The crew is led by Frank Maguire ( Richard Roxburgh), a highly respected diving expert who’s both fearless and stubborn. A group of underwater divers heads into the South Pacific’s Esa-ala Caves, hoping to conquer one of the world’s most notoriously dangerous underground terrains. Instead of Dances With Wolves, Sanctum brings to mind Neil Marshall’s great 2005 horror film The Descent, minus any cave-dwelling, and homicidal, bat-like humanoids. Much like Avatar, Sanctum looks great yet feels lifeless. Well shot and immersive in setting, the cave-diving-gone-wrong adventure flatlines due to a pedestrian screenplay and bottom-of-the-barrel acting. The same exterior-over-interior issue pervades the man’s latest project, Sanctum, which Cameron executive produced. Rather than push the storytelling in the same ways as he did the production’s effects work, Cameron seemingly devoted less attention to the writing and basically cranked out Dances With Wolves: The Ferngully Edition. For all the technical accolades and financial spoils showered upon James Cameron’s Avatar, there remains one inconvenient truth that’ll forever hinder the film’s legacy: Cameron’s script for the record-setting blockbuster is just too damn generic.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |