Plots(1)

When a massive, genetically-engineered flesh=eating snake head fish begins combing the quiet waters of the bayou, searching for prey, local authorities scramble to curb the carnage, but, genetically conditioned to breathe under water and on land, the monster can hunt wherever humans tread..and they're fast..and they're hungry! (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (4)

lamps 

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English Anyone expecting more than just gratuitous brutality should better avoid this film. The first act is awfully boring, the rest is nothing but a cocktail of blood, severed limbs and a cliché about a deadly, mutated giant predator. The director apparently decided to focus not on a coherent plot, but only on a series of unpredictable and properly gory deaths, culminating in the final slaughter of the monster, which was really amusing. It's not a complete waste of time, but there's no way the film can get out of the sub-par. ()

Stanislaus 

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English Frankenfish reminded me a lot of the 2000 film Crocodile. In that film, the "lead role" was also played by an enormously bloodthirsty monster with an insatiable appetite, who enjoyed the plankish “actors”. But this one is a bit better. ()

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Gilmour93 

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English Fans of Ren & Stimpy know well that Captain Nasty is on the attack, but the question is, in what numbers? Natural horror films have a tough time and are mercilessly judged, but what can you do when they lean so heavily into it? The Louisiana bayou this time hides aggressively digital antagonists, and given the director's past as a CGI technician (The Abyss, T-1000 in T2), I’m reminded of sayings about a shoeless blacksmith and not visiting a tavern without cash. The characters and their chatter, when they’re not being fish food, evoke indifference, so the only plus points come from some unexpected moments (a shotgun entering the plan) and the very rare presence of slightly dark humor. For example, before the central duo, shaped by the events, heads towards their “rescue” at the end... "For having fish brain makeup, you look pretty good." ()

kaylin 

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English The American horror film Frankenfish is a fine B-movie that may entertain you, but you mustn't expect anything special from it. I suppose I wanted something more from the film, which I didn't get. I was fundamentally not entertained by it, and the added value of the exaggeration didn't seem enough to me. Although in conclusion, I would like to point out that as far as the special effects are concerned, the CGI used here is not bad at all. ()

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