When summer hits, it's time for sharks.
I don't make the rules.
But occasionally, I love them.
Quick Plot: It's 1946 down under when a quartet of gangsters crashes their stolen bounty deep into a river. Leader Bull Maddock (played by Jake Ryan who I have to believe is known as the Australian James Gandolfini) hires a struggling and scrappy diving company to retrieve the goods. The price is right, even if the details are obviously sketchy.
On the team is enthusiastic Clara, quiet Jimmy, and kind but usually drunk Ernie.
In the water is a bull shark.
That's essentially the plot of Fear Below, a genuinely fun little 90 minutes. Written by Gregory Moss and Matthew Holmes (the latter who also directed), this is the kind of zippy little genre flick that satisfies the exact itch you needed scratched. The good guys are likable and quirky, the bad guys are charismatically mean. The shark action isn't as sharp as you might like in a shark movie, but that's where the genius of the setup comes into play.
Fear Below is the kind of concept I love to discover in a genre film: a threat we know in a setting we rarely see. By placing the action in the 1940s, we get layers of added intrigue that raise this above the usual "there's a shark in the water" fare. Our characters are WWII vets. There are racial and gender dynamics that affect each interaction, and the limited technology means there are never any easy solutions.
More importantly, Fear Below just has a great attitude. I'll take more please.
High Points
We don't get too much backstory into our characters, but the scraps and actors' charms are just enough to keep us fully invested and rooting for a win
Low Points
I queued up Fear Below because I saw "heist + shark" and thought it would be a dumb good time. Had I any inkling of its 1940s period setting, I probably would have watched faster. All this is to say that "Fear Below" is a terribly bland title, only slightly more interesting than the even emptier poster art. Where was the marketing department on this one?
Lessons Learned
It's never too early for nicknames
People are never more creative than when they've got a gun to their head
Working in a river is like working in a cave
Rent/Bury/Buy
Fear Below isn't a new classic, but it's quick and fun watch well worth your time. Find it on Hulu.







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