

But the real villains are the local politicians who made the decision to dump a whole lot of steroid-laced chicken poo into the Chesapeake Bay. It might seem like the villain in The Bay are the isopods infecting the fish and ultimately the human population. If that’s true, you can’t tell me mermaids aren’t real. And according to Whitney, there are GIANT isopods at the bottom of the ocean. Our summer vacations are going to be spent on dry land now, thank you very much. The one scene in the movie uses an ACTUAL isopod, which upset us greatly. But when Levinson realized someone had already been there, done that, he thought, “Let me try this found-footage movie-making on for size.” “What they haven’t done is get into the brackish water of the Chesapeake Bay.” Ironically, The Bay started out as a documentary. “They’re from the Pacific, and they are now in the Atlantic,” he told the outlet. ‘The Bay’ is a commentary on local politicsĪs our friend Barry Levinson once explained to Yahoo, most of The Bay is true. Directed by Barry Levinson, this 2012 found-footage flick forces audiences to look at the extreme level of damage the Chesapeake Bay has suffered in recent years. We interrupt Whitney’s movie monster series to bring you another new episode of Lights Camera No! This week, we’re talking about the all-too-real movie The Bay.
