

“It's feeding time.”
Maddie, a cellist who lost her friend and partial hearing during an armed robbery, is taken on a luxury trip to Thailand by her best friend Trish in hopes of healing. Trish has a hidden agenda: visiting Ceto, a captive orca who has become aggressive after losing her calf. When Ceto escapes captivity and stalks the three friends swimming in a secluded lagoon, paradise turns into a hunting ground. Trapped on a rock with nowhere to run, Maddie and Trish must survive an apex predator while confronting a secret that has followed them from home.
I watched Virginia Gardner survive a 600-foot tower in Fall. Watching her trapped on a rock in the middle of the ocean felt like strange déjà vu—except this time, there was no tension, just green screen and a two-hour waiting room. The film's biggest failure is Ceto herself. A mother orca grieving her lost calf? That could be powerful. But you feel nothing. And when the big 'twist' drops—that Trish was responsible for the tragedy that ruined Maddie's life—I just shrugged. Still, there's one scene I can't shake: Maddie underwater, her hearing aid malfunctioning, as Ceto glides toward her in complete silence. For a moment, it could have been a real film. It wasn't. But I watched it anyway. Because sometimes even the worst movies are just something to keep you company on a Saturday night.
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