

And, really, they're probably relying heavily on the sisterly bond between the two and the ordeal they're going through to carry the film. Though, to be fair, she's the one that pushes Lisa to do this shark cage thing to show her ex that she isn't boring, since that was the reason that, apparently, he broke it off with her. Lisa is just going through a break-up and, for some reason, she wants this guy back. Another thing is that, honestly, there's no real depth to any of the characters. I mean, the sisters are underwater, there's no real way to make that look exciting or fresh across 85 minutes. Not that I had a problem with that, it's just that, after a while, the movie gets a little same-y looking. Maybe the fact that the majority of the flick takes place underwater. I honestly don't know what that missing piece was. I honestly felt that it was missing a little something that would have made it good, in my opinion. Now, of course, that's not to suggest that I thought this film was good. But, again, focusing on whether or not the dive science is accurate is being purposely ignorant. Look, I was likely to never get into a shark cage to begin with, so this movie didn't really change that, as terrifying as the sisters' entire ordeal was. Oh and, of course, worrying about the fucking sharks that are in the ocean. This is a movie about two sisters, stuck in a shark cage at the bottom of the ocean (47 meters down.duh), fighting to survive their ordeal while their oxygen runs out. It's a fucking horror movie, not a mindfuck of a movie that explored so many scientific ideas that it, probably, didn't really do justice to. While I get that, in many cases, being as accurate as you can toward a specific subject is key to making sure their narrative works, I don't think it should be as scrutinized as, say, the science in Interstellar was. People go into movies to buy into the illusion of the narrative that they're trying to sell you. It's trying to be a horror story and it's trying to get its point across as effectively as it can. I don't think this movie was ever menat to portray it perfectly, but, again, focusing on such a that completely misses the point the movie is trying to make.

But, maybe, just maybe, have people thought about the fact that maybe this movie wasn't about faithful and truthful to dive science. I didn't read the article, so I'm just reacting from the title of the article. I Googled this movie, fairly recently, and one of the first articles that came up, the title at least, said that the movie fails dive science. I'm not necessarily saying that these films are better horror movies than, say, Rosemary's Baby or Evil Dead 2 (the first two names that came to mind), but they're just ones that they can believe that it might actually happen to them. Seriously though, and this is something that I've said many times, I feel that the horror movies that most resonate with people are those movies that feel like it's something that could happen to them. There would also be a sequel called 1 Meter Down: Instant Death. It'd probably be called 0.5 Meters Down: Fear Personified. In fact, I told this friend, yesterday, that if I was the main character of this movie. I joke around with a friend of mine about my inability to survive for any length of time in the ocean. It's not like I won't go to beaches or anything of the sort, it doesn't go that far, but I just don't go to the beach as often as I probably should considering that I live on a tropical island. It just seems like a practical skill to have, since you never know what can happen, even if I try to stay away from the ocean as much as I can.
#In the deep movie 2016 full movie how to
Obviously, that traumatic experience has kept me from learning how to swim for the rest of my life, though I want to. In fact, and again, I don't know if I've shared this, but I almost drowned when I was a little kid. I don't know if I may have talked about this in an older review, but I do not know how to swim.


I figure I've got nothing else to do, so I might as well get this review out of the way and avoid facing the same issues that I faced with the prior review, where I began writing it 20 minutes prior to starting that night's movie. I'm starting this review less than 2 hours after finishing my review for Don't Kill It and less than 40 minutes after finishing this flick.
