Current:Home > NewsMeet the megalodon: What you need to know about the shark star of 'Meg 2: The Trench' -Blueprint Wealth Network
Meet the megalodon: What you need to know about the shark star of 'Meg 2: The Trench'
View
Date:2025-04-15 21:06:42
Since Steven Spielberg's “Jaws” in 1975, sharks have boasted a serious pop culture bite. But when it comes to dealing with a trendier toothy menace ... well, we’re going to need a bigger boat.
Great whites have had a good run at the movies for decades, starring in cinematic adventures both admirable (“The Shallows”) and abhorrent (“Shark Exorcist,” anyone?), so it’s time for some fresh meat. “The Meg” films – including the new sequel “Meg 2: The Trench” (in theaters Friday) – and the recent sea thriller “The Black Demon” put the spotlight on the megalodon, a prehistoric shark species that measured 50 to 60 feet long and weighed around 50 tons. That’s more than three times the size of a modern great white.
The appeal comes down to fear factor: “Let's say you're in a boat and a 15-foot great white swims by and then a 60-foot megalodon swims by. Which one's going to scare you more?” asks Steve Alten, whose 1997 book “Meg: A Novel of Deep Terror” was the basis for the “Meg” film franchise. “Bigger is better, especially when bigger can eat you whole as opposed to taking bites out of you.”
Here’s what you need to know about the fin-tastically fishy predator trying to eat Jason Statham on the big screen:
‘Meg 2’ triples the chomp for star Jason Statham
In the first “Meg,” rescue diver Jonas Taylor (Statham) and scientists at an underwater research facility fight for survival when the largest shark to have ever lived emerges from a deep section of the Mariana Trench and wreaks havoc on a crowded beach.
The sequel, directed by Ben Wheatley (“Kill List”), ratchets up the danger when Jonas and Co. have to deal with not one but three megalodons that hunt in a pack, plus other ginormous sea creatures from the trench.
"As a shark movie fan, you are already humble because of 'Jaws.' 'Jaws' is not just the best shark film, it's the best film," says Wheatley, who got a kick out of doing a "poppy and fun" movie. "I'd been on a mission for years of trying to make a movie that wasn't really cynical and depressing."
Megalodons co-existed with great whites, not dinosaurs
The “Meg 2” trailer features a meg chewing on a T. rex, but in reality, dinos went extinct 65 million years ago and the meg came to be 23 million to 26 million years ago. Unlike other animals where paleontologists can study whole skeletons and trackways, megalodon has been difficult because sharks don't have bones (their skeletons are primarily cartilage) and “all we had was their teeth,” says Sora Kim, an associate professor of paleoecology at the University of California, Merced. She uses stable isotope analysis to study the chemistry of teeth, muscle tissue and blood to compare and contrast modern and fossil animals.
Kim says megalodons lived in an ocean world with “a lot more diversity of marine mammals” – including whales, toothed and untoothed – plus great white sharks, and researchers have found “pretty shocking” evidence that some megalodons swam high up on the food chain while others were fairly low. “There was a lot of variation in meg diet, which is similar to white sharks. In white sharks, there is evidence of specialists as picky eaters and generalists that are opportunists.”
'Jaws' vs 'The Meg':A definitive ranking of the best shark movies
Unfortunately, size did matter for the megalodon
One major reason why the meg went extinct around 3 million years ago: It was just too darn big. While being an apex predator might sound good, “it's really hard to keep up with that level of (food) consumption,” says Kim, who was part of a recent study that determined megalodons, like modern great whites, were endothermic creatures. “If they’re warm-blooded, then they even need more food, more calories to keep up that metabolic rate.”
The physiological issues were compounded by ecological ones. The megalodons died out at “a time when ocean conditions were changing with climate change affecting prey distribution and availability,” Kim adds.
"The story of them is really sad, isn't it? It would make for quite the depressing film," Wheatley says. But "Meg 2" leans into "a lot of movie science, so you can't take it too seriously. It's not a National Geographic lesson."
Nobody should be worried about a megalodon attack
Alten gets asked a lot if megalodons might still exist somewhere and while he won’t totally disqualify the idea (“Only 5% of our oceans have been explored, less than 1% of the deep, so we have no idea what's down there”), scientists are pretty sure they're extinct.
Were they to exist, Statham and the rest of us would probably be OK. Kim thinks they’d exhibit similar behavior to a really large Orca.
“Just because something has huge teeth doesn't necessarily make it as intense and scary as what's been portrayed in Hollywood,” she says. “Humans have put these personalities on sharks, but in reality, they're just doing their thing.”
But no matter the size, sharks deserve our respect
Nearly 50 years after “Jaws” scared people off the beach, the public still has a massive interest in sharks – “Shark Week” is a thing for a reason. But in recent years, there’s been more of an outcry from activists fighting for their conservation. “Sharks are not the enemy,” says Alten, who just started writing his final “Meg” novel. “Killing millions of them is hurting ourselves. We're the problem, not the sharks.”
The fact that an extinct shark is at the heart of his movie "allows me to sleep at night," Wheatley says with a laugh. "No one's going to be going out murdering a load of megalodons because of our film, that's for sure. We can get back into the psychology of these big monster movies and why people like them."
And Kim feels that a fictional action adventure where a megalodon fights a Hollywood action hero can be a net positive.
“It's great that they’re bringing an animal and ecology into people's lives, even though it's like totally not realistic," she says. "Maybe we can use this to help get people excited for sharks and science.”
'Jaws' vs 'The Meg':A definitive ranking of the best shark movies to celebrate Shark Week
veryGood! (188)
Related
- Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
- How many points did Caitlin Clark score last night? What she did in first home game for Fever
- A former OpenAI leader says safety has ‘taken a backseat to shiny products’ at the AI company
- Scottie Scheffler, from the course to jail and back: what to know about his PGA Championship arrest
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Dabney Coleman, actor who specialized in curmudgeons, dies at 92
- FIFA orders legal review of Palestinian call to suspend Israel from competitions
- 70 years on, Topeka's first Black female superintendent seeks to further the legacy of Brown v. Board of Education
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- 5 Israeli soldiers killed in Gaza by their own army's tank fire
Ranking
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Michigan park officials raise alarm about potential alligator sighting: 'Be aware'
- Scottie Scheffler on his arrest at PGA Championship: 'I was in shock.' He wasn't alone
- The stuff that Coppola’s dreams are made of: The director on building ‘Megalopolis’
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Flash floods due to unusually heavy seasonal rains kill at least 50 people in western Afghanistan
- New app allows you to send text, audio and video messages to loved ones after you die
- What Louisville police claim happened with Scottie Scheffler: Read arrest report details
Recommendation
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Radar detects long-lost river in Egypt, possibly solving ancient pyramid mystery
Georgia’s prime minister joins tens of thousands in a march to promote ‘family purity’
What to do this weekend: Watch 'IF,' stream 'Bridgerton,' listen to new Billie Eilish
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Spain claims its biggest-ever seizure of crystal meth, says Mexico's Sinaloa Cartel was trying to sell drugs in Europe
You'll Love Benny Blanco's Elaborate Date Night for Selena Gomez Like a Love Song
Stockholm secret songs: Taylor Swift to perform three acoustic sets for Eras Tour