What Lies Beneath Movie Review
What Lies Beneath Review

"What Lies Beneath" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Robert ZemeckisProducer : Steve Starkey,Jack Rapke,Robert Zemeckis
Screenwiter : Clark Gregg
Starring : Harrison Ford,Michelle Pfeiffer,Diana Scarwid,Joe Morton,James Remar,Miranda Otto,Amber Valletta
So far, this summer’s supposed blockbusters could have used a free course on
filmmaking from Robert Zemeckis.
Lesson number one: Take time to acclimate the audience to the characters.
Unlike The Perfect Storm, What Lies Beneath completely absorbs the main
character’s personalities into the dramatic mix- frailties and all, through an
intense look into their psyche, practically forcing the audience to become
emotionally attached. This is not an original concept in cinema, but after
watching Clooney and Wahlberg jump on that fishing boat and mournfully
pronounce their goodbyes as if they already knew the ominous storm was on its
way, you can't help but root for the ship to capsize.
Lesson number two: The film should have a pace that at least feels natural.
The Patriot is a story about revenge, yet I couldn’t shake the dreadful notion
of an overly contrived plot, and I could practically smell the “sap” in those
birch trees as Mel wreaked havoc. In contrast, the plot in What Lies Beneath
is clever throughout, filled with suspense and surprises, each scene linked in
perfect transition with the next.
Lesson number three: Less is more! We’ve seen Braveheart, and now Gladiator
and The Patriot in the same summer? Both films were successful, but movie
moguls seem to have forgotten that the most exciting and thrilling effects can
be found in the main characters' performances. By keeping special effects
subtle, What Lies Beneath proves that you can still create a supernatural film
that is downright chilling, without all the grandeur.
From his grave, Hitchcock would have given this picture two decrepit thumbs
up. Zememckis pulls one straight from the Master of Suspense’s hat by casting
legends Harrison Ford and Michelle Pfeiffer in an eerie and isolated setting,
which really allows their performances to resonate throughout.
Set in affluent and rural Vermont, Ford plays Dr. Norman Spencer, a geneticist
and professor from Harvard who is on the verge of a breakthrough with a nerve
manipulation drug. His wife, Claire (Michelle Pfieffer) has been the pillar of
strength in her husband’s quest for academic glory, and has even sacrificed her
promising music career. Their marriage appears perfect, but ever since a
terrible car accident one year earlier, Claire has been facing emotional
problems, which makes her the perfect victim to be haunted by an unsettled
entity from beyond. Frightened out of her wits by strange phenomena around the
house along with the disappearance of a new neighbor’s wife, Claire decides to
confront what she believes is a ghost haunting the house. What she unearths
could cost her her life and that of her husband, as the will for revenge seems
able to conquer death.
Michelle Pfeiffer’s performance is dazzling. There’s something mysterious
about the glow of her blue eyes that mesmerizes. Half the time you don’t know
whether she’s possessed, depressed, or just completely loony. Plus, her
disconcerting appearance suits the Quixotic setting so perfectly that I found
myself truly sympathizing with her plight. Harrison Ford also shows that his
judgment in scripts is not permanently kaput after Air Force One and the awful
Random Hearts. This role will put him back in my good graces just in time to
start more rumors about the next Indiana Jones movie. In addition,
screenwriter Clark Gregg deserves credit for putting together a script that is
frightening and somehow totally believable.
I have a feeling that What Lies Beneath will be compared to the remake of Cape
Fear several years ago. What Lies Beneath is absolutely precise in its
production. But it's the puzzling and original plot that will have fans of
movies like The Sixth Sense in for another giddy shocker.
Hmmm... Michele, or the laptop?
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Review by Athan Bezaitis
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