Bait 3D

Bait 3D is a 2012 3D disaster horror film directed by Kimble Rendall based on the screenplay by John Kim and Russell Mulcahy.[3] It featured Sharni Vinson, Phoebe Tonkin, Xavier Samuel, Julian McMahon, Cariba Heine, Alex Russell, Lincoln Lewis, Alice Parkinson, and Dan Wyllie.The film centers around a group of people who try to escape a grocery store, submerged as a result of a freak tsunami, while being hunted by bloodthirsty great white sharks.As Rory boards into the ocean to set a buoy, a great white shark appears and kills a man in the water.While stocking shelves with Naomi (Alice Parkinson) he sees Tina with her new boyfriend Steven (Qi Yuwu) returned from Singapore.In the supermarket, a young woman, Jaime (Phoebe Tonkin) is caught shoplifting, and temporarily evades the security guard by meeting up with her boyfriend Ryan (Alex Russell), who also works at the store.The tense situation eventually escalates, and Doyle's partner appears and shoots assistant manager Julie (Rhiannon Dannielle Pettett).Josh kills the shark with the taser as Doyle wires a truck jammed in the entrance to explode, breaking a hole in the debris and freeing them.[8] Production of a sequel called Deep Water, about a plane en route from China to Australia crashing in the Pacific Ocean, was scrapped in March 2014 due to "uncomfortable similarities" to the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.
Kimble RendallRussell MulcahyJustin MonjoXavier SamuelSharni VinsonAdrian PangQi YuwuAlex RussellPhoebe TonkinMartin SacksLincoln LewisDamien GarveyDan WyllieJulian McMahonRodrigo BalartScreen AustraliaMedia Development Authority of SingaporeBlackmagic DesignScreen QueenslandParamount PicturesGolden Villagedisasterhorror filmCariba Heinegreat white sharksRichard Brancatisanogreat white sharkCoolangattaTeen Wolfanimatroniccomputer-generated imageryVenice Film FestivalBlu-rayRotten TomatoesMargaret PomeranzDavid StrattonThe AgeDeep WaterPacific OceanMalaysia Airlines Flight 370Gene SimmonsRenny HarlinAaron EckhartBen KingsleyGran CanariaNew ZealandBox Office MojoPopMattersAt the MoviesThe Hollywood Reporter