Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. News

Hostel director to take on giant, prehistoric shark movie Meg

Add as a preferred source on Google

The dinosaurs of Universal Pictures’ Jurassic World are grabbing all the attention (and the records) right now, but Warner Bros. Pictures is hoping to make its own monster-fueled blockbuster with giant prehistoric sharks.

After nearly 20 years in development limbo, a big-screen adaptation of Steve Alten’s 1997 novel Meg is not only moving forward, but may have landed Cabin Fever and Hostel director Eli Roth to bring the story from page to screen. Variety reports that Roth is in talks to direct the film, which follows the story of a man hunting one of the prehistoric period’s most deadly predators.

Recommended Videos

Alten’s novel follows deep-sea diver Jonas Taylor, the only survivor of an exploratory mission to the Mariana Trench that was interrupted by the attack of a Megalodon, a relative of the Great White Shark that was believed to be extinct and grew up to 60 feet long. Dismissed by the scientific community, Taylor spends years attempting to prove that such a creature could still exist at the greatest depths of the ocean, and eventually learns how right he was when he joins a former colleague on another mission to the famous trench.

Given that the Megalodon is often touted to have been able to tear apart a Tyrannosaurus Rex in seconds, Warner is likely banking on this giant-monster movie capitalizing on the current wave of dinosaur-dominated fascination with the genre.

If Meg does indeed find its way to the screen, though, it will have taken a long and winding road to get there. Alten’s book was optioned almost immediately after publication in 1997, and was initially set up at Walt Disney Pictures for a big-screen adaptation. However, the failure of 1999’s similarly shark-fueled thriller Deep Blue Sea gave the studio second thoughts about investing in Meg, and the project stalled until Warner acquired the rights to it.

The most recent writer to draft a script for the adaptation is Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life screenwriter Dean Georgaris, whose screenplay was received well by the studio and will likely be the foundation for the big-screen version of Meg.

There’s no word yet on when the studio expects to release the film.

Rick Marshall
Former Contributing Editor, Entertainment
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
Comcast’s breakup is the bluntest warning yet that the cable bundle is losing its grip
Peacock and Xfinity customers should see stability now as NBCUniversal's split rewires the logic behind future streaming perks.
Logo, Text

Comcast's breakup sounds like an alarm bell for Peacock, Xfinity, and the monthly internet bill. At the service level, the answer is calmer. Current customers shouldn't expect subscriptions, billing, or broadband plans to change while the company works through the split.

NBC News reports that Comcast plans to spin NBCUniversal and Sky into a separate public company, moving Peacock, Universal, NBC, Telemundo, Bravo, theme parks, and Sky away from the broadband and wireless business. The separation is expected to take about a year.

Read more
The painfully loud streaming ads interrupting your show are finally getting toned down
California bans streaming platforms from running ads louder than the shows they interrupt.
A hand holding the Amazon Fire TV remote in front of the Amazon Fire TV Omni Mini-LED TV.

If you have ever scrambled for the remote because a commercial is suddenly blasting twice as loud as the show you were watching, relief is on the way.

Starting July 1, California is making it illegal for streaming platforms to run ads louder than the content they interrupt. Governor Gavin Newsom signed the bill, known as SB 576, back in October 2025, and it finally takes effect this week.

Read more
3 underrated Apple TV shows you should watch this weekend (June 26-28)
3 critically loved Apple TV+ shows that somehow still fly under the radar.
the-big-prize-door-underrated-tv-show-apple-tv

Apple TV makes excellent shows that somehow never break into the mainstream conversation the way Severance or Ted Lasso did. These three picks all share that frustrating pattern, stacked with critical praise, loved by the people who found them, and still criminally underwatched.

Between them, you get a mystery comedy, a sweeping historical drama, and a sharp workplace sitcom, which is proof that Apple's range goes way beyond its biggest hits. If you're looking for something genuinely great that flew under your radar, start here.

Read more