¡Tintorera!, for which you see a poster above, is often presumed to be within the pantheon of Jaws knockoffs, and that’s true, but barely. There’s a giant shark, and it eats a few people, but ¡Tintorera! couldn’t be more different in tone than Spielberg’s blockbuster. It’s a counterculture movie set in and around Cancún, Tulum, and the Rivera Maya. A considerable amount of script is spent exploring free love and utopian lifestyles. Shark hunters Andrés Garcia and Hugo Stiglitz fashion an exclusive three-way relationship with Susan George. They also mix and match with Laura Lyons and Jennifer Ashley, and each bed down on consecutive nights with Fiona Lewis, which catalyzes a transformation from professional rivals to friends. Discussions of sexual sharing and finding new ways to live take up far more running time than anything to do with sharks.
But sharks there indeed are—specifically, a large tiger shark whose first victim is Lewis. She’s eaten during a nude swim, which is another resemblance to Jaws. But to give a sense of how different ¡Tintorera! really is, consider that Lewis appears to be the movie’s star during its first half hour, and when she vanishes no trace of her is ever found and nobody much cares that she’s gone. They assume she left the country. In cinema’s imaginary countercultureworld, who has time to ask questions? The focus of the film shifts to Garcia and Stiglitz’s rivalry-cum-friendship. Shortly afterward, Susan George arrives, and the focus shifts again, onto the aformentioned threesome. But then she leaves, and suddenly Lyons and Ashley are the main love interests. Then one of them is eaten too. This round robin approach, in our experience, is unique in a film that isn’t anthological or episodic, and it’s jarring, to be sure.
Another aspect of ¡Tintorera! that might jar is it usage of real sharks and extremely practical special effects. Many actual sharks are killed. A loggerhead turtle is killed via throat cutting and hung over the side of a boat to make a blood trail. We don’t think the Mexican filmmakers Conacite Uno and Productora Filmica Real added a disclaimer to the credits about no animals being harmed. Somehow they got a shark to swim around with a fake human torso sticking out of its mouth. Another shark is made to carry around a human lower body trailing yards of intestines. We don’t know how the filmmakers achieved these striking scenes, but they look very real. So if all of what we’ve written doesn’t make the film’s slender free love plot sound enticing, maybe watch it for the gory efx. You’ll marvel. ¡Tintorera! premiered in Mexico today in 1977.