In Invasion of the Mermaids (2025), the classic folklore of mermaids is reborn as an ecological horror. Far from enchanting creatures luring sailors with song, these mermaids emerge from the depths as vengeful, intelligent apex predators. When unexplained disappearances plague coastal areas, and marine life behaves strangely, marine biologist Dr. Lena Hayes is called in. Her investigation reveals horrifying evidence: glowing eyes, razor‑sharp fins, and hypnotic songs used to hunt humans as ships vanish at sea
The story takes place largely in the coastal town of Brightwater and other global shores, where a seismic underwater event—triggered by deep‑sea drilling or mining—unleashes this ancient mermaid civilization. As entire fleets disappear and coastal communities descend into chaos, Lena teams up with a local fisherman named Mack, whose knowledge of old maritime legends becomes essential to understanding these creatures’ motives

These mermaids are depicted with haunting realism: bioluminescent veins, translucent skin, predatory grace, and even psionic or sonar-based abilities. Designed by top effects houses such as Weta Workshop, they evoke deep‑sea predators rather than mythic beauties, creating a visual style that is both beautiful and terrifying. Cinematographer Greig Fraser shapes the underwater world into something simultaneously awe-inspiring and claustrophobic, capturing scenes lit only by the mermaids’ glow, emergency lights, or bioluminescent coral
Lena’s character arc tracks from skeptical scientist to reluctant leader. Faced with destruction and moral ambiguity, she must grapple with humanity’s own role in provoking this uprising. Her emotional journey is punctuated by intense sequences: city flooding, shipboard terror, and attempts to decode an ancient prophecy that may hold the key to survival or coexistence Meanwhile, human institutions crumble, and tensions boil between those who want to fight back and those who believe in negotiation.

The film’s themes revolve around environmental reckoning, mythological reinterpretation, and the cost of human ignorance. The mermaids’ wrath is portrayed not as mindless evil, but as overdue justice for centuries of pollution, deep-sea exploitation, and neglect. Yet some critics argue that the allegory feels heavy-handed and the characters underdeveloped, especially in the film’s rushed second half
Ultimately, Invasion of the Mermaids stands out as a visually stunning, if uneven, ecological thriller. Its creature designs, haunting soundscapes, and underwater cinematography are unforgettable—even if pacing and emotional depth don’t always match that ambition. The story closes on an uneasy, open-ended note: humanity may have sealed the mermaids away, but the impression lingers that this conflict is just beginning. For fans of myth drenched in horror and environmental allegory, it’s a bold — if flawed — plunge into the unknown.





