 |
| Director
: |
Chris Kentis |
| Starring
: |
Blanchard Ryan, Daniel Travis,
Saul Stein |
|
| The plot
of Open Water |
Two
scuba divers (Ryan, Travis) are accidentally stranded
in shark-infested waters when their tour boat
leaves them behind. |
| Open
Water Movie Review |
Is Open Water not much
more than a Reader's Digest "Drama in Real Life?"
Yes, that's probably fair. Does it look like crap (well,
the Sundance version that I saw did)? Yes, absolutely.
Is the acting at some times painful? The direction static?
The palette singular? Yes, yes, and yes.
Does it contain one
of the most memorable scenes of this year, or any other?
No question. Is it the kind of film that you relay to
your brother-in-law at a family barbeque because you're
still slightly taken aback by what you saw? Absolutely.
Will you recall it in the ensuing years over the art-house
titles that will be lauded over it on top ten lists?
More than likely.
This small film, made
for a pittance by the husband and wife filmmaking team
of Chris Kentis and Laura Lau, is, much like The Blair
Witch Project a visceral experience, a primal odyssey
about fear -- fear of being lost, fear of losing a loved
one, fear of being eaten.
The story is simple
and compact: a squabbling couple (Blanchard Ryan, the
stronger of the acting duo, as the wife, and Daniel
Travis as the slightly egotistical husband) go to the
Caribbean for a vacation and find that their scuba diving
tour boat has returned to port without them, leaving
them to drift out to sea. As the two bicker about their
options, their situation becomes more dire as the sky
grows darker and the waters around them become more
active. They've both been wounded and their thrashing
and bleeding attracts sharks. Lots of sharks.
As a horror film, Open
Water succeeds by investing its time on the best aspects
of people in a life-and-death situation, instead of
dwelling on open wounds or the usual staples of the
genre -- the profane, disgusting, and sick. One pitch-black
nighttime scene, where the pair can only see the sharks
around them when a nearby storm unleashes its lightning,
reinvigorates the old "dark and stormy night"
cliché, presumed dead for decades, to spectacular
effect. The film also succeeds by refusing to moralize
while still including the message to all those extreme
sportsters out there: we are incredibly fragile and
defenseless creatures.
The digital video is
both a blessing and a curse. It grants an immediacy
and intimacy in this particular setting, as if you're
watching the work of some mute third leg of the party,
who happens to be along on the trip with a home video
camera. The print I saw had the same resolution and
pixilation issues of DV, but only in the earlier establishing
scenes of the couple in their port of departure.
It's really irrelevant,
however. Open Water is a reminder that movies do not
have to be tethered to big stars, expensive special
effects (in fact, it succeeds largely because we know
those sharks aren't generated in Marin County), or even
great film stock to achieve something more. It's a great
film because it's a great story, well-edited and persuasively
told, about survival and the dignity of the human spirit.
|
More Movie Reviews links for Open Water |
|
| Trailer
for Open Water |
videodetective (Windows Media 28-300K)
(videodetective.com)
Yahoo Movies - various sizes (Quicktime) (movies.yahoo.com) |
|