The Requin
The Requin is a 2022 American survival thriller film directed and written by Le-Van Kiet.[1] Starring Alicia Silverstone as Jaelyn and James Tupper as Kyle, the film centers on a married couple vacationing at a remote seaside villa in Vietnam whose romantic getaway turns into a fight for survival when a tropical storm sweeps their home out to sea, stranding them amid circling great white sharks.[1] Released to theaters and streaming on January 28, 2022, by Lionsgate, it blends elements of adventure, mystery, and horror, with production handled by Film Bridge International and Paper Street Pictures.[1][2] The story unfolds as Jaelyn and Kyle, seeking to mend their strained relationship after personal losses, face escalating perils including Kyle's severe injuries from the storm and the relentless threat of shark attacks.[3] Le-Van Kiet, known for his prior directorial work on the 2019 action film Furie, crafts The Requin as a tense, water-bound drama that emphasizes human endurance over graphic creature-feature violence, though it incorporates practical effects and CGI for the aquatic sequences.[4] Supporting cast includes Deirdre O'Connell and Danny Chung, with the narrative drawing comparisons to classic survival tales like Open Water due to its isolated, adrift premise.[2] Critically, The Requin received mixed to negative reviews, praised for Silverstone's committed performance and atmospheric tension but critiqued for uneven pacing, implausible plotting, and subpar visual effects.[3] It holds an 18% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 17 reviews, with a consensus noting its intriguing setup undermined by execution flaws, while audience scores are similarly low at 6%.[1] Despite its modest $8.5 million budget, the film found a niche in the direct-to-video market, appealing to fans of low-budget thrillers involving natural disasters and marine predators.[2]Synopsis
Plot
Jaelyn and Kyle, an American couple grappling with the grief of a recent stillborn child that has strained their marriage, arrive in Vietnam for a restorative vacation at a luxurious overwater villa.[5][6] Hoping to rekindle their relationship, they spend their first days relaxing by the sea, though tensions simmer beneath the surface. While swimming, Kyle sustains a mysterious bite wound on his leg, which he dismisses as minor, but it begins to fester as days pass.[5] As a powerful tropical thunderstorm approaches, the couple ignores warnings from hotel staff to relocate to safer ground and remains in the villa. The storm unleashes fierce winds and waves that batter the structure, eventually detaching it from its pilings and sending it adrift into the open ocean. Clinging to the floating remnants, Jaelyn and Kyle desperately salvage what supplies they can—cans of food, water, and debris—while Kyle's injury worsens, limiting his mobility. In a bid for rescue, Jaelyn fashions a smoke signal from scavenged materials, but it inadvertently ignites a fire that forces them to abandon the villa for a makeshift raft pieced together from wreckage.[5][6] Days into their ordeal, with blood from Kyle's wound attracting predators, a massive great white shark attacks the raft, biting off his already injured leg in a brutal assault. Jaelyn fights back fiercely, using a jagged piece of wood to stab at the shark and drive it away temporarily, but the damage is done—Kyle is left bleeding profusely and unable to move. Multiple sharks circle relentlessly, nipping at the raft and further injuring the couple; Jaelyn sustains a deep bite to her thigh during the chaos. Exhausted and adrift, they eventually wash up on a remote beach, where Kyle succumbs to his injuries and blood loss, his body claimed by the approaching sharks as Jaelyn watches in horror.[5][6] Alone and delirious from pain and dehydration, Jaelyn experiences vivid hallucinations, including a vision of Kyle urging her to survive and return home. She stitches her thigh wound crudely with fishing line from the debris to stem the bleeding, then pushes onward, swimming toward a distant speck on the horizon that proves to be a local fisherman's coracle. The fisherman, initially helpful, tends to her by properly sewing her wounds and shares his raft, but a second massive shark attack shatters their fragile safety—the beast rams the vessel, killing the fisherman and dragging him underwater.[5][6] In the climactic confrontation, Jaelyn battles the shark head-on, using the coracle's outboard engine to ram its gills and an anchor as an improvised weapon to hook and fatally impale the creature through the eye and skull. With the shark vanquished, Jaelyn collapses on the bloodied raft, drifting until she is finally spotted and rescued by a group of fishermen on a nearby shore, who pull her to safety as she whispers her survival.[5][6]Themes
The Requin explores the central theme of grief and loss through the protagonist Jaelyn's recent stillbirth, which profoundly impacts her emotional state and interactions with her husband Kyle during their ill-fated vacation. This personal tragedy manifests as ongoing trauma, with Jaelyn struggling to process the death of their daughter during childbirth, leading to moments of withdrawal and vulnerability that heighten the film's tension.[7][3] The narrative delves into isolation and human resilience, as the couple's overwater bungalow is swept away by a violent tropical storm, stranding them in shark-infested waters far from help. This physical separation amplifies their emotional solitude, forcing Jaelyn to draw on inner strength to combat dehydration, injury, and relentless environmental threats, underscoring the human capacity to endure against nature's indifference.[8][3] Marital strain emerges subtly as a recurring motif, exacerbated by the pressures of grief and the escalating crisis; pre-storm conversations reveal underlying resentments, with Kyle's attempts at consolation clashing against Jaelyn's unresolved pain, illustrating how tragedy can fracture intimate bonds even as shared peril demands unity. The shark encounters, occurring amid their desperation, serve to externalize these internal conflicts, representing an unrelenting force mirroring the inescapability of their sorrow.[7][8]Cast and Characters
Principal Cast
Alicia Silverstone stars as Jaelyn, a deeply traumatized wife struggling with the grief of losing her newborn child, who travels to a remote Vietnamese villa with her husband in an attempt to rebuild their shattered lives.[4] Stranded at sea after a devastating storm destroys their home, Jaelyn transforms from a figure overwhelmed by insomnia and panic into a determined survivor, fending off shark attacks with improvised weapons and raw determination in a harrowing fight for her life.[3] Her performance captures a broad emotional spectrum, from quiet devastation to fierce resolve, anchoring the film's tension in personal stakes before escalating to visceral horror.[4] James Tupper portrays Kyle, Jaelyn's well-intentioned but increasingly helpless husband, whose protective instincts clash with his physical limitations as injuries mount during their desperate struggle against the ocean and predators below.[3] Initially supportive and pragmatic, Kyle's arc culminates in tragedy as his wounds prove fatal, shifting the narrative focus to Jaelyn's solitary endurance and highlighting the couple's strained dynamic rooted in shared loss.[4] Tupper's restrained depiction emphasizes Kyle's flawed humanity, using subtle dialogue to convey frustration and fading hope amid the chaos.[3] Silverstone, who rose to prominence in the 1990s with iconic roles in teen comedies like Clueless and the superhero film Batman & Robin, takes on a demanding lead in the horror-thriller genre with The Requin, delivering an intense and credible portrayal of emotional and physical turmoil. Tupper, with prior experience in suspenseful projects including the mystery thriller series Big Little Lies and the supernatural horror film Nothing Left to Fear, brings authenticity to Kyle's role as a husband navigating crisis.[9]Supporting Cast
Deirdre O'Connell voices Anne, Jaelyn's mother, who is heard in a phone conversation with Jaelyn, expressing concern about her mental state and the couple's recent loss.[4][10] Danny Chung portrays the Fisherman, whose pivotal intervention in the climax rescues the surviving lead character Jaelyn after days adrift, providing a stark contrast to the isolation and offering narrative closure in a brief yet essential sequence.[10] Jennifer Mudge voices Lizzie, Jaelyn's sister, who speaks to her via phone about her well-being and the family's worries following the couple's tragedy, subtly reinforcing the themes of loss without extending into lengthy exposition.[4][10] Kha Mai serves as the Tour Guide in the opening sequences, delivering authentic local flavor to the Vietnamese coastal setting and immersing viewers in the environment before the storm hits.[10] Tourists such as Kameron Hood and Louis Roy Pearo populate early scenes, evoking the allure of the getaway location while hinting at underlying dangers through casual background presence.[11] The inclusion of Vietnamese performers like Kha Mai underscores the production's commitment to cultural authenticity in the film's Vietnam-based opening, enhancing realism in depictions of local life and lore.[10]Production
Development
Le-Van Kiet, a Vietnamese director who gained international recognition with his 2019 action thriller Furie—Vietnam's highest-grossing film and an Academy Awards submission for Best International Feature—brought his experience in blending intense action with emotional depth to The Requin.[12] Following Furie's success, Kiet envisioned The Requin as a cross-cultural survival tale, setting the story in a remote Vietnamese seaside villa while centering American protagonists to explore themes of resilience amid nature's fury and personal loss.[13] This approach allowed him to infuse authentic Vietnamese coastal elements into a Hollywood-style thriller, drawing from his UCLA film school training and prior works like the horror film House in the Alley (2012).[12] Kiet penned the original screenplay himself, inspired by a real-life article about an Indonesian boy who survived for months adrift on a storm-swept hut, adapting it into a narrative of a couple confronting a tropical storm and ensuing shark threats.[14] Development began around 2019–2020, shortly after Furie's release, with Kiet employing a meticulous process: he first created detailed storyboards and visualizations through meditation, then outlined the script extensively before drafting in Final Draft software.[14] The script emphasized character-driven tension over genre tropes, using the couple's grief over a lost child as a core motivator for their survival struggle.[13] The film's $8.5 million budget prioritized practical effects to achieve realism within constraints, avoiding costly hydraulic sets for the storm sequence by instead utilizing a lakeside pool and dynamic stunt work.[15][16] This planning extended to visual effects integration, with Kiet storyboarding all major sequences, including shark attacks, in advance; a Vietnamese VFX team monitored pre-production remotely to align practical elements like lighting and camera movements with post-production needs.[16] Casting focused on actors who could convey emotional vulnerability and physical intensity, with Alicia Silverstone selected as Jaelyn for her ability to anchor the survival drama and appeal to genre audiences familiar with her versatile roles.[13] Her prior collaboration with co-lead James Tupper as Kyle further streamlined the process, ensuring chemistry in portraying the strained couple.[13]Filming
Principal photography for The Requin took place primarily in Orange County, Florida, with key locations including Universal Studios Florida in Orlando and Full Sail University in Winter Park, which stood in for the film's Vietnamese beach settings.[17] Additional sea sequences were captured using water tanks and an Olympic-sized pool at a state park in Orlando to simulate ocean conditions.[18] Originally planned for Vietnam, production relocated due to the country's border closures amid a COVID-19 resurgence, allowing filming to proceed under U.S. protocols.[17][19] Shooting occurred in early 2021 over a compressed schedule of approximately 20 days, following three to four weeks of preparation, with the entire on-set phase wrapping in under two months.[18] COVID-19 measures, including remote collaboration for visual effects teams via live feeds, added logistical hurdles but ensured continuity.[18] On-set challenges centered on replicating the film's intense survival sequences, particularly the storm that strands the characters at sea. Crews contended with powerful winds and downpours to capture realistic tropical turmoil, much of which was staged on soundstages at Universal Studios.[19] Water-based action demanded rigorous safety protocols, as actors Alicia Silverstone and James Tupper spent extended periods in cold tanks, leading to hypothermia risks; Tupper's core temperature once dropped to dangerous levels, necessitating frequent breaks and monitoring.[20] Underwater shots employed specialized camera housings and divers for precision.[18] Director Le Van Kiet, a Vietnamese filmmaker, maintained authenticity by incorporating cultural details like the Vũng Tàu seaside villa and references to local landmarks such as the Võ Thị Sáu monument, despite the U.S.-based production; Florida's humid, stormy climate further aided in evoking Southeast Asian conditions.[19]Visual Effects and Post-Production
The post-production phase of The Requin involved extensive visual effects work to realize the film's survival horror elements, with producers reporting nearly 1,000 VFX shots to depict the oceanic perils and isolation.[21] These shots primarily focused on creating dynamic sea environments, storm sequences, and shark threats through CGI, including background replacements for water scenes captured in controlled tank setups during principal photography.[16] The VFX team, based in Vietnam, collaborated remotely with the production via Zoom, monitoring live camera feeds to ensure seamless integration of digital elements with live-action footage.[16] Key techniques combined practical and digital methods to heighten realism in the shark encounters and injuries. Special effects teams constructed several shark elements, including a large animatronic shark head for close-up interactions, which served as references for subsequent CGI animations of great white sharks circling the protagonists.[22] Practical prosthetics and stunts were employed in high-energy sequences like the storm surge, providing a foundation for digital enhancements in post.[16] The film was shot on the Arri Alexa Mini LF camera with Signature primes to deliver high-detail imagery, facilitating precise compositing and color work in post-production.[16] Post-production began following principal photography in Florida, with the project in active stages by March 2021 and fully completed by November 2021 ahead of its January 2022 release.[21][23] Editing and VFX refinement emphasized the film's tense, isolated atmosphere, supported by an original score composed by Jean-Paul Wall that underscored the dread of the open sea without relying on exaggerated horror motifs.[24] Sound design incorporated layered audio to amplify underwater tension and environmental immersion, drawing on the sparse dialogue to make subtle oceanic sounds—such as waves and distant splashes—central to the suspense.[25]Release
Marketing
The marketing campaign for The Requin began in late 2021, building anticipation through targeted trailer releases that highlighted the film's shark thriller elements and starring role for Alicia Silverstone. The first official trailer was unveiled by Saban Films on December 9, 2021, focusing on intense shark attack sequences and Silverstone's character navigating peril at sea, which was distributed across platforms like YouTube to generate early buzz for the survival horror genre. A second trailer followed on February 9, 2022, from Lionsgate, shifting emphasis to the broader survival horror aspects, including the couple's isolation and emotional strain, timed to coincide with the film's impending theatrical and on-demand debut.[26][27][28] Promotional artwork, including posters, featured striking designs with the floating Vietnamese villa adrift amid ocean waves and a ominous shark silhouette lurking below, evoking tension and isolation; these were shared digitally via official film channels and limited print runs for theatrical markets. Publicity efforts centered on interviews with Silverstone, where she discussed the film's underlying themes of grief, particularly her character's loss of a child and the emotional toll of survival, to add depth beyond the horror premise and appeal to audiences interested in character-driven narratives.[29][30][31] In the UK, the film was promoted under the alternative title From Below starting in early 2022, a decision aimed at resonating with local audiences by using a more accessible English phrase that alluded to the underwater shark threat, avoiding the French-derived "Requin" which translates to "shark" but might confuse non-French speakers. This rebranding supported targeted digital and VOD platform tie-ins to broaden reach in international markets.[32][33]Distribution
The Requin premiered on video on demand in the United States on January 28, 2022, distributed by Saban Films, accompanied by a limited theatrical release in select markets.[34] Internationally, the film was released in the United Kingdom as From Below on February 21, 2022, by Altitude Film Distribution, with digital availability beginning earlier on February 7.[32][35] In other territories, including Spain (February 4, 2022, via internet), Poland (March 3, 2022, via internet), France, Australia, New Zealand, and Southeast Asia, it was distributed under its original title, typically with subtitles.[36][37] Home media options became available with the Blu-ray and DVD release on March 29, 2022, from Lionsgate.[38] By 2023, the film had expanded to streaming platforms including Tubi and Prime Video.[39][40] As of 2025, it continues to be accessible on free ad-supported services like Tubi, with no major re-releases reported.[39]Reception
Critical Response
The Requin received overwhelmingly negative reviews from critics, earning an 18% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 17 reviews.[1] The site's average rating is approximately 3.8/10. On IMDb, it holds a 2.6/10 rating from over 7,400 user votes.[2] Metacritic gives it a score of 31/100 based on 4 critic reviews, and a user score of 3.1/10 from 12 ratings, reflecting general unfavorable reception.[41] Some critics praised Alicia Silverstone's committed performance as Jaelyn, noting her ability to convey escalating panic and emotional depth amid the survival ordeal.[3] Reviews also commended the tense early storm sequences for building initial suspense through effective cinematography and direction, making the setup momentarily engaging.[4] RogerEbert.com awarded it 2 out of 4 stars, appreciating these modest strengths despite broader flaws.[3] The majority of critiques focused on the film's absurd plot premise—a beach villa detaching and floating to sea—deemed illogical and derivative of classics like Jaws, earning Alicia Silverstone a Razzie nomination for Worst Actress.[42] Common complaints included poor shark CGI, described as cheap and unconvincing, which undermined the late-arriving horror elements.[7] Underdeveloped characters and weak writing further hampered the narrative, with reviewers calling the dialogue on-the-nose and the tone tonally inconsistent, prioritizing suffering over thrills.[4][7] Variety noted the delayed shark action as a pacing issue, while others labeled it an abysmal entry in the shark genre.[4][7] Audience reception diverged even further negatively, with Rotten Tomatoes' verified audience score at 6% from over 250 ratings, suggesting disappointment over unmet genre expectations for shark horror despite the critical focus on dramatic elements.[1]Box Office Performance
The Requin achieved a worldwide box office gross of $130,493, with earnings derived primarily from limited theatrical releases in select international markets and U.S. VOD rentals.[2][43] The following table summarizes the reported theatrical grosses by territory:| Territory | Opening Gross | Total Gross |
|---|---|---|
| United Arab Emirates | $48,257 | $93,565 |
| Croatia | $10,466 | $26,270 |
| Serbia and Montenegro | $10,658 | $10,658 |