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Catholic movie review - Piranha 3D |
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By John P. McCarthy - Catholic News Service
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Monday, 23 August 2010 |
The link between committing sins of the flesh and becoming a victim in a horror movie was never more blatant than in the tall and tawdry fish tale "Piranha 3D" (Dimension).
Just as retribution awaits the film's most wanton characters, audience
members who venture into its blood-filled waters seeking an escape will
feel as though they're being punished. While the tone adopted is hardly
self-serious or censorious, the story is cripplingly vacuous. There
aren't enough ideas to make "Piranha 3D" remotely unsettling; and the
lasciviousness and gore displayed are more wearisome than offensive or
frightening.
"Babes, boats and bikinis" is one (mild) description of the scene at
Arizona's Lake Victoria, where undergrads flock for their spring-break
bacchanalia. This year, seismic activity causes a fissure in the lake
bed that releases prehistoric fish with an appetite for slatternly coeds
and the otherwise ethically challenged. In a rather pitiful homage to
"Jaws," the first victim of these voracious creatures is a local
fisherman played by Richard Dreyfuss.
Not only does Lake Victoria's sheriff Julie Forester (Elisabeth Shue)
have to worry about the safety of the throngs of scantily clad visitors,
her teenage son Jake (Steven R. McQueen) and his much-younger siblings
Zane and Laura (Sage Ryan and Brooklynn Proulx) are also imperiled. Jake
has shirked his baby-sitting duties to act as location scout for
soft-core pornographer Derrick Jones. Jerry O'Connell sinks his bleached
incisors into this role, which is clearly modeled on real-life "Girls
Gone Wild" impresario Joe Francis.
Jones and the predatory fish have nothing on director Alexandre Aja's
voyeuristic camera, which takes as much prurient delight in watching
gyrating bodies in party mode as it does in showing them get shredded
and dismembered.
Anyone hoping there might be a silver lining in the fact that 3-D
technology is being used here for something other than an animated or
science-fiction feature will be disappointed. The underwater action is
generally murky and the special effects deployed above the surface are
equally pedestrian. Stomach-churning makeup work is the only exception.
McCarthy is a guest reviewer for Catholic News Service. More reviews are available online at www.usccb.org/movies.
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At the peak of the mayhem, Sheriff Forester gives the panicking hordes
this obvious advice, "Whatever you do, don't go into the water!" Heed
her counsel and refrain from jutting even a toe into this piece of
exploitation cinema.
The film contains intense graphic violence, including a decapitation,
numerous severed torsos, and other mutilated and dismembered bodies and
body parts; full frontal female nudity; much groping and kissing, some
of it same-sex; frequent profane, rough and crude language; repeated
scenes of underage drinking; and an instance of drug use. The Catholic
News Service classification is O -- morally offensive. The Motion
Picture Association of America rating is R -- restricted. Under 17
requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.
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