

Tuesday, September 26: Gangnam Zombie – VOD, Blu-ray, DVD Megalomaniac – VOD Natty Knocks – Blu-ray, DVD Sniper: G.R.I.T. Monday, September 25: Scooby-Doo! and Krypto, Too! – Digital, VOD Friday, September 22: Dark Asset – VOD Everybody Dies By the End – VOD Expend4bles – Theatrical It Lives Inside – Theatrical Nightsiren – Theatrical (limited) No One Will Save You – Hulu, Disney+ As an Amazon Associate, the owner occasionally earns a small amount from qualifying linked purchases.Īll US releases unless noted otherwise. If you do block ads please consider making a small donation to our running costs instead. We are a genuinely independent website and rely solely on the minor income generated by internet ads to stay online and expand.
#APEX PREDATORS MOVIE TRAILER PLUS#
MOVIES and MANIA provides an aggregated range of film reviews from a wide variety of credited sources, plus our own reviews and ratings, in one handy web location. There’s working around a low budget and then there’s not even trying.” Voices from the Balconyįor YouTube reviews, a trailer and more movie info please click the page 2 link below No blood, no struggles, rarely even a fin in the water. A shark attack film with no shark attacks, sounds really exciting, eh? Victims just vanish under the water, or the camera cuts away and they’re gone when it returns. ” …there are no on-screen shark attacks in Apex Predator. Characters indoors react to situations that occur on the beach outside! Anyone paying to see this pitiful con job will be rightly dismayed This is the worst shark rip-off movie ever released.

With the much anticipated grand opening of a new beachside resort quickly approaching and the bodies beginning to pile up, it is up to marine biologists Doctor Rebecca Mattei (Brinke Stevens) and her colleague Doctor Elaine Ripley (Vida Ghaffari) to help local authorities capture the animal before it’s too late…īeyond the very, very briefly seen sharks by way of stock footage, the real predator here is fraud filmmaker Dustin Ferguson who has managed to cobble together a languidly paced travelogue style lazy effort designed solely to fleece anyone tempted by the generic and dishonest artwork provided by Wild Eye Releasing.īetween seemingly endless shots of beachside locations, a vast cast of low-budget movie regulars appear onscreen briefly to indulge in corny conversations (some of which seem improvised) about the supposed menace of a shark attack. With the bodies drenched with water and scars not resembling any modern street weapon, the police begin to suspect it’s a rogue shark. The beaches near Los Angeles have been the scene of several recent grisly mutilations.
