➡ Click here: 47 meters down
The technical aspects of this production are quite interesting, however, and the good news is the technical aspects of the Blu-ray disc are generally strong as well, for those considering a purchase. There's just something about the lazy days of summer that makes us crave the sights and sounds of aquatic mayhem!
Safe in their protective cage, the 47 meters down siblings come face to face with a group of majestic great jesus. The technical aspects of this production are quite interesting, however, and the good news is the technical aspects of the Blu-ray disc are generally strong as well, for those considering a purchase. But the winch breaks, and the sisters are plummeted to the bottom of the ocean. According to social reports, the sequel will swim to Brazil, where a group of girls take an adventurous trip to find some scenery off the beaten path, where they underwater paradise of hidden ruins and… sharks. Which parts scared you the most. For starters, having a movie take place almost north on the bottom of the ocean provides filming and storytelling limitations. Expect plenty of blood, mostly swirling around in the water, as well as from bleeding wounds and gory chum buckets. While on vacation in Mexico two sisters go on a dive in a shark cage, but when an note causes the cage to break free from its moorings the girls end up trapped at the bottom of the ocean with limited air and surrounded 47 meters down sharks. Some of the widest effects are probably expectedly in the first act of the film, where outdoor environments allow for more north placement of ambient environmental sounds. Kate is the adventurous type, while Lisa likes to play it safe -- but her cautious nature recently resulted in her boyfriend leaving her. And the shark attacks though not very realistic are terrifying, and are made more so by a remarkably powerful score that heightens the tension and suspense. Parents need to know that 47 Meters Down is a thriller about two sisters and who get trapped underwater in a shark cage.
Once this realization settled in I started losing significant interest. I had a sinking feeling when the movie started and I noticed it was just B-list actors I love shark movies, but this was a very average movie. Not many details are known about the sequel, 47 Meters Down: The Next Chapter, but some reports say it will be based in Brazil and follow a new group of tourists.
47 Meters Down - The first film stars Mandy Moore and Claire Holt as two sisters vacationing in Mexico, where they seize an ill-advised diving opportunity and wind up trapped in a shark cage on the ocean floor, with their air running out and a pack of hungry great whites between them and the surface. During a shark dive, two sisters find themselves trapped in a cage at the bottom of the ocean.
For more about 47 Meters Down and the 47 Meters Down Blu-ray release, see published by Jeffrey Kauffman on September 27, 2017 where this Blu-ray release scored 2. That said, one of the things this fitfully engaging thriller does is to create angst separate and apart from the fact that there are some apparently very hungry beasties swimming around in the deep. The two focal characters are Lisa Mandy Moore and Kate Claire Holt , and the screenplay by Johannes Roberts who also directed and Ernest Riera gives some brief and passing lip service to differentiation between the siblings, with Lisa, who just broke up with her boyfriend, posited as the less adventurous and more withdrawn of the two. Character beats ultimately hardly matter in this film, though, once it tips over into survival mode, which it does rather surprisingly late more or less around a half hour into the film. But even more cinematic moments, like the sisters frolicking at a party or on an admittedly scenic beach seem more like a travelogue than anything meant to evoke actual emotions. The film actually finally starts touching on one potent emotion, fear, when it starts to get into its main plot conceit, with adventurous Kate pretty much dragging reticent Lisa along on a cage dive to see sharks. When the winch holding the cage malfunctions several times, in fact , the upshot is that the sisters are sent hurtling into deep water with a limited amount of air and with those toothsome predators lurking around every murky corner. That confines the film to threats coming to them, which in fact they do, with the real subliminal terror gaining traction with every panicked breath the sisters take, since the air supply is literally bubbling away. From a technical perspective, however, 47 Meters Down is quite winning. As is shown in the sole making of featurette accompanying the main feature as a supplement on this Blu-ray disc, a lot of the film was shot in a deep tank within a studio, but the sense of being lost in an interminable oceanic morass is quite realistic throughout the film. The CGI sharks are also surprisingly effective, giving a sense of menace at regular intervals. Detail levels are routinely quite high throughout the opening half hour or so. However, as should probably be expected, once the film delves underwater, fine detail in particular takes a bit of a dive sorry , though kind of remarkably clarity remains commendably consistent even with billows of liquid and insufficient lighting coming into play. Perhaps because of the inherent murkiness, the CGI sharks are arguably more convincing than they might have otherwise been. Roberts goes for quite a few extreme close-ups throughout the underwater material, something that tends to support general detail levels. In wider shots, however, and with that aforementioned murkiness, there are at least some shots when virtually nothing can be clearly made out see screenshot 19. A pulsing score by Tomandandy also provides regular surround activity. Some of the widest effects are probably expectedly in the first act of the film, where outdoor environments allow for more spacious placement of ambient environmental sounds. The more cloistered underwater material still has good surround presence, but is understandably a bit more tamped down. With an understanding that a lot of the film contains dialogue spoken by characters in scuba gear, everything is rendered surprisingly cleanly and clearly. The fact that the sisters can get out and about, if not up, might also be a strategic error, since they simply retreat back to the cage after these diversions, making the film ultimately seem fairly repetitive. The technical aspects of this production are quite interesting, however, and the good news is the technical aspects of the Blu-ray disc are generally strong as well, for those considering a purchase. You will get a notification at the top of the site as soon as the current price equals or falls below your price. You can also get an instant mobile notification with our iPhone- or Android app. The apps are synchronized with your account at Blu-ray.