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ActionScience FictionHorror

The Meg

- Pleased to eat you.

A deep sea submersible pilot revisits his past fears in the Mariana Trench, and accidentally unleashes the seventy foot ancestor of the Great White Shark believed to be extinct.

Release Date : 2018-08-09

Language :MandarinEnglishJapaneseThai

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Apelles EntertainmentGravity Picturesdi Bonaventura PicturesFlagship Entertainment GroupMaeday ProductionsWarner Bros. Pictures

Production Country : ChinaUnited States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Jason Statham

Character Name : Jonas Taylor

Original Name : Jason Statham

Gender : Male

Li Bingbing

Character Name : Suyin

Original Name : 李冰冰

Gender : Female

Rainn Wilson

Character Name : Morris

Original Name : Rainn Wilson

Gender : Male

Cliff Curtis

Character Name : James 'Mac' Mackreides

Original Name : Cliff Curtis

Gender : Male

Ruby Rose

Character Name : Jaxx

Original Name : Ruby Rose

Gender : Female

Jessica McNamee

Character Name : Lori

Original Name : Jessica McNamee

Gender : Female

Masi Oka

Character Name : Toshi

Original Name : Masi Oka

Gender : Male

Winston Chao

Character Name : Zhang

Original Name : Winston Chao

Gender : Male

Shuya Sophia Cai

Character Name : Meiying

Original Name : Shuya Sophia Cai

Gender : Female

Page Kennedy

Character Name : DJ

Original Name : Page Kennedy

Gender : Male

Robert Taylor

Character Name : Heller

Original Name : Robert Taylor

Gender : Male

Ólafur Darri Ólafsson

Character Name : The Wall

Original Name : Ólafur Darri Ólafsson

Gender : Male

Mai Hongmei

Character Name : Mother

Original Name : Mai Hongmei

Gender : Female

Wei Yi

Character Name : Awesome Kid on Beach

Original Name : Wei Yi

Gender : Male

Vithaya Pansringarm

Character Name : Thai Boat Captain

Original Name : วิทยา ปานศรีงาม

Gender : Male

Rob Kipa-Williams

Character Name : D'Angelo

Original Name : Rob Kipa-Williams

Gender : Male

Tawanda Manyimo

Character Name : Marks

Original Name : Tawanda Manyimo

Gender : Male

Mark Trotter

Character Name : Injured Sailor

Original Name : Mark Trotter

Gender : Male

James Gaylyn

Character Name : David E. Jordan

Original Name : James Gaylyn

Gender : Male

Andrew Grainger

Character Name : Morris' Lawyer

Original Name : Andrew Grainger

Gender : Male

Steven A. Davis

Character Name : Speedboat Crewman

Original Name : Steven A. Davis

Gender : Male

Glen Levy

Character Name : Speedboat Mercenary

Original Name : Glen Levy

Gender : Male

Edwin Wright

Character Name : Morris' Helicopter Pilot

Original Name : Edwin Wright

Gender : Male

Ivy Tsui

Character Name : Bride

Original Name : Ivy Tsui

Gender : Female

Jeremy Tan

Character Name : Groom

Original Name : Jeremy Tan

Gender : Male

Tim Wong

Character Name : News Camera Operator

Original Name : Tim Wong

Gender : Male

Yoson An

Character Name : News Helicopter Pilot

Original Name : Yoson An

Gender : Male

Yao Yao

Character Name : Dude on Raft

Original Name : Yao Yao

Gender : Male

Leand Macadaan

Character Name : Filipino Fisherman #1 (uncredited)

Original Name : Leand Macadaan

Gender : Male

Boaz Magege

Character Name : Launch Controller

Original Name : Boaz Magege

Gender : Male

Piroon Vongvaruj

Character Name : Thai Boat Crewman

Original Name : Piroon Vongvaruj

Gender : Male

Douglas Lee

Character Name : Wedding Photographer

Original Name : Douglas Lee

Gender : Male

Teresa Lee

Character Name : Bridesmaid

Original Name : Teresa Lee

Gender : Female

Marc Copage

Character Name : Interrogator

Original Name : Marc Copage

Gender : Male

Reviews

P

Per Gunnar Jonsson

@Dark Jedi

2024-05-16

Well, when the credits started to roll I cannot say that I felt it had been a waste of time and money. I did indeed have some enjoyment watching this movie. However, it could have been a lot better. For starters, what is the point of making a movie about a bloody “dinosaur shark” and aim for a PG-13 rating? Whoever made that incredibly stupid decision obviously missed the mark big time. I think this was the biggest fault with the movie. There were so many missed opportunities. The entire scene at the beach at the end of the movie was just wasted for example. The script was of course somewhat illogical with holes in it large enough to drive a, well, a Megalodon through them. This however was something that I more or less expected given the kind of movie. First of all it is science fiction and fantasy after all and second, it appears that these kind of movies never seem to get anything better than mediocre script writers…at best. There were some good things though. I have read the book and I didn’t really like it. In my review I gave it 2 out 5 five stars. The main reason for this was that the book was more of a bad soap opera than a horror/thriller. It was so filled with unlikable, scheming and backstabbing assholes that it was really not enjoyable. Jason’s ex wife was such a despicable bitch that she alone ruined the book for example. Luckily the movie had toned down that aspect of the book quite a lot. Actually, in the end, there was really only one truly despicable asshole in the movie and he met with the fate that he deserved thanks to his own stupidity. So, I did enjoy the movie and, as a science fiction and fantasy fan, I am glad to have watched it. I mean, a giant pre-historic shark on the big screen does have a certain cool-factor after all. It was somewhat saved by Jason Statham being in it though and it could have been a lot better.

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

Child friendly horror... You have to take in to context the post release statements by director Jon Turteltaub and lead actor Jason Statham. The Meg is not the film they either read on the page or filmed as a course of grisly schlock entertainment. This was meant to be a proper schlocker, a bloodletting monster of the deep on the loose picture, sadly the suits at the helm didn't see that as a viable money making exercise and had this cut to be a "12" friendly bums on theatre seats cash grabber. Shame on them. What we get is a run of the mill creature feature that although once viewed does not leave a lasting impression (was anyone really hoping for that anyway?), but is kind of fun in that time filling sort of way. It runs through the modern day creature feature playbook 101. So off we go with the hero having a troubled backstory, a money made funder out of his depth, ladies with life quandaries, a man who can't swim working in the middle of the ocean! and on we go. Throw in some quite awfully scripted dialogue and it's cheese sarnie time. Statham is nearly always a good watch - in the muscle bound action hero kind of way - though you see the cracks between what the film was meant to be and what it ended up as. For you see that The Stath comes off as taking it all too seriously, which in this released cut is ridiculous. He's surrounded by no mark actors, though no short supply of beauty (Bingbing Li socko gorgeous/Ruby Rose hard sexy) and the narrative feeds us all the pointers of exactly where this will end up. There's a couple of nifty fun homages to Jaws, some decent suspense scenes, and the cinematography (Tom Stern) is pin sharp and pleasurable. Best bet to enjoy this is to know it's a "12" rated friendly piece, to understand it has ultimately ended up as a same old same old monster movie. It's a million miles away from the class of Jaws, and lacks the tongue in cheek knowing of Deep Blue Sea, but it fills a gap in that undemanding time wasting way. 5/10

G

Gimly

@Ruuz

2021-06-23

It's nice to see a Shark-led Creature Feature that's actually got some money behind it, but _The Meg_ is still really nothing special. _Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole._

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2024-05-29

This is one of these international co-productions that has way too many producers and vested interests behind it, so it's no great surprise that what we do end up with is such an hybrid of so many other films, It's actually quite hard to be objective when writing about it. The obvious comparisons are with "Jaws" (1975) and "Deep Blue Sea" (1999) but this is a distinctly poor relation. Even on an IMAX screen, it moves along with all the pace of a milk-float even despite the lively contributions from the enthusiastic Jason Statham as he attacks the leviathan with a glorified Stanley knife. The remainder of the acting and pretty much all of the dialogue is typically banal and but for the very effective use of CGI this would achieve laughs not gasps. Can't wait for the sequel....