A weekend at a lake house in the Louisiana Gulf turns into a nightmare for seven vacationers as they are subjected to fresh-water shark attacks. —IMDb
David Richard Ellis (born September 8, 1952) is an American film director and former stuntman. Ellis was born in Hollywood, California. He began his career in the film industry as a supporting actor in juvenile roles; his big screen debut was in the 1975 Kurt Russell film The Strongest Man in the World. One year later, he switched to stunts in the film Baby Blue Marine and worked from then on as a stuntman. His next career move came in 1981 with the promotion to stunt coordinator. After a successful five years in this position, he worked from 1986 on as an assistant director or second assistant director, in charge of action sequences from films such as The Matrix Revolutions and Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone.
In 1996, Ellis made his debut as a director in the Disney live-action film Homeward Bound II: Lost in San Francisco, and has attained more attention for directing Final Destination 2 (2003), the continuation of the financially successful horror film franchise… read more
A lake full of various kinds of sharks and a couple of yokels just a sodomy away from deliverance and it still can't produce any chills. A total hack job with a terrible script, pathetic visual effects and not even fun in a 'so bad its good kind of way'. Time filler and nothing more. Bring back the genetic sharks of deep blue sea instead. Terrible.
jaws meets deliverance. was a chance with the premise (and pg-13 rating) to affect some kind of commentary on the increasingly lascivious gore hound nature of modern horror, but instead takes every opportunity to indulge the audience's delight in watching people suffer. after the relative promise of cellular and snakes, ellis has revealed himself as a competent hack with a streak towards dull, joke-y misanthropy.
Goofy but mildly entertaining B movie finds a group of college kids under attack by renegade sharks when they head out on a salt water lake for a weekend getaway. Actually tries to make a statement about audience's lust for blood, which probably went over the heads of most of its target audience. Otherwise its pretty standard, patently ridiculous fare, but kind of fun in spite of itself.