In 1978, Roger Corman's New World Pictures released the
original Piranha, which was a Jaws knockoff directed by B-movie maven
Joe Dante from a script by indie auteur John Sayles. It was an enjoyable
exploitation movie with its tongue firmly planted in cheek. Piranha spawned a 1981 sequel only
notable because it marked the directorial debut of James Cameron as well as a
1995 Showtime remake starring a then-unknown Mila Kunis. Alexandre Aja brought
the man-eating fish back with a vengeance in 2010 with Piranha 3D. The remake was surprisingly entertaining as it reveled
in its tackiness with projectile vomit flying out of the screen. Piranha 3D may have been well-made
trash, but its sequel Piranha 3DD is
just plain trash.
A year after the horrific events of Piranha 3D, Lake Victoria is a ghost town following a massive
attack on spring breakers by an undiscovered species of prehistoric piranha.
The military embarked on a widespread eradication of the deadly fish and the
threat has been seemingly neutralized. Meanwhile, Maddy (Danielle Panabaker), a
marine biology student, has returned home to nearby Merkin, Arizona for the
summer. She is shocked when her sleazy stepfather, Chet (David Koechner), has
transformed her late-mother's water park into a hedonistic hotspot. Chet has
replaced lifeguards with "water-certified" strippers and a
"Cooch-Cam" that displays close-ups of the female anatomy as they
exit the pool. He's also illegally tapped into an underground river to avoid
paying bills to the water company. Guess how the piranhas get into the park?
Piranha 3DD treads
water for its first two acts, which feel interminable in spite of a length that's
barely 80 minutes, not counting end credits. There's an occasional piranha
attack though most of the screen time is dedicated to Maddy reconnecting with
her old friends, the slutty Ashley (Meagan Tandy) and the virginal Shelby
(Katrina Bowden). There's also a love triangle between the heroine and her
ex-boyfriend Kyle (Chris Zylka), a meathead sheriff's deputy, and the nerdy
Barry (Matt Bush), who's had a crush on Maddy since childhood. Once the thin attempts
at character development are dispensed with, it's finally time for the
bloodbath.
Say what you will about Alexandre Aja, but at least he
directed Piranha 3D with a stylish
flair. The violence of the sequel just doesn't match up to the previous film in
terms of scope or skill. The body count is much less and the kills aren't
nearly as inventive. John Gulager, who also directed the Feast trilogy, seems content to rehash gags rather than come up
with anything new. A prologue involving Gary Busey and a dead cow that farts
out piranha eggs doesn't match up to the previous opening with Richard
Dreyfuss. Other lowbrow sequences include a piranha lodged up someone's rectum
and another swimming out of a girl's vagina to chomp down on her lover's penis.
We also get the lovely image of a decapitated head motorboating a pair of naked
breasts. Speaking of which, Gulager gleefully dishes out a heaping helping of
nudity. Buxom bikini-clad babes lose their tops and jiggle their bountiful
bosoms in slow motion. One pair of bouncing boobs belongs to David Hasselhoff.
The former Baywatch
star plays himself in the third act as the C-list celebrity hired to host the
grand opening of Chet's Big Wet water park. Hasselhoff has found new life as a
self-parody and adds direly needed humor. In a running gag, hapless patrons
plead for his assistance as they truly believe him to be a trained lifeguard.
The Hoff is one of the few enjoyable elements in Piranha 3DD, along with returning cast members Christopher Lloyd,
Paul Scheer, and Ving Rhames. Lloyd once again brings his bug-eyed Doc Brown
act as a slightly loopy ichthyologist. Rhames is back as the traumatized Deputy
Fallon, who lost his legs in the last feeding frenzy. Luckily, he's now in
possession of titanium crutches equipped with shotguns. He also gets two of the
movie's best lines: "Fish ate my damn legs" and "I ain't afraid
of no punk ass water." As for the rest of the cast, they perform their duties
adequately though there isn't enough Katrina Bowden for my tastes. Danielle
Panabaker deserves better roles, but has carved a niche as a young scream queen
with appearances here and in the remakes of The Crazies and Friday the 13th.
Piranha 3D was a
guilty pleasure that turned the dial up to 11 when it comes to gore and
raunchiness. Dipping into the pool a second time was a bad decision. As expected with a title like Piranha
3DD, the sequel gives you bigger breasts, but not a bigger and better film.
Rating: * (*****)
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