Piraña 3D backdrop
Piraña 3D poster

PIRAÑA 3D

Piranha 3D

2010 US HMDB
agosto 20, 2010

El lago Victoria (Arizona) es un lugar que se llena de gente joven durante las vacaciones de primavera. De repente, se producen una serie de temblores submarinos que liberan unos peces prehistóricos antropófagos. Todos deberán unir sus fuerzas para sobrevivir a estas criaturas. Remake del clásico de terror dirigido por Joe Dante

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Equipo

Produccion: Alexandre Aja (Producer)Mark Canton (Producer)Grégory Levasseur (Producer)Marc Toberoff (Producer)Harvey Weinstein (Executive Producer)Bob Weinstein (Executive Producer)筑波久子 (Executive Producer)
Guion: Josh Stolberg (Writer)
Musica: Michael Wandmacher (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: John R. Leonetti (Director of Photography)

RESEÑAS (1)

Roberto Giacomelli
Lago Victoria, Arizona. Un temblor libera voraces pirañas prehistóricas de las entrañas de la tierra. Mientras tanto, se preparan los festejos de Spring Break, la anual fiesta de mitad de primavera que reúne en el lago a miles de jóvenes de toda América para celebrar entre ríos de alcohol y concursos de miss camiseta mojada. Mientras el sheriff Julie Forester investiga la desaparición del pescador Matt Boyd y las consecuencias del sismo, su hijo Jake, que debería cuidar a sus dos hermanos pequeños, se une al equipo de Derrick Jones, director de videos soft-core. Los jóvenes chapotean en la orilla del lago y las pirañas están listas para causar una masacre! Pero ¿se acuerdan de la vieja y querida explotación de los años 80? Aquella nutrida colección de películas de género que, agotada la carga eversiva e innovadora de los primos del decenio anterior, se lanzan de cabeza a los territorios del entretenimiento más grosero y visceral. Los ingredientes principales eran sangre – mucha sangre – efectos especiales caseros, desnudos gratuitos – muchos desnudos – y un estilo basura bien calibrado. Aquellas películas, con las que muchos de nosotros crecimos, eran consideradas basura y sin embargo hoy la revalorización posterior ha (justamente, en opinión del que escribe) idolatra a culto. Ese cine de grindhouse redimido por Tarantino y Rodriguez, así como en algunos casos por Rob Zombie y Neil Marshall, hoy se compone de un nuevo elemento, quizás el más genuino cercano al modelo, "Piranha 3D", y el artífice es Alexandre Aja que se confirma como gurú del post new horror. En teoría "Piranha 3D" debería ser el remake de "Piranha" de Joe Dante, año 1978, a su vez ya remakeado en 1995 por la película para televisión "Piranha – La muerte viene del agua", pero como suele ocurrir podemos considerar el de Aja una variación sobre el tema en lugar de un verdadero remake. Un "Piranha 3…D", jugando con el título, más cercano a un tercer capítulo (después del segundo firmado por James Cameron en 1981) que a un remake. Aja hace suya la lección aprendida de años y años de visiones "descomprometidas" de fan del horror en la pantalla y se esmera en crear un producto de entretenimiento desenfadado que sea lo más cercano posible a las atmósferas de cierto cine amablemente canalla que triunfaba hace treinta años. El resultado es convincente, "Piranha 3D" cumple el objetivo y logra su único propósito: divertir. Realmente poco importa en el guion de Pete Goldfinger y Josh Stolberg ("Sorority Row – Pacto de sangre") si los personajes son meras caricaturas, carne de cañón a merced de las pirañas, porque lo que importa es la combinación fundamental "sexo y gore". Llevando al extremo este fundamental axioma explotativo, nos vemos sumergidos en sangre, vísceras, culos y tetas. Los cuerpos son agredidos, desgarrados, hechos pedazos de las maneras más fantásticas y exageradas posibles. Las amputaciones y las descarnaciones se suceden, a una chica primero le arrancan el cuero cabelludo y luego le descarnan el rostro porque el pelo queda atrapado en el eje del motor de un motora, a un tipo le arrancan el pene que luego servirá de banquete para una simpática piraña…en fin, el nivel es genuinamente exagerado. Luego está el elemento sexo que también domina, docenas y docenas de bellezas en bikini o sin velos que se exhiben en concursos de camisas mojadas y escenas de amor sáfico en apnea (riguroso en 3D!). Para remarcar este aspecto, que sitúa "Piranha 3D" como película fieramente para "hombres", está la participación en papeles destacados de pin-ups como Kelly Brook, así como de conocidas estrellas del porno como Riley Steele y, en papeles menores, Gianna Michaels y Ashlynn Brooke. Sin embargo "Piranha 3D" no es una operación nostalgia, a pesar de la extraordinaria participación de Richard Dreyfuss, que en el prólogo refleja claramente su personaje en "Tiburón", y de Christopher Lloyd, que se parece intencionadamente a Doc Brown de "Regreso al futuro". "Piranha 3D" toma la lección del cine pasado para reinventar el género y llevarlo al extremo…y digamos que de una película de este tipo se necesitaba, desde hace demasiado tiempo el beast movie acuático es peculiaridad de horrendas producciones direct to video que hacen del ridículo y del efecto especial espantoso su estandarte. Además de los cameos de Dreyfuss y Lloyd (y de Eli Roth), la película de Aja cuenta con una protagonista como Elisabeth Shue ("El hombre sin sombra"), buena y bella actriz poco utilizada, y el sobrino de Steve McQueen, Steven R. McQueen ("The Vampire Diares"), acompañados por Ving Rhames ("Pulp Fiction"), Jerry O’Connell ("Scream 2") y Adam Scott ("Fratellastri a 40 años"). El 3D de "Piranha", aunque sea fruto de una conversión en postproducción, funciona egregiamente, uniendo el efecto profundidad característico de la era post "Avatar" al viejo efecto de feria con los objetos que salpican hacia el público, remarcando también en esto el vínculo con el cine de los años 80. "Piranha 3D" es una tontería, hay que partir de este presupuesto, una película de total descompromiso que solo sirve para matar el aburrimiento durante 90 minutos. Si están al juego y les gustan la violencia cartunesca y las muñecas siliconadas, adelante, no quedarán decepcionados.
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RESEÑAS DE LA COMUNIDAD (5)

Gimly

Gimly

5 /10

When evil, inbred, cannibal, devilish, prehistoric, underground piranha are unleashed on the tiny town of Lake Victoria during "Spring Break", the outcome is all rather predictable. Babes, bikinis, boobs, bums, blood, bazulco and bad acting.

Run from a budget of $24M the film has almost no actors of note in lead roles. Although there is a cameo from Eli Roth (Inglourious Basterds), which is always cool.

What we have here, is a virtually flawless example of stupid fun. There's no point in trying to evaluate a film like Piranha 3D on factors like good taste, because it goes out of its way to smash these conventions apart. The film has this crazy energy about it from beginning to end.

It also however, is the perfect example of why 3D is so fucking unnecessary. And though I appreciate how forward the film is, that doesn't make it strictly speaking good. It's part creature-feature, part horror-comedy, but it doesn't stand up in a thrill sense to actual monster movies like Anaconda or King Kong, and it doesn't stand up in a humour sense to actual horror comedy like Shaun of the Dead or Dead Snow, but it sort of takes off on its own in a passable manner. Though it's kiiinda humorous, the film is mostly just "fun", as opposed to "funny".

The script seems cobbled together with a couple of different half assed plot points, but several half ass plots taped together is better than just one half assed plot trying to hold its own and ending up looking like no plot at all. Exploitation has never really been A-grade material, and even though the "suspension of disbelief" thing that films are supposed to have as a general rule, is sort of... not here, Piranha 3D still manages to somehow get this piece of crap off the ground.

I watched it at about 2am with a male friend of mine who has very similar taste and sense of humour to me, and that's pretty much got to be the best possible setting to watch it in. The CG gore is ridiculous, the 3D focus is ridiculous, the film itself is just fucking ridiculous. But brainless is great sometimes, just don't make a habit of thinking that you can get away with bad exploitation, and calling it Black Comedy, once or twice is fine, but soon it just looks like you're aiming for cult, and getting lazy.

-Gimly

Per Gunnar Jonsson

4 /10

This is the 2010 remake of the old classic. The original is pretty much crap so I bought this one solely based on the fact that it has been getting unusually good reviews from both critics as well as viewers.

I have to say that I am at loss as to why. There are loads of much better films in the action/horror/fantasy genre’s that, at least the so called “critics” totally hammer. Why the hell this trash got so good scores is beyond me.

The female acting consists of showing off your boobs then get eaten. The male acting consists of being an asshole, get your dick eaten, then get the rest eaten. The main “event” is a contrived scene when the main asshole get his dick bitten off and the piranhas eat it and spit it out again under water. I’m sure the 3D effects made it even more ridiculous than in 2d. I usually have rather high tolerance for poor acting and bad scripts when it comes to otherwise effects and gore loaded films but most of this film I was just thinking, “what the f... is this shit!”.

Most of the film was just scenes stashed on top of each other designed to show of 3D effects with boobs and various ways a human could get eaten. This is a typical example of why 3D is bad for the movie industry.

John Chard

John Chard

7 /10

Piranha hunt in packs - not for protection, but for overwhelming force.

Actually many of today's younger multiplex goers hunt in packs, they know what they like and they know how to have a good time with even the most crude or banal movie. I don't mean that as an insult, it's just indicative of the film market available to them, it's the reason why films like this here Piranha remake/re-imaging/re-jig exists and makes money. Even "spawning" a franchise on occasions.

Alexandre Aja's Piranha 3D is a complete machine gun of a movie, it knew exactly how to sell tickets at the box office. Even before the 3D was used as a selling point, the word down the grapevine was the promise of lithe bodies in beach wear and loads of CGI killer fish shredding the hell out of a whole community. And that's exactly what is delivered, only with extras that see considerable nudity in the mammary areas and Elisabeth Shue and Ving Rhames kicking buttocks.

It's all very bloody, even lurid and exploitive, while it's difficult to know if you are meant to laugh, scream or do something that Russ Meyer would endorse? But, and I say this as a middle aged old fart, there is so much fun to be had here if you are prepared to unscrew your head and take out your brain. Strap yourselves in Piranha 3D haters, your grandchildren might just be enjoying in the future: Piranha 27: Sexy Mechanoid Bimbos Fight Back. But will they hate themselves in the morning? 7/10

tmdb28039023

1 /10

In 1975, Richard Dreyfuss starred in Jaws; 35 years later he had a cameo in Piranha. His connection to the first film is obviously the only reason he’s in the second, wherein he’s killed off before his name even appears in the opening credits.

Dreyfuss is not alone, though; Elisabeth Shue and Ving Rhames also get to whore themselves out. In the latter's case, there was never any danger that Piranha would result in another hand-me-down acting award for Jack Lemmon; on the other hand, Rhames has easily the best scene in the entire movie — using an outboard motor in a way that would make Ash Williams proud.

But I'm getting ahead of myself; Shue and Rhames first have to find the remains of Dreyfuss, then capture a piranha which they take to Christopher Lloyd (in full Doc Brown mode), who identifies it as a species that has been extinct for two million years (according to the subtitles, Lloyd calls it the "regional piranha," but he may actually be saying "original"; either way it doesn’t matter because neither term makes sense).

An earthquake released the piranhas from an underground lake, or some such bullshit. Q: "How could they survive for so long cut off from the surface?" A: "Cannibalism. They must have fought each other to survive.” Until, presumably, there could be only one. Piranha MacLeod? Well, that would actually explain their apparent immortality.

Piranha is supposed to be a comedy — or, specifically, it's a remake of a parody of Jaws released three years after Jaws and 32 before this one. In other words, this material was so diluted it was almost homeopathic.

Shue and Rhames are big fish in a small pond here — kinda like those poor Sea World orcas (I know they’re mammals; you get the idea, though); as such, the only emotion they inspire in the audience is pity over their career choices.

Only Jerry O'Connell, in a role no doubt based on Joe Francis (of Girls Gone Wild infamy), moves as if he's in his own element — ​​because he is; he knows exactly, having been in several others of the same ilk, what kind of movie this is, and navigates it accordingly.

r96sk

r96sk

6 /10

<em>'Piranha 3D'</em> does attempt something a bit different to the film it remakes (unlike the 1995 redo) and parts are decent (e.g. the gore), though all things considered it's not a movie I'd wanna revisit. It isn't as concise or as fun as Joe Dante's flick, the effects aren't the most convincing either.

The 3D portions are funny to see all these years later (in 2D, obvs). I was never a fan of that format, so I'm glad it never stuck around - pure gimmick. Going back to the effects, the piranha's usage and design underwhelm. I also said this in my review of the 1978 flick's sequel, but: less is more.

The cast are alright. Elisabeth Shue is the clear standout, her character is actually quite cool in terms of what she does and how she handles herself; not a female character that is only there for their looks, like most are here to be frank. Elsewhere, Steven R. McQueen is solid too.

Interesting to see the involvement of Kelly Brook, someone I know from her work away from film; smart casting, to be fair. Away from those, Jessica Szohr is decent, though Jerry O'Connell is rubbish. Adam Scott, Ving Rhames and Christopher Lloyd also appear, Richard Dreyfuss too.

It is better than the other 'follow-ups' to the original and I didn't find it to be absolutely bad, so I guess it merits small praise for that. Still, not one I'd recommend.

Reseñas proporcionadas por TMDB