Thrash Review: When every escape leads to more danger
Thrash is a survival thriller with elements of horror and disaster.
The film combines a powerful Category 5 hurricane with deadly shark attacks, creating a story where nature itself becomes the biggest threat.
Set in the coastal town of Annieville, the film follows several groups of people whose lives become connected as floodwaters sweep through the streets and hungry sharks invade the town. Released on Netflix, the film focuses on survival, courage and the difficult choices people make when there is nowhere safe to run.
A town trapped between floodwaters and sharks
The story begins as residents prepare for a massive hurricane expected to hit Annieville. While many people manage to leave, several are left behind for different reasons.
Dakota, a teenager struggling with severe anxiety after losing her mother, cannot bring herself to leave home. At the same time, Lisa, who is heavily pregnant, is caught in town before she can evacuate. Elsewhere, foster siblings Ron, Dee and Will are forced to remain with foster parents who are more concerned about themselves than the children’s safety.

As the hurricane makes landfall, streets disappear beneath rising water. The flooding soon attracts sharks, turning homes, roads and vehicles into dangerous traps. What begins as a natural disaster quickly becomes a desperate fight to stay alive.
Different stories come together
One of the film’s strengths is the way it follows several groups of survivors at once. Dakota slowly finds the courage to face her fears while trying to help Lisa, whose pregnancy becomes more complicated as the flood worsens.
Meanwhile, Ron, Dee and Will must protect one another while escaping both the sharks outside and the abuse they have experienced at home. Their journey adds an emotional side to the film, showing that survival is not only about escaping danger but also about standing together when everything falls apart.
A marine biologist also works to understand why so many sharks have entered the flooded town, hoping that knowledge can help save lives before it is too late.
Action takes centre stage

Thrash rarely slows down once the storm arrives. Flooded streets, collapsing buildings and sudden shark attacks keep the pace moving throughout its 86-minute running time. The visual effects create convincing flood scenes, while several shark encounters are tense enough to keep viewers watching.
However, some scenes ask the audience to overlook unrealistic moments. Certain decisions made by the characters may leave viewers questioning why they chose the more dangerous option. Critics have also noted that although the film delivers action, some of the emotional moments and character development are limited.
Thrash is an easy film to follow, even for viewers who simply want an evening of survival action without expecting a complex story. The combination of a violent hurricane and shark attacks gives the film an unusual setting that keeps the danger constant from beginning to end.
Although it may not offer many surprises or deep character development, it succeeds in presenting a straightforward survival story where ordinary people are forced to overcome fear in extraordinary circumstances.
Those who enjoy disaster films mixed with creature horror are likely to find enough action to keep them entertained, while viewers looking for a more emotional or realistic thriller may feel the story misses opportunities to explore its characters in greater depth.