Dread Central:
We've landed almost a dozen new images for David R. Ellis' upcoming Shark Night 3D courtesy of French distributor Metro Films, and just like after watching the trailer, we're perplexed by how many day scenes there are in a movie called Shark Night.
David Ellis' Shark Night 3D has been rated PG-13 by the MPAA for violence and terror, disturbing images, sexual references, partial nudity, language and thematic material.
Look for the film in theatres on September 2nd.
Movies Hate You Too writes:
One of the biggest complaints you hear about Netflix Streaming is their lack of quality films. To a certain extent I would agree with that sentiment but for whatever reason I don’t have as big of a problem with their lineup as some customers do. Most of the films I watch on Netflix are more geared towards older catalog titles than new releases so that probably has a lot to do with my higher level of satisfaction. For May however Netflix has added several new releases in addition to adding a large amount of interesting catalog titles.
About time. While I appreciate the selection of older movies, Netflix is seriously lacking with newer releases compared to other streaming services.
Starship troopers :)
I wish they'd add Season 4 of the old Twilight Zone though :( it looks kind of sad to see Seasons 1-3 then jumps right to 5.
Project-blu writes: Shark Night 3D doesn’t scare us out of the water or entertain one bit. David R. Ellis fails in capturing the vicious beast of the sea in a full length feature film. He falls into the Hollywood stereotypes and clichés instead of being even remotely creative. If you've seen one shark fright movie then you've seen Shark Night 3D. The third-dimension is really lacking because it was shot with native 3D cameras, the 3D presentation is something I would expect from a converted film. If you have to watch this in 3D just give it a one-time go, after that, save your battery life on your glasses if you have an active set. Skip this purchase if you can, don’t let the sharks tease you.
just give it a one-time go, after that, save your battery life on your glasses if you have an active set.
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IGN - Like most critics out there, as the year comes to an end, I craft a Best/Worst list to suggest to friends, family and readers. As usual, I would crown two "Worst Of" winners – one award to the most genuinely terrible movie of the year (the Epic Fail award), and one award to the best worst movie of the year, a film so bad it actually works as a straight-faced comedy. A few years back, I gave a title to my best worst award: the Golden Wicker Man, in honor of the Nicolas Cage fiasco. (The one where he punches a lady while wearing a bear suit).