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Raging Sharks: N/A Sci-fi/Action/Horror 2005 Spring Break Shark Attack: N/A Action/Adventure/Drama 2008 Shark Swarm, also known as Great White: N/A Thriller 2008 Shark in Venice, also known as Sharks in Venice in the U.S. N/A Natural horror/Action 2009 Jaws in Japan, also known as Psycho Shark: N/A (unrelated to the Jaws franchise) Horror 2009
Great white sharks have adopted the strategy of breaching to catch fast-moving prey like sea lions and seals. The unexpected leap allows the shark to take its prey by surprise. Their long bodies ...
Bait, a 2012 Australian-Singaporean film, perhaps sets up the most unique of premises in a movie involving people-hungry sharks. The movie follows a bunch of grocery store workers who are forced ...
Sharksploitation is a 2023 American documentary film written and directed by Stephen Scarlata, who also produced the film alongside Kerry Deignan Roy and Josh Miller. [1] The documentary examines the sharksploitation film subgenre, which centers around sharks and shark attacks.
Deep Blood, also known as Sharks and Sangue negli abissi (literally: "Blood in the Abyss"), is a 1989 Italian sharksploitation drama.. The credited director Raffaele Donato (as Raf Donato) only directed the first scene in which the boys gather to seal their blood pact, [3] while the remainder of the film was directed and photographed by Joe D'Amato, [2] who also co-produced the film through ...
Blue Water, White Death is a 1971 American documentary film about sharks, which was directed by Peter Gimbel and James Lipscomb. [2] It received favourable reviews [ 3 ] [ 4 ] and was described as a "well produced odyssey" [ 5 ] and "exciting and often beautiful". [ 6 ]
The Bling Ring. From 2008 to 2009, a shocking string of Hollywood Hills burglaries targeted the likes of Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton, and Megan Fox.
This film is one of the first in the wave of films that sought to capitalize on the popularity of the feature film, Jaws (1975). [3] Mako: The Jaws of Death, with its sympathetic portrayal of sharks as the real "victims" of human exploitation, is notable in the maritime horror genre for having depicted the sharks as the heroes and man as the villain.