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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen / Uncensored | $14.99 |
| DVD - Pan & Scan / Edited | $14.99 |
Feature film: ; Deleted scenes - Dahlia at the laundromat/Ceci & Kyle in the car; Analayzing Dar Water scenes - Blue Robe/Wall of Water; Movie Showcase:; Instant access to select movie scenes that showcase the ultimate in high definition picture and sound; Seamless menus
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Dark Water
1. Be Honest With Yourself
2. 540 Eastwood
3. Another Puddle
4. Ceci's Missing
5. I Want to Live Here
6. Don't Get Your Hopes Up
7. Call a Plumber
8. This Building Is Falling Apart
9. It's Really Coming Down
10. New Student
11. Nobody
12. Since Daddy Left
13. You're Lying
14. Dirty Things
15. Laundry
16. Taking a Nap
17. The Leak's Back
18. Natasha
19. That's Appealing
20. Left Behind
21. Assumptions
22. Here She Is Now
23. I'm Here
24. End Credits
A terrifying novel by Koji Suzuki, previously adapted to film in Japan, becomes a profoundly unsettling supernatural thriller thanks to the inspired direction of Brazilian filmmaker Walter Salles. Newly divorced mom Dahlia (Jennifer Connelly), having won custody of her daughter, Ceci, in a bitter court battle, takes up residence in a depressingly dreary, run-down apartment -- the only affordable one in proximity to a good school. But shabby maintenance isn't the main problem. Long ago, Dahlia learns, something horrible happened in the empty apartment above hers...something that continues to haunt everyone in the building. Salles appropriates the visual style often used by Japanese filmmakers in the production of contemporary urban-based horror films; harsh fluorescent lighting drains the color out of already drab settings and gives the characters a pale, unhealthy appearance. The sun rarely shines, and the cloudy, rain-swollen skies cast a grey pall over the city. Tracking shots are employed sparingly, and when the camera moves it doesn't glide confidently but slithers stealthily down hallways or around corners. Horror is conveyed not by cheap "boo!" tactics but instead by the steady accumulation of disturbing events and blood-chilling revelations. Connelly is superb as the young mother, already emotionally fragile but determined to fight the unseen forces that threaten her young daughter -- who, by the way, is played by young Ariel Gade with the poise and assurance normally associated with much older and more sophisticated performers. Similarly effective in minor but carefully written roles are Tim Roth, John C. Reilly, Pete Postlethwaite, and Camryn Manheim. Dark Water isn't the type of horror movie that makes good "popcorn" fare: It doesn't rely on hoary, stereotypical devices and doesn't have the one-murder-per-reel pace many fans crave. Instead, it moves slowly, almost funereally, toward a sense-shattering conclusion that will leave most viewers limp with exhaustion once the movie has ended. And that's more than you can generally say of today's fright films. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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