Super Shark

Super Shark is a 2011 science fiction action film directed by Fred Olen Ray and starring John Schneider, Sarah Lieving, and Tim Abell. The film follows a marine biologist named Kat Carmichael, played by Sarah Lieving, who has to investigate and survive the rampage of a mutated primordial shark.

Super Shark
DVD cover
Directed byFred Olen Ray
Produced byFred Olen Ray
Kimberly A. Ray
Written byClyde McCoy
Antonio Olivas
Fred Olen Ray
StarringJohn Schneider
Sarah Lieving
Tim Abell
Music byJeffrey Walton
CinematographyBen Demaree
Edited byRandy Carter
Production
companies
Boomgates
Retromedia Entertainment
Synthetic Filmwerx
Distributed byCineTel Films
Release date
  • 2011 (2011)
Running time
87 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Persistent exposure of ocean wildlife to a toxic goo used in oil drilling leads to a shark growing in size and becoming bulletproof, and even attaining the ability to move around on land. It destroys the oil rig that caused it, and then moves to Los Angeles where it eats several divers and threatens to disrupt a bikini contest.

Marine biologist Dr. Catherine Carmichael hires captain Chuck, a local drunk, to drive her out to the oil rig, owned by Traymore Industries, to investigate. Meanwhile, two female lifeguards plan to drink and have casual sex, and a kite surfer is eaten by the "super shark". Carmichael takes a water sample, then confronts the CEO of Traymore who invites her for drinks and dinner. When Carmichael interviews the sole survivor from the oil rig accident, it is disclosed that highly harmful chemicals were used to bore through the rock and that a shark pulled down the rig.

Meanwhile, Carmichael tells the CEO what she thinks happened: a "hydrolizing agent" caused the oil rig to crumble. Soon, a US Navy submarine disappears, and a search plane spots the super shark. At the bar, the two female lifeguards are joined by the male lifeguard, awaiting the bikini contest. Back out on the ocean, Carmichael and skipper Chuck are circled by the super shark until Carmichael, acting on a hunch, tells Chuck to turn off the radio, after which the super shark leaves. She speculates that the fish was attracted to radio waves and sent out signals which disturbed radio reception.

The bikini contest winner and the runner-up are eaten at the beach, together with the photographer, who had had the radio playing. The CEO reveals that he knows that Carmichael has been fired from her job for harassing oil company executives. He offers her a briefcase full of money if she'll go away; she accepts. Skipper Chuck finds her drunk in a bar; she tells him that she was fired, and that her brother died when the Exxon Valdez went down. She passes out and wakes up in Chuck's boat.

Carmichael and skipper Chuck get emotionally close, and seek contact with the military, which has invented a remote-controlled tank that can walk and jump. With the help of a boombox and external speaker, the super shark is lured to a beach, where the tank is unsuccessful in shooting it. Carmichael manages to drop a bomb made of C-4 explosives into the beast's mouth, and it is blown to pieces.

Cast

  • Sarah Lieving as Kat Carmichael
  • John Schneider as Roger Wade
  • Tim Abell as Skipper Chuck
  • Rick Cramer as Colonel Caldwell
  • Trish Cook as Captain Marshall
  • John L. Curtis as Brody
  • Jimmie Walker as Dynamite Stevens
  • Kylee Nash as Bikini Contestant

Release and reception

The film was released on DVD on February 7, 2012. The film has garnered negative reception, holding a rating of 2.5/10 on IMDb and a score of 27% on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 85 user reviews.

gollark: I mean, that would imply that your consciousness was particularly tied to those exact atoms, which would be... odd, I don't know.
gollark: *Would* you notice? That seems to assume some things.
gollark: How?!
gollark: What if 50% in one Planck time and 50% in the next one?
gollark: Is there such a thing as "different ones" if they have the same configuration though?

See also

  • List of killer shark films

References

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