Popularity: 7 (history)
| Director: | Alexandre Aja |
|---|---|
| Writer: | Shawn Rasmussen, Michael Rasmussen |
| Staring: |
| When a huge hurricane hits her hometown in Florida, Haley ignores evacuation orders to look for her father. After finding him badly wounded, both are trapped by the flood. With virtually no time to escape the storm, they discover that rising water levels are the least of their problems. | |
| Release Date: | Jul 10, 2019 |
|---|---|
| Director: | Alexandre Aja |
| Writer: | Shawn Rasmussen, Michael Rasmussen |
| Genres: | Action, Horror, Thriller |
| Keywords | florida, hurricane, alligator, animal attack, creature, flood, animal horror, crawlspace, father daughter relationship |
| Production Companies | Paramount Pictures, Fire Axe Pictures, Raimi Productions, Serbia Creates Film |
| Box Office |
Revenue: $91,500,000
Budget: $13,500,000 |
| Updates |
Updated: Oct 23, 2025 Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
| Name | Character |
|---|---|
| Kaya Scodelario | Haley |
| Barry Pepper | Dave |
| Morfydd Clark | Beth |
| Ross Anderson | Wayne |
| Jose Palma | Pete |
| George Somner | Marv |
| Anson Boon | Stan |
| Ami Metcalf | Lee |
| Tina Pribićević | Young Haley |
| Srna Vasiljević | Louie |
| Colin McFarlane | Governor |
| Annamaria Serda | Emma |
| Savannah Steyn | Lisa |
| Cso-Cso | Sugar |
| Name | Job |
|---|---|
| Maxime Alexandre | Director of Photography |
| Joe Barnett | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
| Cyril Kuhnholtz | Key Grip |
| Joe Cappelletti | ADR Voice Casting |
| Shawn Rasmussen | Writer |
| Michael Rasmussen | Writer |
| Hector C. Gika | Sound Effects Editor |
| Dawn Fintor | Foley Artist |
| David Jobe | Foley Mixer |
| Grégory Levasseur | Second Unit Director |
| Timothy Paul Taylor | Unit Manager |
| Alan Gilmore | Production Design |
| Dragan Kaplarević | Art Direction |
| Lucy Eyre | Set Decoration |
| Elliot Greenberg | Editor |
| Max Aruj | Original Music Composer |
| Steffen Thum | Original Music Composer |
| Ketan Waikar | Art Direction |
| Andy Brierley | Casting |
| Justin Bursch | Unit Production Manager |
| Christopher Landry | First Assistant Director |
| Maria Nita | Second Assistant Director |
| Slaviša Ivanović | Stunt Coordinator |
| Marina Lešić | Script Supervisor |
| Gareth Wingrove | Special Effects Supervisor |
| Tina Subić | Makeup Department Head |
| Jovana Jelaca | Hairstylist |
| Victor Ray Ennis | Supervising Sound Editor |
| Paul Hackner | Sound Designer, Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
| Sergej Radović | Still Photographer |
| Mikša Anđelić | Second Unit Director of Photography |
| Srđan Nedeljković | Assistant Art Director |
| Joshua Min | Concept Artist |
| Radoslav Mihajlović | Construction Coordinator |
| Uroš Stojanović | Graphic Designer |
| Maja Vasic | Property Master |
| Stefan Aleksic | Set Designer |
| Dušan Demić | Set Designer |
| Nevena Dilparić | Set Designer |
| Igor Kandic | Set Designer |
| Marko Mirković | Set Designer |
| Branislav 'Bane' Stevanović | Set Designer |
| Dušan Pešić | Set Dresser |
| Pierre Michaud | Chief Lighting Technician |
| Ivan Cvetojević | Electrician |
| Vladimir Milosavljević | Electrician |
| Vojislav Stanisic | Electrician |
| Milos Vucenovic | Electrician |
| Marko Leković | Key Grip |
| Marko Gligorijevic | Underwater Camera, "C" Camera Operator |
| Ian Filipovic | Video Assist Operator |
| Goran Micovic | Video Assist Operator |
| Stefan Stojanovic | Video Assist Operator |
| Tijana Saletovic | Makeup Artist |
| Jasmina Banović | Assistant Hairstylist |
| Maja Ilić | Assistant Hairstylist |
| Seth Mason | Casting Associate |
| Dragana Mladenovic | Assistant Costume Designer |
| Mira Radakovic | Seamstress |
| Jared Arkulary | Digital Intermediate Producer |
| Dustin Chow | First Assistant Editor |
| Andrijana Tomka | Production Coordinator |
| Ian Creed | Marine Coordinator |
| Danijela Đokanović | Production Accountant |
| Nicholas Cabana | Animation Supervisor |
| Moïse Charest | CG Artist |
| Rudy Langoux | CG Artist |
| Stéphane Rioux | Compositing Supervisor |
| Julie Rotharmel | Visual Effects Coordinator |
| Jade Ghali-Lachapelle | Visual Effects Coordinator |
| Mike Soppit | Visual Effects Editor |
| Sean Findley | Visual Effects Producer |
| Nairye Apelian | Visual Effects Producer |
| Marjolaine Tremblay | Visual Effects Producer |
| Matthieu Labbe | Visual Effects Production Assistant |
| Marie-Joëlle Clément | Visual Effects Production Manager |
| Heather Martini | Visual Effects Production Manager |
| Robert Bock | Visual Effects Supervisor |
| Jose Marra | Visual Effects Supervisor |
| Keith Kolder | Visual Effects Supervisor |
| Thomas Montminy Brodeur | Visual Effects Supervisor |
| Tamara Pešić | Location Manager |
| Berto | "A" Camera Operator |
| Marko Mladenović | "B" Camera Operator |
| Anđelija Vlaisavljević | Line Producer |
| Sandra Djurickovic | Production Supervisor |
| Aleksandar Tadić | Unit Production Manager |
| Irena Todorovic | Stunts |
| Marko Joksimović | Stunts |
| Jovan Koricanac | Stunts |
| Slobodan Vlajic | Stunts |
| Nebojša Simić | Stunts |
| Vedran Brkic | Stunts |
| Milica Dordevic | Stunts |
| Sasa Sagradzija | Stunts |
| Nemanja Latincic | Stunts |
| Ivan Blagojevic | Stunts |
| Srđan 'Rale' Jovanović | Stunts |
| Branko Jekovic | Stunts |
| Emilija Rakic | Stunts |
| Nenad Todorović | Stunts |
| Alexandra Andjan | Stunts |
| Marko Vasiljević | Stunts |
| Miroslav Vučković | Stunts |
| Ivan Djordjevic | Stunts |
| Luka Todorović | Stunts |
| Natalija Marin | Stunt Double |
| Sara Pavlović | Stunts |
| Marie-Sophie Daniel | First Assistant "A" Camera |
| Branislav Stojanović | First Assistant "A" Camera |
| Nemanja Petković | First Assistant "B" Camera |
| Uros Lukic | Second Assistant "A" Camera |
| Miloš Jovanović | Second Assistant "B" Camera |
| Milana Milunović | Second Assistant Director |
| Novica Jankov | Production Sound Mixer |
| Julien Morteveille | Concept Artist |
| Andrea Dietrich | Storyboard Artist |
| Zoran Prodanović | Boom Operator |
| Ivana Rajnvajn | Costumer |
| Marija Harz | Costumer |
| Dragana Manislavić | Assistant Property Master |
| Jelena Radojevic | Production Secretary |
| Ana Biskupljanin | Production Coordinator |
| Sara Marinković | Local Casting |
| Nemanja Milosavljevic | Background Casting Director |
| Ana Gobeljić | Production Runner |
| Mirna Zaric | Payroll Accountant |
| Kathy Donno | First Assistant Accountant |
| Jamey Scott | Sound Effects Editor |
| Russell Topal | Sound Effects Editor |
| Bernard Weiser | Dialogue Editor |
| David Grant | Dialogue Editor |
| Susan Dudeck | Dialogue Editor |
| Shane Bruce | Foley Artist |
| John Guentner | Foley Mixer |
| Michael Miller | ADR Mixer |
| Mike Lerma | ADR Recordist |
| Mikael Sandgren | Music Editor |
| Nathaniel Hill | Music Editor |
| Nicholas Fitzgerald | Music Editor |
| Shane Rutherfoord-Jones | Orchestrator |
| Slavko Novaković | Transportation Coordinator |
| Stefan Matić | Transportation Captain |
| Laura Szabó | Animal Wrangler |
| Árpád Halász | Animal Wrangler |
| Queenie Li | Music Coordinator |
| Momirka Bailović | Costume Design |
| Izaroze Néron-Gauthier | Visual Effects Coordinator |
| Camille Deguire | Visual Effects Coordinator |
| Oliver Petrovic | Art Department Coordinator, Set Decorating Coordinator |
| Nataša Krstić | Special Effects Makeup Artist |
| Shane Shisheboran | Special Effects Makeup Artist |
| Mina Lazarević | Assistant Set Decoration |
| Sonja Nenadić | Assistant Set Decoration |
| Nenad Grcic | Carpenter |
| Ivan Pavlekovic | Carpenter |
| Uros Milovanovic Spezik | Carpenter |
| Jovan Uhrin | Carpenter |
| Branko Cvijić | Prop Maker |
| Marko Milošević | Props |
| Vladimir Milanovic | Set Decoration Buyer |
| Paul Lynch | ADR Recordist |
| Seva Solntsev | ADR Recordist |
| Lazar Perovic | Boom Operator |
| Dejan Kragulj | Boom Operator |
| Bojan Lung | Sound Mixer |
| Vladimir Stosic | Sound Mixer |
| Zamal M'Barek | Special Effects Supervisor |
| Muhamed M'Barek | Special Effects Supervisor |
| Anton Brand | Animation Technical Director |
| Marilyn Marcotte | Animation |
| Hala El Morajji | Compositing Artist, Rotoscoping Artist |
| Ignacio La Rosa | Compositing Supervisor |
| Karen Arredondo Lopez | Digital Compositor |
| Marie-Pier Couture-Alain | Digital Compositor |
| Jean-Michel Cristofaro | Digital Compositor |
| Victor Manuel Enríquez Díaz | Digital Compositor |
| Michelangelo Frisoni | Digital Compositor |
| Sandro Kath | Digital Compositor |
| Heike Kluger | Digital Compositor |
| Andréanne Lamoureux | Digital Compositor |
| Maxime Laroche | Digital Compositor |
| Marc-Antoine Thibault | Digital Compositor |
| Alexandra Torelli | Digital Compositor |
| Jennyfer Pellerin | Roto Supervisor, Digital Compositor |
| Keanan Ferrand | Digital Compositor |
| Michel Frenette | Digital Compositor |
| Steven Quinones-Colon | VFX Lighting Artist |
| Samantha Fosado | VFX Lighting Artist |
| Mai-Anh Tran | Matte Painter |
| Philip Harris-Genois | Modeling |
| Maxime Philippon | Modeling |
| Vincent Vezina | Modeling |
| Dominic Piché | Modelling Supervisor |
| Christian Camacho | Rotoscoping Artist |
| Jeanne Esquilat | Rotoscoping Artist |
| Alexandre Giguère | Rotoscoping Artist |
| Opale Vezina | Rotoscoping Artist |
| Tahira Ali | VFX Artist |
| Austin Baerg | VFX Artist |
| Andrzej Bandurski | VFX Artist |
| Julien Chiari | VFX Artist |
| Arnaud Malherbe | VFX Artist |
| Stephen Siemens | VFX Artist |
| Jacquelyn Racine | Visual Effects Coordinator |
| Camille Michaud | Visual Effects Production Assistant |
| Marc-Antoine Lamy | Visual Effects Production Assistant |
| Fernando Torres Idrovo | Visual Effects Supervisor |
| Alexsandra Orlovic | Script Supervisor |
| Aaron Becker | Main Title Designer |
| Alphonse Swinehart | Main Title Designer |
| Milos Cojcic | Production Assistant |
| Danilo Nikolić | Production Assistant |
| Milos Vidaković | Assistant Chief Lighting Technician |
| Josh Adams | BTS Videographer |
| Veljko Vukasovic | Digital Imaging Technician |
| Filip Orlandić | Digital Imaging Technician |
| Mike Weber | Digital Imaging Technician |
| Emir Bihorac | Grip |
| Ivan Leković | Grip |
| Petar Pavlović | Grip |
| Nedic Veljko | Grip |
| Vojislav Dizdarevic | Extras Casting Coordinator |
| Isidora Veselinović | Casting Assistant |
| Alexandre Aja | Director |
| Lorne Balfe | Executive Music Producer |
| David Boucher | Special Effects Technician |
| Adrien Morot | Makeup Effects Designer |
| Name | Title |
|---|---|
| Sam Raimi | Producer |
| Craig J. Flores | Producer |
| Grégory Levasseur | Executive Producer |
| Justin Bursch | Executive Producer |
| Lauren Selig | Executive Producer |
| Alexandre Aja | Producer |
| Organization | Category | Person |
|---|
Popularity History
| Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 4 | 38 | 68 | 28 |
| 2024 | 5 | 42 | 77 | 22 |
| 2024 | 6 | 37 | 97 | 21 |
| 2024 | 7 | 35 | 56 | 23 |
| 2024 | 8 | 43 | 76 | 22 |
| 2024 | 9 | 28 | 38 | 21 |
| 2024 | 10 | 35 | 62 | 19 |
| 2024 | 11 | 35 | 80 | 23 |
| 2024 | 12 | 32 | 63 | 19 |
| 2025 | 1 | 38 | 62 | 27 |
| 2025 | 2 | 28 | 48 | 5 |
| 2025 | 3 | 11 | 35 | 2 |
| 2025 | 4 | 6 | 10 | 4 |
| 2025 | 5 | 5 | 9 | 4 |
| 2025 | 6 | 6 | 8 | 4 |
| 2025 | 7 | 5 | 6 | 3 |
| 2025 | 8 | 4 | 6 | 3 |
| 2025 | 9 | 5 | 6 | 4 |
| 2025 | 10 | 5 | 7 | 3 |
Trending Position
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 10 | 489 | 575 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 9 | 547 | 797 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 8 | 699 | 885 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 7 | 726 | 884 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 6 | 781 | 910 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 5 | 995 | 995 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 4 | 607 | 731 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 3 | 936 | 936 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 2 | 274 | 747 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 1 | 671 | 781 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 12 | 968 | 968 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 11 | 588 | 650 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 10 | 788 | 875 |
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 8 | 398 | 584 |
If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog :) 2018 was a disappointing year for me. A lot of letdowns regarding my most anticipated movies, and not enough surprises throughout the year. 2019, on the other hand, has been quite interesting. Most blockbusters have resonated ... with me, and they’ve been my favorite films to watch so far (Avengers: Endgame, John Wick: Chapter 3 - Parabellum, Us, Glass). Additionally, original low-budget flicks have also caught my eye, and I’ve been enjoying them as well, even if they’re no masterpieces (Greta, Long Shot). Although, I had some bad experiences as well (Dark Phoenix, Hellboy, Godzilla: King of the Monsters). Crawl, which I honestly expected just to be a cliche-filled silly horror movie, joins this last group, and it’s on par with Long Shot as the best surprise of 2019, until now. First of all, this is not a typical horror film, at least having in mind the last few examples of the genre. People might go in expecting something along the lines of Annabelle Comes Home, but with alligators, so I might as well moderate those thoughts. I wouldn’t even place it in that genre, even though disaster-horror isn’t exactly a bad description. It’s definitely a suspense movie, almost like a survival-thriller. Haley and Dave have to fight for their lives in a race against both a hurricane and fatal predators, so I wouldn’t generally put this in the horror genre. Moving on … I love this type of films, you know that. Suspenseful, claustrophobic sequences, straightforward plot, and set in (mostly) just one location. You might think that since it’s only one place to shoot and it’s such a simple concept, it’s easier overall, but it couldn’t be more distant from the truth. With high-budget, multiple-location movies, directors and screenwriters can hide their technical flaws with tremendous VFX or huge set pieces. In one location, especially such a small one like a modest house, there’s no hiding. If you want to deliver an entertaining and captivating story, you have to write an enthralling screenplay. If you want to provide scary and efficient jump scare scenes, you need to show some creativity and prove you’re a talented filmmaker. Alexandre Aja, who doesn’t exactly has a remarkable filmography, showcases that even with such a simplistic and short idea, it’s possible to be as or more fun than a massive blockbuster. Less than 20 minutes into the film, and we’re on. There’s enough backstory and characterization of the main protagonist for the audience to not only care about Haley but understand what skills she has that will help her survive what comes next. I love small details like zooming in on her locking a door, closing a window, moving a piece of furniture … Every shot has meaning because it will affect the plot later on. Aja is not shooting something “just because”, and that’s a skill that a lot of directors struggle to have nowadays since they feel that the runtime needs to be close to the two-hour mark. After so many dumb, cliche, and horribly performed jump scare sequences in previous horror flicks from this year, I finally got to watch a movie where the director knows how to truly scare people, and make them jump out of their chairs. There are no loud soundtrack noises to make you screech. There are no demons or monsters in front of the screen, screaming like crazy. I was at the edge of my seat for more than a couple of times, and I genuinely got scared on some particular moments, where the surprise factor (Aja doesn’t follow the cheap timings of most horror scenes) and the creativity behind the camera were top notch. Obviously, the VFX and overall production design aren’t mind-blowing. The alligators look pretty real, and that was the main goal, so mission accomplished. Also, being Rated-R helps the film to deliver great alligator attacks with tons of blood, and the injuries our characters have to deal with are pretty gnarly and disgusting (that’s a compliment). Filming in water is extremely hard, especially in such a confined space. However, Aja and his crew were able to produce a movie where you can understand everything that’s going on for the entire runtime. Kaya Scodelario and Barry Pepper deliver great performances and show amazing chemistry. Their characters have enough development, even if they don’t have that imaginative scripts. Crawl is one of those films where I can’t point out a preeminent issue with it because it’s good at every aspect. I mean, sure, there are a couple of rare moments of extreme survival, where we might think “he/she should be dead”, but it’s such a fun and entertaining time at the theater that we can let go of one or two over-the-top scenes. It’s not like The Meg, where every single moment is unrealistic as hell. The success of the fictional part of a fiction movie depends on its realistic foundation and limits. If these aren’t well-established, then the film will be all over the place, and its viewers won’t know what to believe or not. All in all, Crawl is one of 2019’s best surprises, and I definitely recommend to see it in theaters. With compelling leads and a simple concept, Alexandre Aja delivers an entertaining, suspenseful, claustrophobic, and technically creative movie. Finally, someone who knows how to handle a camera, and provide genuinely scary jump scare sequences. Hopefully, this can catapult Kaya Scodelario to grab a bigger role on a more impactful film. I can’t point out any “flaws”, it’s simply a “good movie”. With such a low-budget, give a chance to this one, and watch it instead of a massive blockbuster that will probably leave you disappointed with the numerous cliches and the extreme focus on silly action or huge set pieces as a replacement for a good story. Good job, Paramount! Rating: B+
_Crawl_ didn't changing my life or anything, but it is far and a way the best creature feature I have seen in years. Kaya Scodelario still hasn't quite got the hang of an American accent, and the very first time we see a gator it does nooot look good, but I still am very happy with what was achieved ... here. _Final rating:★★★½ - I really liked it. Would strongly recommend you give it your time._
Crawl is a medium budget creature horror film that’s more Bait than Jaws – but with the added back drop of a massive hurricane. As if our characters weren’t already in enough danger. Is Crawl a “so bad its good” movie, or a “so bad you should avoid it” movie? Read on to find out. Set in Florid ... a during a category 5 hurricane, Crawl tells the story of Haley and her father Dave, played by Barry Pepper. After receiving a frantic phone call from her sister, Haley goes on the hunt to find her father who is trapped in their old house as the hurricane approaches. Unbeknownst to Haley, the overflow drain has been breached by Alligators, and their about to make Haley’s rescue mission a whole lot more difficult. And if the gators don’t get Haley and her dad, the rising hurricane waters will. I don’t know much about Alligators or Hurricanes, but I do like to think I know something about logic. And that is something that is sorely lacking in most characters in this film. Even the dog. A series of unfortunate events conspire to make the rescue almost a futile effort. And the missing logic from our characters only add to the frustration to us, as the viewer. Where should I start? First and foremost, I want to understand why neither Haley or Dave ever tried to smash out the weak looking brick work patterns on the basement wall and then crawl out of the new hole to safety? It doesn’t look like the bricks would need much in the way of a good whack to break open – and considering there were tools in the basement, including the shovel that Dave uses later on to half-decapitate a gator, this bit makes no sense to me. Now I realise two things – 1 is that the open brick patterns serves a purpose to flood the basement – but in reality it’s the first thing anyone would think to smash open. And 2 – if they did do that, then I realise we’d have a short film. But then the writers could have had more fun for the next hour putting Haley and Dave in more incredible and hard to survive scenarios. So there’s a missed opportunity. The gators that are stuck into basement with Haley and Dave also don’t seem to be those of the killing variety – its either that or the skin of our two characters is so tough that these gators just can’t bite through them. I’m not gator expert, but I am pretty sure if one gets his whole mouth on your arm – he is probably going to bite your whole arm off, and not just leave a minor bite mark. Funny thing is we know these two gators are indeed killers, as one of them does eat the police man who comes to rescue them. Also following up on the theme of me not being an expert on gators – one thing has me puzzled. Do gators kill for sport, or because they’re hungry? I can’t work that out based on this movie. And in something that really shocked me for an American movie – it took over an hour until we saw the first gun. That has to be some kind of record for an American horror thriller movie? But its not all bad – because there are quite a few laugh out loud moments in this movie to lighten up the mood. I really liked the way Haley traps one of the gators in the shower. That’s both clever and utterly ridiculous – that a flimsy piece of shower glass could be strong enough to hold back a gator that wants to kill. I also liked the nod to the Purge movies when the siren started just as the eye of the storm was passing through. It almost felt like a both a warning to all humans, and a sign to all gators that they could begin their hunt. If you go into this movie realising that its not meant to be taken seriously, then its an enjoyable ride that will only briefly have you jumping in your seat over the scares and light gore. For a movie about gators hunting humans, it is surprisingly light on the gore – but then that’s what happens when Hollywood makes horror movies for teen audiences. And there in lies the problem with this movie and someone like me watching it. It not aimed or marketed at me, and maybe not even at you. It’s a forgettable popcorn flick in the same vein as Bait, but not as fun – at least that had gore to go with its killer sharks.
Simple but entertaining enough, and quickly paced (running time around 80-minutes w/o credits), thriller that has just enough character development for me to care about their predicament. Not sure how much replay value this has but it's at least worth a rental. **3.5/5** ...
The movie plot follows Hayle, who heads towards a storm in Florida to check on his father, who is not answering calls. When she gets there, her father is hurt and the house is surrounded by hungry and furious alligators. To make it worse, the storm causes a flooding and all this water just makes ... the hunt easier for the gators. The movie has good visual effects, but the plot armor is the most absurd one I have seen in years. Against everybody else, the gators are relentless and super-effective man-killing machines, tearing anyone in pieces before they are even able to see what is attacking them. The protagonists, however, suffer only mild scratches from gator bites that would at least result in an arm or leg being torn off. This is so frequent and so clearly absurd and unrealistic that the movie ceases to be enjoyable after a while.
**Hurricanes, alligators, and a fractured father-daughter relationship - Crawl is a fun creature flick that survives it all!** Crawl is different from my usual favorite stupid shark or alligator creature features because this is not a so-bad-it’s-good ridiculous movie. Instead, Crawl is a well-do ... ne creature survival thriller that creates high anxiety with claustrophobic environments filled with enraged starving alligators. Kaya Scodelario and Barry Pepper play a father and daughter trapped in a flooding basement in the middle of a hurricane that has become the new home of some hungry crocs. The serious tone and high quality of Crawl would be comparable to The Shallows making this an excellent film as much about survival and growth as the alligators looking for dinner. The effects, well-designed sets, and great performances make Crawl a top-notch creature feature.