
Returning home late to Maple Street, a teen is knocked out by an intruder. But when she wakes the next day to her parents claiming she only fell down the stairs, she suspects they’re hiding a secret.

Returning home late to Maple Street, a teen is knocked out by an intruder. But when she wakes the next day to her parents claiming she only fell down the stairs, she suspects they’re hiding a secret.

Sometimes a movie comes out that is so bad, it actually turns out to be good. This sums up Sharknado perfectly. It’s wonderfully bad, over-the-top silly, and is more corny than a Western Nebraska farm field. It spills over with cheese, but (oddly enough) it’s that same cheese that makes the films fun to watch.

Wallace Shawn and Andre Gregory, apparently playing themselves, share their lives over the course of an evening meal at a restaurant. Gregory, a theater director from New York, is the more talkative of the pair. He relates to Shawn his tales of dropping out, traveling around the world, and experiencing the variety of ways people live, such as a monk who could balance his entire weight on his fingertips. Shawn listens avidly, but questions the value of Gregory’s seeming abandonment of the pragmatic aspects of life.

Grace, an aspiring model, is thrilled to have fashion photographer Hunter Kelly help launch her career. But when the photo shoot becomes a kidnapping showing Hunter’s true intentions to use Grace as his next “star” on a sexy website, Grace must find a way to escape before she becomes Hunter’s next model murder victim.