Worn by: Li Bingbing as Suyin Zhang
Reference: Carl F. Bucherer Patravi
Brand: Carl F. Bucherer
Five years after deep-sea rescue diver Jonas Taylor's submarine evacuation mission ended in disaster when an unseen creature attacked, killing two crew members and leaving him discredited by Dr. Heller who blamed pressure-induced psychosis, billionaire Jack Morris finances the underwater research facility Mana One off the coast of China. Dr. Minway Zhang and his oceanographer daughter Suyin supervise a mission to explore a previously concealed deeper section of the Mariana Trench hidden beneath a thermocline of hydrogen sulfide, but the submersible crew—including Jonas's ex-wife Lori—becomes trapped when attacked by a massive creature. Despite initial resistance, Jonas travels from Thailand to attempt the rescue, discovering the attacker is a 75-foot Megalodon, a prehistoric shark believed extinct. When Suyin attempts her own rescue in a mini-sub, she's saved by Jonas after a giant squid attacking her is killed by the Megalodon, which then pursues them through the thermocline into modern ocean waters. The Mana One crew tracks and poisons what they believe is the Megalodon, but a second, much larger Meg emerges—the true creature from the trench—devouring team members including Suyin's father Zhang before heading toward the crowded beach at Sanya Bay. Jonas and Suyin work together using torpedo-rigged submersibles and whale call audio to divert and ultimately kill the massive predator, with Jonas stabbing it in the eye and letting surrounding sharks finish it off. The Carl F. Bucherer Patravi ScubaTec Rose Gold Steel (reference 00.10632.24.33.01) is a luxury diver's watch combining rose gold and stainless steel with professional diving capabilities—reflecting Suyin's dual role as both a sophisticated scientist and hands-on oceanographer willing to dive into dangerous deep-sea situations.

Worn by: Jason Statham as Jonas Taylor
Reference: IWC Aquatimer
Brand: IWC
Jonas Taylor’s IWC Aquatimer Perpetual Calendar is a monument to human hubris — a machine built to master depth, worn by a man who stares into the abyss. Its massive case and intricate calendar functions, designed for precision in the deep, appear almost comic against the prehistoric chaos of the Megalodon. Yet the watch’s over-engineering mirrors Taylor himself: disciplined, overprepared, and haunted by the limits of control. In underwater close-ups, its luminous markers glow like the last rational light before the ocean swallows reason whole.
