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With Xavier Samuel, Sharni Vinson, Adrian Pang, Yuwu Qi. A freak tsunami traps shoppers at a coastal Australian supermarket inside the building - along with 12-foot Great White Sharks.
Bait: Directed by Antoine Fuqua. With Jamie Foxx, David Morse, Robert Pastorelli, Doug Hutchison. An ex-con is used by police to lure a criminal out of hiding.
Bait: Directed by Mark Jenkin. With Edward Rowe, Giles King, Chloe Endean, Janet Thirlaway. Martin is a fisherman without a boat, his brother Steven having re-purposed it as a tourist tripper.
But they soon find out that they have more to worry about than being in a flooded grocery store - there are 12 foot sharks swimming around them, and they're hungry. — Michael Hallows Eve. One painful year after a bloody encounter with a killer shark, the former lifeguard, Josh, is now working in a supermarket.
Bait (2012) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.
As the bloodthirsty sharks begin to pick the survivors off one by one, the group realizes that they must work together to find a way out without being eaten alive. Bait is Australia's first 3D movie and to be honest its better than I had expected. The special effects, the cast, the monstrous sharks and supermarket half in water is pretty ...
Bait: Directed by Hugo Haas. With Cleo Moore, Hugo Haas, John Agar, Emmett Lynn. A beautiful blonde leads a man down the road to ruin.
Clickbait: Created by Tony Ayres, Christian White. With Zoe Kazan, Betty Gabriel, Phoenix Raei, Adrian Grenier. When family man Nick Brewer is abducted in a crime with a sinister online twist, those closest to him race to uncover who is behind it and why.
Shark Bait: Directed by James Nunn. With Holly Earl, Jack Trueman, Catherine Hannay, Malachi Pullar-Latchman. A group of friends on vacation steal a couple of jet skis for fun and race them out to sea, ending up in a head-on collision.
Bait is a pretty remarkable film. Saw it at the excellent BFI Southbank. It's set in the present day but filmed using techniques from the old silent film era - with sound - including audio - added afterwards. No moving camera. Shot as if the person being spoken to is holding said camera (think Peep Show). Beautiful black and white.