Review :: "Open Water"

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In the ads for the new ultra-realistic low budget thriller "Open Water," two quotes are being used more often than any others:

"The best shark movie since 'Jaws'!" -Brian Raftery, GQ

"Prepare to jump out of your skin." -Peter Travers, Rolling Stone

After reading these excited endorsements (and after seeing the non-scary "Exorcist" prequel just hours before), I went into "Open Water" prepared for sheer terror. That's not exactly what I got. While the film never truly terrified me, it did leave me thinking about the tenuous nature of human life.

"Open Water" has a detached documentary-style feel to it, partially because it was entirely shot on low-budget digital video. The colors are washed out, and nothing in the film is even remotely glamorous. Shots of the surrounding Caribbean coast only seem to bolster the sensation that we are watching a vacation movie -- a vacation gone horribly wrong.

Movie

Open Water ***

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This thriller -- inspired by a true story provokes the kind of primal fear missing from most big-screen "horror movies." Blanchard Ryan and Daniel Harris star as a vacationing couple who get left behind in the middle of the ocean during a scuba diving excursion. The plot and filmmaking is simplistic. But it sure is effective.

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The film also feels real because of the little moments that director Chris Kentis has chosen to show us. The plot is as simple as it gets: a couple gets stranded in the middle of the ocean, left behind after their scuba-diving tour boat forgets about them. Since he has nothing else to advance, no other agendas or subplots to present, Kentis can give us a look at how real people would act in this frightening situation.

Dialogue is sparse, and much of it is inconsequential. Susan (Blanchard Ryan) and Daniel (Daniel Travis) are entirely new faces, so we don't see them as actors. They talk like people we know, not characters on the movie screen. Glimpses we see of their personal life before they go to sea are short, but telling, showing that a whole host of resentments are already building up between them. As a couple, these two are in jeopardy before they even reach the ocean.

It's the precise, deadpan delivery that really sucks you into "Open Water." Even the mix-up on the boat that leaves them stranded at sea is handled with such little fanfare that it puts an exclamation point on the couple being treated like an afterthought.

Once the couple is out to sea, the movie loses a bit of steam. Sharks, water temperature, lack of food, sickness, and other dangers such as jellyfish are all explored, but it all feels like well-organized but unfinished chapters.

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Ironically, it is the authenticity of the event that sinks some of "Open Water's" dramatic effect. Kentis brings on the realization, for example, that sharks are swimming in the area multiple times. Susan and Daniel become aware of the danger, get a little worked up, and then, before you know it, the sharks are gone. We don't know, of course, that they are gone for any other reason other than the filmmaker has chosen to fade out that particular scene and move on to the next struggle. This fear of what lurks below them is effective as a device, but without more clever or closer camera angles, keeping that fear afloat is a difficult task indeed. Ultimately, there are some tense moments, but they cannot sustain the film's already short, 79-minute running time.

Also "Open Water" isn't really a "shark movie" as it was touted -- doesn't deliver the shocks and horrors that its ad campaign seemed to promise. In fact, it doesn't seem like a movie at all. It claims to be based on true events, and genuinely looks as though we are witnessing those events first-hand. Even the movie's ending is another quiet moment that passes with little fanfare.

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