Sara (Sara Paxton) has graciously invited her college friends Nick (Dustin Milligan), Beth (Katharine McPhee), Blake (Chris Zylka), Maya (Alyssa Diaz), Gordon (Joel David Moore), and Malik (Sinqua Walls) back to her family’s home in the middle of a lake in Louisiana bayou country. It’s time for drinking, fornicating, and of course… shark attacks. That’s right, kids. Its shark time, and they’re hungry for college-age morons! Unfortunately, Shark Night is PG-13 as well as 3D, so it even manages to fail as a B-movie. It’s like they took an R-rated movie, cut out all the fun stuff, and then pushed the SyFy Channel cut into theaters (while saving all the excised nudity and entrails for the Director’s Cut home video version). Honestly, I expected better of David Ellis. It seems weird to expect “better” from the guy that directed a couple of Final Destinations and Snakes on a Plane, but here we are. Say what you want to about the relative merits of those flicks, they know what they are and they latch onto the full stupidity of that, and have some fun in the process. I can get behind that. I can’t get behind a poorly sanitized flick like this. As for the actors, well… none of them were really stand-outs, and none of them were really dragging the movie down, either. Sara Paxton is cute, American Idol’s Katharine McPhee looks great in a bikini, and that’s about all you can say for them. Donal Logue is mostly wasted as Sheriff Sabin. They’re all very pretty people or interesting-looking character actors who will no doubt enjoy this paycheck and may very well go on to other things. The script, from Jesse Studenberg and Will Hayes, is pretty standard stuff, albeit a little short on the laughs. It’s predictable, and a little light on the shark-killing action, too. I did like the reveal for the reason behind why there are sharks in the lake, but that’s about it. It’s unfortunate that Incentive Filmed Entertainment didn’t have the guts you need to really do a movie about shark attacks right. Rather than making a shark movie with teeth, they settled for a shark movie with gums, and that really bites. US correspondent Ron Hogan is a fan of movies where sharks attack people, so Shark Night 3D was the biggest disappointment for him since Jaws 4: The Quest for Peace. Find more by Ron at his blog, Subtle Bluntness, and daily at Shaktronics and PopFi.