Into the Blue 2: The Reef Movie Review
Into the Blue 2: The Reef Review
"Into the Blue 2: The Reef" Overview

Rating: NR
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Stephen HerekProducer : David Brookwell,David Buelow,Sean McNamara,Charles Winkler
Screenwiter : Mitchell Kapner
Starring : Chris Carmack,Laura Vandervoort,Marsha Thomason,David Anders
Into the Blue 2: The Reef sounds like soft-core porn, is made on the level of
soft-core porn, and might have been more entertaining had it gone full tilt
into soft-core porn territory. Not that it doesn't try -- there are more than
enough pointless, random, gratuitous shots of topless beach babes to turn on
any pimply-faced geek in search of female flesh and to give the movie reason to
tout its salacious "Uncut, Unrated" label. Perhaps that is the point of the
movie, and perhaps the distributors will make a few bucks off of that cheap
ploy. More power to them, because any self-respecting individual who walks into
a video store, looks at this title, and decides to rent it deserves to lose
their four bucks.
Obviously, this is a sequel to the 2005 Paul Walker-Jessica Alba
beach-bums-become-heroes movie. That film was one of the dumbest movies ever
made, but it was released theatrically and featured actors of at least mediocre
ability. Into the Blue 2 is a direct-to-DVD attempt to cash in on what the
studio must think of as the "high-caliber Into the Blue brand," even though the
original grossed a sparkling $18 million. This one stars Park Avenue mannequins
who pose their way through a non-existent terrorist plot involving a nuclear
warhead(!) and buried treasure.
The movie opens with a hard-boiled crime "setup" in which some stock mafioso
caps a Latin surfer dude after talking vaguely about a cryptic "deal." It then
cuts immediately to an endless montage of chiseled guys and barely-clothed
bikini babes. And then, well... that basically describes the entire movie. Hot,
scantily-clad young people party on the beach and occasionally engage in brute
heroism involving crime lords and international intrigue. Can you feel the pain?
Several extended sequences of deep-sea diving help extend the film's barely
90-minute running time -- they go on forever despite the fact that every hidden
chest is neatly placed in plain sight (which makes sense, since the set dresser
placed it there two minutes before the director called "action"). There's lots
more filler, too, in the form of volleyball scenes, dancing sequences, and jet
ski races, all edited like third-rate music videos, which might collectively
take up more running time than the actual plot.
The male lead is played by a Casper Van Dien lookalike, which was a silly
decision on behalf of the casting director, since Van Dien himself was surely
available to fill this role. His female partner is played by a woman so leaden
it seems even she is bored with the movie she's in. The rest of the cast is
filled out with a combination of stock 90210 rejects and a few legitimate
actors whose careers have no doubt taken drastic turns for the worse. Fans of
reality TV will note the strategic inclusion of The Hills mega-ditz Audrina
Patridge and Survivor alumni Parvati Shallow and Amanda Kimmel. You know your
movie's level of celebrity cameos is depressingly low when the celebrities in
question don't play themselves, but do play characters with their same names.
Into the Blue 2 was directed by Stephen Herek, who up until recently was
actually making movies released theatrically. He directed Bill and Ted's
Excellent Adventure, for crying out loud! Herek's resume is marked with
high-profile projects with stars like Eddie Murphy, Mark Wahlberg, Glenn Close,
and Angelina Jolie. Few of them were all that good, but come on, even Life or
Something Like It was better than this softest of soft-core extravaganzas. I
feel bad for Herek, and feel a sort of kinship with him. The poor guy clearly
doesn't want to be making movies like this, yet he has to. Similarly, I'd like
to be reviewing Adventureland, yet here I sit, finishing a review of Into the
Silicone.
Why don't you make a movie? It'll last longer.
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Review by Jason McKiernan
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