Dynamic wallpapers & themes
Lifestyle and Utilities
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Finally, Live Wallpaper on your iPhone! 100+ beautifully designed moving wallpapers to choose from....
Truly, Madly, Deeply: Underwater Photography
Book
To capture an image of the crystal octopus, one of the ocean's rarest and most elusive creatures,...
Steve Backshall Annual 2018
Book
In this full colour, photographic, gift book fearless TV presenter, Steve Backshall, explores the...
In Harm's Way: The Sinking of the USS Indianapolis and the Extraordinary Story of Its Survivors
Book
On July 30, 1945, the USS Indianapolis was torpedoed in the South Pacific by a Japanese submarine....
A Beginner's Guide to Making Curtains, Shades, Pillows, Cushions, and More: 50 Step-by-Step Projects, Plus Practical Advice on Hanging Curtains, Choosing Fabric, and Measuring Up
Vanessa Arbuthnott and Gail Abbott
Book
Learn to sew curtains, blinds, cushions and more and make your home truly your own with these 50...
JT (287 KP) rated The Reef (2010) in Movies
Mar 10, 2020
Open Water saw two divers float around for ages before finally becoming lunch for a pack of hunting tiger sharks. Deep Blue Sea used CGI technology to create massive predators with a smart enough brain to devour the hapless crew of a scientific research station. And Shark Night 3D gave us blood curdling horror with half naked women thrown in for good measure. The Reef, encompasses most of the above minus the CGI. Here it’s replaced with clever and careful editing of one of the most beautiful but sinister creatures of the ocean….the Great White Shark.
A small group of friends, some with a past, get together on a yacht and hit the clear blue waters to deliver it to a waiting recipient. When it capsizes they are faced with the choice, swim for it to the nearest land miles away or wait it out on a potentially sinking vessel. Four members venture out leaving one behind, who after confessing he fishes the waters has no desire to get his feet wet, but excelling in scaring the shit out of his friends by telling them they all look like seals ready for the slaughter.
For any low budget indie film such as this creating tension when you have a location that looks exactly the same for miles in each direction is always going to be hard. But to his credit Andrew Traucki does extremely well in building up the entrance of our finned friend. Capturing the underwater viewpoint from Luke (the only one with a face mask) he dives down now and again to check the murky undertow for signs of life at the request of some very distressed friends. You’re always half expecting to see something but it never comes, until you finally catch a glimpse of the tail, and then your heart will race.
Of course this tension has to be sustained for the next forty-five minutes which is pretty hard. The acting is OK, made all the more effective by the fact that the cast is a bunch of relative unknowns. It’s hardly a surprise ending however, but given what Traucki has to work with he’s a produced good effort. There’s enough here to keep anyone happy, more so if you’re afraid of being left to die in miles of open water….oh, and you hate sharks!
Stop Drifting, Start Rowing: One Woman's Search for Happiness and Meaning Alone on the Pacific
Book
In the year 2000, Roz Savage seemed to have it all. But she felt there was a mismatch between the...
A Field Guide to North Atlantic Wildlife: Marine Mammals, Seabirds, Fish, and Other Sealife
Noble S. Proctor and Patrick J. Lynch
Book
This beautifully illustrated guide covers an unprecedented range of species that may be sighted...
Sex in the Sea
Book
Forget the Kama Sutra. When it comes to inventive sex acts, just look to the sea. There we find the...
New York's New Edge: Contemporary Art, the High Line, and Urban Megaprojects on the Far West Side
David Halle and Elisabeth Tiso
Book
The story of New York's west side no longer stars the Sharks and the Jets. Instead it's a story of...