Ah, the Syfy Channel in the mid-2000s: a magical time when executives believed they could slap “Dark” onto any title, throw a latex monster onto a boat, and call it cinema. Enter Chupacabra: Dark Seas—a film so aggressively mediocre that it somehow manages to sink lower than its own exploding cruise ship finale.
This isn’t a movie. This is a vacation slideshow accidentally edited by a drunk uncle who thought adding a rubber monster would spice things up.
The Premise: Jaws, but With an Overgrown Rat-Dog
The plot, such as it is, goes like this: Giancarlo Esposito (yes, that Giancarlo Esposito, who must have lost a bet or owed someone money) plays Dr. Peña, a cryptozoologist who smuggles a live Chupacabra aboard a cruise ship. Because obviously, the best place to keep a dangerous, bloodthirsty creature is a floating buffet of senior citizens and karaoke enthusiasts.
The ship is captained by John Rhys-Davies, who spends the entire film looking like he’s rethinking every career decision since Raiders of the Lost Ark. His daughter Jenny is the fitness instructor, because every good monster film needs a character whose sole survival skill is yelling, “Run!” while wearing spandex.
Naturally, some crew members open the crate (because people in monster movies have never seen monster movies), the beast escapes, and hilarity—sorry, horror—ensues.
The Monster: Spirit Halloween Leftover
Let’s talk about the Chupacabra itself. Folklore paints it as a terrifying bloodsucker, part vampire, part cryptid, the stuff of nightmares. This film presents it as…a guy in a Party City costume who looks like he was glued together from leftover Predator scraps and a rejected Goosebumps puppet.
The creature roars like a malfunctioning leaf blower, runs like a middle-aged man late for his train, and kills with all the ferocity of a drunk raccoon in your trash cans. It’s impossible to be scared of something that looks like it could be defeated with a broom.
The Human Cast: Titanic, But Everyone’s Already Given Up
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John Rhys-Davies (Captain Randolph): delivers his lines like he’s narrating his own obituary. By the end, he decides to retire and write his memoirs, presumably titled Things I Did for a Paycheck.
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Giancarlo Esposito (Dr. Peña): plays the “sympathetic scientist” archetype but comes across more like a substitute teacher trying to convince teenagers that chupacabras matter. He’s eventually killed by the beast, which frankly feels less like a scripted scene and more like divine mercy.
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Chelan Simmons (Jenny): the daughter/future victim, who alternates between screaming, stretching in yoga pants, and existing solely as bait.
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Dylan Neal (Lance the Marshal): the square-jawed hero whose personality is best described as “shirt tucked in.”
Together, they form a cast that makes you nostalgic for Gilligan’s Island. At least those castaways had charisma.
The Kills: Murder on the Lido Deck
The film tries for creative deaths but delivers them with all the enthusiasm of a wet sponge. The highlights:
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A sweet old lady loses her Shih Tzu to the beast in the casino. It’s the only time in the movie you actually feel something—and it’s sadness for the dog.
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A group of Navy SEALs are brought in, which sounds cool until you realize they have the tactical skills of mall cops. The Chupacabra chews through them like unpaid interns.
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Random crew members wander into dark rooms, scream, and are never seen again. It’s like Scooby-Doo without the comedy.
The gore is minimal, the scares nonexistent, and the editing suggests the monster was allergic to good lighting. Most of the time, you can barely see the thing. Which, honestly, is a blessing.
The Dialogue: Written on a Napkin, Possibly Mid-Flight
The script is a masterpiece of clichés. Gems include:
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“We’re not dealing with a man…we’re dealing with a monster!”
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“It’s a chupacabra!” (as though anyone on Earth would know what that is without a Wikipedia entry).
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“Daddy, don’t leave me!”—a line Jenny delivers with all the emotional weight of someone asking for more breadsticks at Olive Garden.
It’s like the writers watched every monster movie ever made, copied the dialogue, and then used a thesaurus to swap out half the words for more “dramatic” ones.
The Setting: Love Boat Meets Rubber Suit
The cruise ship could have been fun—a self-contained setting, plenty of opportunities for claustrophobic tension, a floating buffet of victims. Instead, it feels like the filmmakers rented a single corridor, a casino room, and the engine room, then recycled them for 90 minutes.
By the time the ship explodes at the end, you don’t feel relief for the survivors—you feel relief for yourself. Thank God it’s over.
The Science: A Cryptozoology Lecture From Hell
Dr. Peña insists on preserving the beast for science, arguing that its existence is more valuable than human life. This would be interesting if he weren’t keeping it in a glorified storage locker on a booze cruise. That’s like saying you’ve discovered Bigfoot, then keeping him in your garage next to the lawn mower.
The “science” in this film is laughable:
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Navy SEALs firing wildly in cramped hallways? Totally safe.
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Using a young woman as live bait for a supernatural monster? Standard practice.
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Blowing up an entire cruise liner full of priceless research just to kill one rubber-suited monster? Nobel Prize-worthy strategy.
The Ending: Retirement Plan Explosion
The climax sees Captain Randolph setting the engines to explode, sacrificing the ship to kill the beast. Jenny and Lance escape on a lifeboat while Randolph contemplates his new career as a memoirist. Presumably, his first chapter will be titled How I Lost My Cruise Ship to a Discount Monster Costume.
As the ship sinks in a fiery blaze, you don’t feel tension—you feel envy. Those passengers got to leave this nightmare early.
Final Verdict
Chupacabra: Dark Seas is less a film and more a prolonged practical joke. It takes a fascinating Latin American legend and drowns it in bad CGI, lazy acting, and the kind of script that would embarrass even an Are You Afraid of the Dark?episode.
The only terror here is existential—the creeping dread that you’ve wasted 90 minutes of your life watching John Rhys-Davies and Giancarlo Esposito slum it in a production that looks like it was filmed between buffet shifts on an actual cruise.
If you’re looking for scares, don’t bother. If you’re looking for laughs, you’ll find them—but only because this thing is funnier than any official Syfy comedy ever made.

