Bait 3D
Bait | |
---|---|
Theatrical Release Poster | |
Directed by | Kimble Rendall |
Produced by |
Gary Hamilton Todd Fellman Peter Barber |
Written by |
Russell Mulcahy John Kim |
Starring | |
Music by |
Joe Ng Alex Oh |
Cinematography | Ross Emery |
Edited by | Rodrigo Balart |
Production company |
Darclight Films |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 93 minutes |
Country |
Australia Singapore |
Language | English |
Budget | $20 million[1] |
Box office | $29.5 million[2] |
Bait 3D is an Australian-Singaporean 3D horror thriller film directed by Kimble Rendall based on the screenplay by John Kim and Russell Mulcahy.[3] It featured Sharni Vinson, Phoebe Tonkin, Xavier Samuel, Julian McMahon, Cariba Heine, Alex Russell, Lincoln Lewis, Alice Parkinson, and Dan Wyllie. The film was released on 20 September 2012 in Australia.
Plot
The movie opens with a hungover lifeguard, Josh (Xavier Samuel), being woken up by friend and fellow lifeguard Rory (Richard Brancatisano). Rory tells Josh that he shouldn't have proposed to his sister, Tina (Sharni Vinson), then offers to set a buoy for Josh. Josh visits Tina, who discusses their upcoming move to Singapore. As Rory boards into the ocean to set a buoy, a shark appears and kills a man in the water. Alerted to the danger, Josh quickly takes a jet ski and goes to get Rory, but is too late. Rory is squirted into the water, and Josh is unable to save him before he is devoured.
A year later, Josh now works for a supermarket. While stocking shelves with Naomi (Alice Parkinson) he sees Tina with her new best friend Steven (Qi Yuwu), returned from Singapore. At the same time two teenagers, Kyle (Lincoln Lewis) and Heather (Cariba Heine) are parked for a make-out session, accompanied by Heather's dog, Bully. In the supermarket a young girl, Jaime (Phoebe Tonkin), is caught shoplifting, and temporarily evades the security guard by meeting up with her boyfriend Ryan (Alex Russell), who also works at the store. The store manager, Jessup (Adrian Pang), catches up with her, fires Ryan, and calls the police. The arresting officer, Todd (Martin Sacks), arrives, and is revealed to be Jaime's dad. After this, Jessup is held at gun point by a robber, Doyle (Julian McMahon). Things go south, and Doyle's partner appears and shoots assistant manager Julie (Rhiannon Dannielle Pettett).
At the height of the commotion, a tsunami wave descends on the city and floods the supermarket. Doyle's partner is killed by the flood, and the survivors injured. As the survivors try to find a way out the security guard is dragged under water. It becomes apparent that a great white shark has been washed into the store by the tsunami. Additionally, a broken wire threatens to electrocute them all. Steven volunteers to shut off the power, and the others dress him in crude armor made of shopping carts and shelves to protect him from the shark. He succeeds but loses his oxygen tube and drowns. Despite their previous conflicts, the survivors work together to get Jessup into a ventilation shaft to go for help. A flood of quarter size crabs slides out of the vent, startling Jessup and causing him to fall back, where the shark kills him.
In the parking garage, Kyle, Heather, and Ryan have been cut off from the others. Ryan helps the couple escape from their drowned car, but a second great white shark is revealed. Kyle ditches the dog, Bully at the last second and they manage to get to temporary safety. After several unsuccessful attempts at luring the shark away, Ryan decides to join them on top of a flipped van, but the shark gives chase. Ryan successfully gets into the flipped van but Kyle falls and is devoured.
Inside the supermarket, the remaining group make a plan to catch their shark so they can swim to safety. Jaime manages to swim to the butcher section and grab a hook with meat to use as bait. The shark does not go for the bait, so fellow survivor, Kirby (Dan Wyllie) grabs a hook and puts it through Naomi's shirt, using her as bait. Kirby is revealed to be Doyle's partner, who changed out of his clothes and mask so the others wouldn't know he was the murderer. Doyle stabs Kirby with a makeshift harpoon, and throws him into the water with the hook. Naomi is pulled from the water as the shark devours Kirby, catching its jaw on the hook and ensnaring itself in the trap. Josh apologizes to Tina, feeling guilt over her brother's death, but Tina reassures him and kisses him.
Below, Bully is found alive. Heather's newfound hope inspires Ryan to start banging on the pipes, calling for help. Jaime hears Ryan, and with Josh goes to rescue him. Below, they are alerted to the second shark's presence. Josh and Jaime find her dad's car, in which are a shotgun and taser. Josh kills the shark with the shotgun, and the four of them get back into the supermarket. A tremor strikes as they are all swimming to the entrance, breaking the first shark loose. Josh kills the shark with the taser as Doyle wires a truck jammed in the entrance to explode, breaking a hole in the debris and freeing them. The survivors leave the supermarket, reaching the severely damage city, and Tina asks Josh what to do now. At sea, a seagull swoops low over the water, and a shark jumps out and devours it.
Cast
- Phoebe Tonkin as Jaime, Ryan's girlfriend and Todd's daughter
- Xavier Samuel as Josh, Rory's friend, and Tina's fiancé
- Sharni Vinson as Tina, Rory's sister, and Josh's fiancé
- Julian McMahon as Doyle, the robber of the supermarket
- Richard Brancatisano as Rory, Tina's brother
- Dan Wyllie as Kirby, Doyle's partner
- Alice Parkinson as Naomi, who also works at the supermarket
- Damien Garvey as Colins
- Lincoln Lewis as Kyle, Heather's boyfriend
- Cariba Heine as Heather, Kyle's girlfriend
- Alex Russell as Ryan, Jaime's boyfriend
- Adrian Pang as Jessup, who is the manager of the supermarket
- Qi Yuwu as Steven, Tina's new best friend
- Martin Sacks as Todd, Jaime's father
- Rhiannon Dannielle Pettett as Julie, the assistant manager of the supermarket
Production
Initially Russel Mulcahy was going to direct the film however work on the show Teen Wolf made this impractical and so he hired on Kimble Rendall instead. [4]The film began shooting on 29 November 2011.[5] Three animatronic sharks were used for filming. [4] Although Rendall wanted to entirely avoid using CGI the budget negated that some scenes had to use it.[4]
Release
Bait had its premiere at the Venice Film Festival where it was shown out of competition on 1 September 2012. The film was released theatrically on 20 September 2012 Australia and on 29 November 2012 in Singapore.[5]
The film was released on DVD in Australia on 16 January 2013 without the "3D" subtitle as Bait; it was only released in 3D on Blu-ray.
Reception
The film received a 47% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 32 reviews.[6] Margaret Pomeranz rated the film 3.5/5 stars and said it would appeal to a specific genre audience, while David Stratton rated it 2.5/5 stars and criticized the film for not investing the audience in its characters.[7] Others, such as Jake Wilson of The Age, saw it as a film that is somewhat enjoyable on the basis of being an "awful" film.[8]
Sequel
Production of a sequel called Deep Water, about a plane en route from China to Australia crashing in the Pacific Ocean, was suspended in March 2014 due to "uncomfortable similarities" to the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.[9][10]
References
- ↑ Swift, Brendan (2012-10-02). "Bait 3D continues to struggle at local box office". If.com.au.
- ↑ "Bait 3D". Box Office Mojo.
- ↑ Gibron, Bill (2012-09-18). "The 10 Greatest Shark Films of All Time". PopMatters.
- 1 2 3 "Exclusive: Director Kimble Rendall Talks Sharks in a Supermarket for Bait 3D, Blowback and More". Dread Central.
- 1 2 Elley, Derek (20 September 2012). "Bait". Film Business Asia. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
- ↑ "Bait - Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 20 February 2014.
- ↑ Pomeranz, Margaret; Stratton, David. "Bait". At the Movies. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
- ↑ Wilson, Jake (20 September 2012). "Bait not quite dead in the water". The Age. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
- ↑ "Film Deep Water about a China plane crash shelved due to missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370". AAP/News Corp Australia. 25 March 2014.
- ↑ "Aussie Flight Disaster Film 'Deep Water' Shelved Over Eerie Resemblance to Missing Malaysia Flight". Hollywood Reporter. 24 March 2014.