47 Meters Down

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At the beginning of “47 Meters Down: Uncaged,” a quartet of young women are given some pretty good advice before going out to sea: “Don’t get eaten by a shark.” It’s advice, as you might expect, not all take.Which of the four makes it out alive fuels this absolutely satisfying sequel to “47 Meters Down,” this time with a new cast and set in some ancient underwater labyrinthine tunnels in Mexico. Forty-four years after “Jaws,” there’s still a shark thriller that makes your heart pound.Director and co-writer Johannes Roberts returns to dangerous waters after the surprising success of his “47 Meters Down” in 2017, which was made for just $5 million and earned $62 million. That one starred Claire Holt and Mandy Moore as sisters whose shark cage diving experience in Mexico, shall we say, did not go as planned. General chaos sega genesis. Sorry, again, Mexican tourism industry.

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(Not to rub salt in the wounds, much of it was filmed in the Dominican Republic anyway.). Roberts has clearly been given a bigger budget and it shows in the nicely realized submerged city the poor young women must navigate. He’s saddled with a terrible film title — 47 meters was the depth of the ocean floor in the first film — but none of that matters once the air tanks and masks go on. He’s like one of his sharks: Shaky on land but a master in the water.“47 Meters Down: Uncaged,” an Entertainment Studios Motion Pictures release, is rated PG-13 for “creature related violence and terror, some bloody images and brief rude gestures.” Running time: 89 minutes.

Three stars out of four.MPAA Definition of PG-13: Parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.Mark Kennedy is at.

Parents need to know that 47 Meters Down: Uncaged is the sequel to. Expect shark-related violence: Characters are attacked, bitten, and killed, with gory wounds and blood swirling in the water. A gory human head is shown, and a character drowns, horrifyingly, on camera.

A flare gun is fired at a shark, and bullies shove a character into a swimming pool. Language includes uses of 'ass,' and there are middle-finger gestures. Teen girls wear skimpy swimsuits. Unfortunately, this movie lacks everything that made the original worth seeing; this one has confusing visuals, underdeveloped characters, and weak jump scares. In 47 METERS DOWN: UNCAGED, Mia and Sasha (Corinne Foxx) are reluctant stepsisters, with Mia's father, Grant , married to Sasha's mother, Jennifer.

Grant has found an underwater cavern and is busy mapping it out, so when Mia and Sasha are booked on a glass-bottom boat tour, Sasha convinces Mia to run off with her two best friends, Alexa (Brianne Tju) and Nicole (Sistine Rose Stallone), instead. Since Alexa is dating Grant's assistant, she knows where the cave is and brings the girls there to swim. Discovering a shipment of scuba-diving equipment, they decide to go exploring. Unfortunately, hungry sharks appear, and the girls find themselves trapped, with their air tanks running out.

Unlike the tight, gripping, this pointless shark-related sequel is meandering and unfocused, with interchangeable characters and confusing visuals. Writer-director and co-writer Ernest Riera follow up their crafty 2017 hit with entirely new characters and a new scenario and location. But while the first movie deftly developed its two characters and then kept them in one spot, 47 Meters Down: Uncaged has four characters who rove all around a disorienting cave.

It's impossible to tell at any given moment where anyone is or who anyone is. (It's almost as bad as.)The four teen girls, covered in scuba gear, continually shout one another's names ('Mia!' ) as if that will help clear up who's who. The swishy underwater photography and constantly swinging flashlights completely obscure the space of the action, rendering much of the attempted suspense inert. Instead, Roberts is reduced to turning his movie into a traditional slasher-type scenario, with cheap jump scares and sudden appearances; none of it makes much sense. The ancient cavern setting could have been quite spectacular, but instead 47 Meters Down: Uncaged only serves to taint the memory of its predecessor.