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4.3/10
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James Franciscus tries to save hundreds of swimmers in a coastal resort after a Great White Shark starts terrorizing the area.James Franciscus tries to save hundreds of swimmers in a coastal resort after a Great White Shark starts terrorizing the area.James Franciscus tries to save hundreds of swimmers in a coastal resort after a Great White Shark starts terrorizing the area.
James Franciscus
- Peter Benton
- (as James Francicus)
Micaela Pignatelli
- Gloria Benton
- (as Micky Pignatelli)
Giancarlo Prete
- Bob Martin
- (as Timothy Brent)
Stefania Girolami Goodwin
- Jenny Benton
- (as Stefania Girolami)
Massimo Vanni
- Jimmy
- (as Max Vanders)
Ennio Girolami
- Matt Rosen
- (as Thomas Moore)
Alessandro Maspes
- Helicopter Pilot
- (as Alex Maspes)
Featured review
When it was released, The Last Shark (aka Great White) got quickly pulled from theaters due to threats of a lawsuit from Universal Studios, producers of the Jaws movies. Having seen the film on DVD, I can see why. The writers of The Last Shark basically watched the first two Jaws movies and stole every good scene from them, even going so far as to clone characters.
All the main elements from Jaws are here. The gnarled seaman...check. The heroic everyman...check. The corrupt government official who tries to cover up the attacks...check. Even some of the attack scenes mimic specific scenes in Jaws I and II.
These things are made worse by the fact that the Italian studio behind this film had nowhere near Spielberg's budget. Consequently, we have an obviously fake shark model that appears every time the shark sticks it's head out of the water, which is quite often. The underwater shots are accomplished by a mixture of stock shark footage and very fake looking stop motion animation.
Making things even more ludicrous is that the shark appears to be intelligent, engaging in uncharacteristic shark behavior such as trying to trap people in caves with rocks and using ropes as tow lines. At times, it comes across as a comedy.
All the main elements from Jaws are here. The gnarled seaman...check. The heroic everyman...check. The corrupt government official who tries to cover up the attacks...check. Even some of the attack scenes mimic specific scenes in Jaws I and II.
These things are made worse by the fact that the Italian studio behind this film had nowhere near Spielberg's budget. Consequently, we have an obviously fake shark model that appears every time the shark sticks it's head out of the water, which is quite often. The underwater shots are accomplished by a mixture of stock shark footage and very fake looking stop motion animation.
Making things even more ludicrous is that the shark appears to be intelligent, engaging in uncharacteristic shark behavior such as trying to trap people in caves with rocks and using ropes as tow lines. At times, it comes across as a comedy.
- TheExpatriate700
- May 8, 2010
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaShortly before the film's release, "Universal Pictures" sued the producers, claiming it plagiarized "Jaws (1975)," and the Australian distributors, for breach of copyright regarding Peter Benchley's book "Jaws." "Universal" won an injunction, and the film was pulled from theaters.
- GoofsJames Franciscus' trouser keeps changing from light blue to dark red in the same scene.
- Quotes
Peter Benton: [looking at a chewed up surf board] One thing's for sure, it wasn't a floatin chainsaw.
- ConnectionsEdited into Double Target (1987)
- How long is The Last Shark?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- The Last Jaws
- Filming locations
- Savannah, Georgia, USA(many exterior locations)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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