Saturday, 02 Nov 2024

Shark weak: 'Meg 2: The Trench' takes the plunge into a too-silly sequel


Shark weak: 'Meg 2: The Trench' takes the plunge into a too-silly sequel
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"The Meg" was agreeably silly, with a better business plan than a script: A mashup of "Jaws" and "Jurassic Park," the movie paired Jason Statham with an international cast to boost its global appeal, particularly in China.

Washing ashore five years later, "Meg 2: The Trench" doesn't overly mess with that formula, but it does muck up the simple strengths of the story with all kinds of unnecessary side plots. In the process, the film goes from Shark Week to shark weak - from playfully amusing to just plain stupid, eliciting enough laughs in the wrong places to make an advance screening virtually interactive.

Granted, the big-sharks-and-summer construct is generally reliable, but "Meg 2" does more than just renew the threat of ancient whale-sized Megalodons swimming into our midst. Instead, the film's intrepid explorers - undertaking a mission to take submersibles 6,000 meters below sea level, equipped with high-tech Iron Man-type suits - run afoul not only of the giant beasts but a nefarious scheme to mine the ocean floor.

The latter complication forces Statham's Jonas to segue into action-hero mode, facing a ruthless villain played by Sergio Peris-Mencheta ("Snowfall"), a distraction that seems unnecessary given the whole, you know, GIANT SHARK problem.

Then again, "Meg 2" isn't content to trot out just sharks among its monstrous foes, which adds up to overkill in more ways than one. The cast also hasn't stood in place, with the character played by Li Bingbing (who withdrew from the project) out of the picture and Jonas keeping an eye on her now-teenage daughter Meiying (Sophia Cai), while allying himself with the girl's uncle (Chinese star Wu Jing), an adventurer every bit as fearless and foolish as he is.

Of the supporting characters, the only one who really registers is holdover Page Kennedy as DJ, who, having survived the first movie, functions as an amusing stand-in for the audience by constantly telling everyone how idiotic they're being in terms of risking life and limbs.

Otherwise, this is one of those franchises where everyone you don't immediately recognize represents potential fish bait, sort of like the red-shirted crewmen in "Star Trek."

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