

Of course, you watch a shark movie to see people eaten by sharks, and The Black Demon disappoints on that level. (In fact, seeing this right after Trenque Lauquen makes The Black Demon feel a little like the mummy B-movie that makes up the first episode of La Flor.) nature conflict into a battle with angry ancient gods. And the script is peppered with touches of Aztec mythology that slightly elevate this beyond the typical man vs.

Screenwriter Boise Esquerra sets up hero and victim in one smug swoop, and the tension becomes a matter of not How will he save the day but When do we get to see him eaten alive? Still, Chato (Julio César Cedill), one of the few rig men to survive the demon’s initial savagery, becomes at once a valuable ally and a possible conscience for Paul, who has-imagine!-ignored years of safety warnings around the rig. A pre-credit sequence immerses us in the wonders and horrors of the tainted region, as we see divers plant a strip of explosives at the base of the oil rig - only to be quickly dispatched by The (pretty murky) Black Demon.Īs soon as Paul and his family land, we know there’s hell to pay, and from Paul’s thoroughly obnoxious behavior, condescending to local residents and careless with his family: sure, wouldn’t you leave your young wife, teen daughter and young son in a strange shady-looking bar in the middle of nowhere while you go take care of things on the doomed rig? Josh Lucas stars as Paul, a smarmy oilman (working for Nixon Oil, so you know they’re bad) who’s taken his family on a vacation to Bahia Azul, where he’s getting ready to decommission an oil rig in the middle of the sea. But despite offering predictable plot points and easy environmental messaging, director Adrian Grunberg ( Rambo: Last Blood) delivers enough B-movie energy to make you forget how forgettable the actual demon is. What evil could be lurking in the picturesque waters off the Baja coast? Could it be…nature’s revenge? The Black Demon is yet another shark movie - specifically, another megalodon thriller - and in this case, the eponymous creature isn’t just hungry for blood-it’s looking to collect its bloody dues from humans who have exploited the planet for far too long.
