe: I'll meet you in half an hour!
- Bandes originalesLove All Things That Love the Sun
Written and Sung by Jim Stein
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Piranha?Alimenté par Alexa