Based on a story by Japanese novelist Koji Suzuki and a film by Hideo Nakata (THE RING), DARK WATER is a thrilling exercise in psychological terror. Jennifer Connelly stars as Dahlia, a troubled woman who is battling her husband, Kyle (Dougray Scott), for custody of their young daughter, Ceci (Ariel Gade). Low on cash, Dahlia moves with Ceci into a creepy apartment building on Roosevelt Island in New York City--and soon discovers that something very wrong is going on one floor above them. As black water drips down ominously from the ceiling in her bedroom, Dahlia is unable to get help from the real estate agent in charge (the appropriately mysterious John C. Reilly) or his very strange employee (a grizzled Pete Postlethwaite). Around the time Ceci starts going to her new school, she also seems to have developed a very dangerous invisible friend with eerie ties to the apartment above. Believing that Kyle might be gaslighting her, Dahlia turns to a rather curious lawyer (Tim Roth) who appears to work out of his car. All the while, memories of her strained relationship with her mother begin flooding her mind and giving her debilitating migraines. Brazilian director Walter Salles's (THE MOTORCYCLE DIARIES, CENTRAL STATION) first Hollywood film, DARK WATER cleverly paces itself before unleashing a terrifying conclusion.
Theatrical Release: July 8, 2005
Blu-ray Disc Features:
Keep Case
Widescreen - 2.35
Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround - English
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Uncompresse - English
Subtitles - Enlish (SDH), French, Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Deleted Scenes
Featurette - Analyzing DARK WATER Scenes
Director of Photography
Affonso Beato:
Executive Producer
Ashley Kramer: Executive Producer, DARK WATER (2005)
Production Designer
Therese DePrez: Production Designer, DARK WATER (2005)
Costume Designer
Michael Wilkinson: Costume Designer, JUST ANOTHER STORY
Review 1:
"[T]his metaphorically charged spook show about abandonment and childhood ghosts stands on its own."
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.147-148 06/24/2005
Review 2:
"[Salles] has made, in effect, the first collapse-of-the-middle-class horror movie."
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.51-52 07/15/2005
Review 3:
"Connelly plays it like she means it and Salles surrounds her with top-notch Brits....Expert genre filmmaking."
Source: Uncut
p.142 09/01/2005