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Peur bleue poster

PEUR BLEUE

Deep Blue Sea

1999 AU HMDB
juillet 28, 1999

Le docteur Susan McAlester est persuadée de pouvoir remédier à la dégénérescence du cerveau humain à l'aide de protéines de requins. Elle travaille avec une équipe de biologistes au centre de recherche Aquatica, un vaste complexe offshore, où ils se livrent a des expériences aussi secrètes que dangereuses. C'est ainsi que le docteur Susan McAlester n'a pas hesité à recombiner l'ADN de deux grands requins au mépris de l'éthique médicale et de la plus élémentaire prudence. Susan et ses partenaires en font ainsi de terrifiantes machines à tuer.

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Equipe

Production: Bruce Berman (Executive Producer)Duncan Henderson (Executive Producer)Akiva Goldsman (Producer)Don MacBain (Producer)Alan Riche (Producer)Tony Ludwig (Producer)Jonathan Schwartz (Executive Producer)
Scenario: Donna Powers (Screenplay)Duncan Kennedy (Screenplay)Wayne Powers (Writer)
Musique: Trevor Rabin (Original Music Composer)
Photographie: Stephen F. Windon (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Marco Castellini
Dans un centre de recherche marin, des expériences sont menées sur le cerveau des requins pour trouver un remède contre le cancer. Le résultat n'est cependant pas celui espéré : les scientifiques parviennent seulement à créer des requins plus intelligents et plus forts que la normale, qui se retournent rapidement contre eux. Un film qui repose sur les effets numériques créés par ordinateur et sur des séquences soudaines et inattendues qui font sursauter le spectateur (l'une des plus marquantes étant la séquence de la mort de Samuel L. Jackson). Une intrigue plutôt mince et prévisible et un déroulement des événements assez invraisemblable sont en revanche ses points faibles. En définitive, un film de monstre assez divertissant, agréable à regarder et avec de bonnes doses de sang, mais pas vraiment mémorable.
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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (5)

Gimly

Gimly

5 /10

There's quite a cast assembled for Deep Blue Sea, not what we've come to expect from the Asuylum-soiled genre of shark movies in this day and age. It's not a fantastic movie, but it proves more watchable that 90% of its company.

Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole.

Kamurai

Kamurai

8 /10

Great watch, would watch again, and do recommend.

This is probably my favorite shark movie. I know "Jaws" did a thing back when, but I like this better. It doesn't mean it's a better movie, the same way that more people like pizza than salad even though salad is a better food.

The biggest part of why I like it so much better is that it's a survivalist situation, in an isolationist setting, and the sharks are "intelligent" so they're actively hunting the humans so it becomes a killer creature feature too.

The cast is really good, and you should probably recognize about half the faces, whether or not they've been in Marvel movies.

The split story lines bother me a bit, and more when they're voluntary, but it works. And when someone gets eaten by a shark, everyone else greedily makes an opportunity of it in a good survivor's fashion.

This is a movie fueled by adversity instead of stupidity, as is a soft requirement for some movies. I guess the "stupidity" is creating the situation in the first place

If you like sharks eating people, or underwater bases ("Rapture"), or liked "The Meg" then give this a watch.

Tejas Nair

6 /10

An engaging thriller with a mindless plot, Deep Blue Sea managed to keep me hooked throughout its loud 100-minute running time. A doctor and her team of researchers looking to find a cure for Alzheimer's in sharks in an isolated facility in the middle of an ocean - what more do you need for some sweet chaos while also supported by some unethical practices? Deep Blue Sea is not the most realistic shark film out there but it has a lot of cool action, suspense, the added pleasure of flooding sequences, and a protagonist that you love to hate. Go for it. (Grade B-). TN.

The Movie Mob

The Movie Mob

7 /10

Peak corny shark goodness! 🦈🦈🦈

Deep Blue Sea falls prey to every shark movie trope and has a blast doing it. Embracing its cheesiness makes this movie one is the all-time best shark flicks—a fabulous cocktail of 90s cheese, sharks, and surprising twists. If you haven’t seen this one, I guarantee you will be surprised by who survives and who doesn’t.

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

5 /10

The science behind this may well be plausible - that cures for human ailments may well rest elsewhere in the animal kingdom. To that end Saffron Burrows ("Susan") enlists the help of millionaire philanthropist "Russell Franklin" (Samuel L. Jackson) to develop a cure for Alzheimer's using sharks captive in a converted offshore submarine refuelling base. When he arrives at the facility he meets the rather oddball crew including "Carter" (Thomas Jane") "Preacher" (LL Cool J) and "Jim" (Stellan Skarsgård) before quickly discovering that these genetically altered fish are tired of being the guinea-pigs in the lab and are bent on revenge. The film does not hang about; the effects are quite scary at times but the one great snag is given that the sharks are supposed to be super-intelligent: why did they agree to star in a film with the dreadfully flat Burrows - there are bits of flotsam in this film less wooden than her performance. Jane & LL Cool J have some fun as they try to evade their menacing foes and though it certainly isn't "Jaws"; it's not terrible...

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