'Hot Spring Shark Attack' Review: New Depths of B-Movie Absurdity

Hot Spring Shark Attack takes B-movie horror humor to stratospheric levels of schlock absurdity. What begins as ridiculous and goofy gets exponentially sillier as writer/director Morihito Inoue raises his game in a relentless plot. The premise of ancient sharks with supernatural abilities attacking a Japanese coastal town elicits a few chuckles, but then the brainless onslaught wears thin. And that's just in the first half hour of a movie that clocks in at a meager seventy-two minutes — without credits. Hot Spring Shark Attack is an experience solely meant for dedicated genre fans and those who want a complete break from reality.
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