The movie actually manages to provide the dumbest ending I have ever seen. Not to spoil it, but there is finally some action at the end. It is a shark movie with a couple of sharks that pop up now and then, but mostly it is about the two girls being scared in the water.
Since the only two people in the water are the lead characters, there is not much gore in this movie. From there, every predictable thing happens, except for shark bites. Naturally, the two gals continue to act like they are teenagers, and pay for the trip, and go on the rickety boat. In fact, this boat looks like it was salvaged from the bottom of the ocean. The gals finally get on the tour boat, and it looks like a smaller and older boat than the one that was featured in the original JAWS movie. The build-up to getting on the boat took about 40 minutes, and it was pretty boring. There's a tendency to exaggerate facts when it comes to creature features in the horror genre and the same could be said for 47 Meters Down. Here's why the diving and sharks were so inaccurate. 47 Meters Down focused on sisters who get trapped inside a diving cage in shark-infested waters.
The two sisters hook up with a couple of local townies, and they are all excited to go on a boat to look at sharks. 47 Meters Down's Diving & Sharks Are Totally Inaccurate. Mandy Moore is 33, and Claire Holt is 29. Dreams is a collection of eight unrelated stories that unfold in a surrealistic telling of sights, sounds, and sensations. So that I really enjoyed - taking a John Hughes template and putting it into the world of sharks.Two 30 year old sisters are looking for kicks in the cheap side of Mexico. Dreams / - Akira Kurosawa (1990) A departure from the usual Kurosawa recommendation list, Dreams is the film most movie-goers and cinema lovers may not have seen. “You have two step-sisters who don’t like each other, and one is bullied, and it resolves itself throughout the movie to a really cool ending that turns it all on its head. None of the four teens in the film are based on any particular real person, though in the press notes for the film, director Johannes Roberts says he modeled their relationships after another director's style. Four girls dropping into the territory of predatory creatures, even if inadvertently, doesn't really count as "unprovoked," and the reality is that humans do a lot more damage to the shark world than they do to ours. The 2019 Yearly Worldwide Shark Attack Summary shows only 66 unprovoked attacks, a drop from previous years' averages. But when it comes to summer entertainment, isn't that what we really want? If this actually was a pseudo-documentary warning story about the dangers of shark attacks, it would be a lot more dishonest. The film takes a few near-truths and bends them with artistic license. Incredibly disappointing, 47 Meters Down: Uncaged has none of the intensity or terror of the original. It's dramatic, but is 47 Meters Down: Uncaged a true story in any way? With less than an hour of oxygen left and great white sharks circling nearby, they must fight to survive. This hallucination is explained by nitrogen narcosis which is caused when diving and breathing gases at a deeper depth. Two sisters vacationing in Mexico are trapped in a shark cage at the bottom of the ocean. The movie 47 Meters Down (spoiler alert) ends with Mandy Moore’s character, Lisa, hallucinating that she has successfully rescued herself and her sister. With Mandy Moore, Claire Holt, Chris Johnson, Yani Gellman. But things worked out well enough for those gals. 16 release, when four teen girls decide to explore the subterranean wonders of a Mayan ruin, they inadvertently position themselves as the next human sacrifices when they run into a swarm of Great Whites. 47 Meters Down: Directed by Johannes Roberts. Of course, that might get a little too close to the plot of the original 47 Meters Down, the movie Uncaged follows up.
Just when you thought it was safe to take a cave dive, out comes a shark attack sequel to make you question even hopping into a pool's shallow end.