Open Water is a
2003 horror movie shot on a shoe-string budget about the true story of Tom and Eileen Lonergan, a vacationing couple that went
scuba diving in 1998 in the Bahamas and were left out in open sea. The
movie portrays what folks suppose happened to them using actors that are fairly
unknown, with the exception of Steve Lemme of Broken Lizard that plays an
uncredited diver. The camera filters used give the movie an incredibly cheap
feel.
Daniel Kintner, played by Daniel Travis,
and Susan Watkins, played by Blanchard
Ryan, are a young couple that are having some relationship
difficulties. They decide to go scuba diving together and join a group on a on
an ocean boat. While on the boat a head count is taken and they mistakenly
count 20 instead of the 18 that are there.
Daniel and Susan have been left behind in the ocean and the boat is
nowhere to be found.
Open Water
capitalizes on the uneasy feeling one might get swimming alone in the ocean.
There is very little action and considering that the couple finds themselves
attacked by both jellyfish and sharks, there is very little actually seen on
screen. The sound quality is fairly poor and the film looks like a home video.
Why the filmmakers decided upon this is a bit baffling. The dialogue is
forgettable and there are not a lot of compelling reasons to captivate the
viewer. The thing that this movie has going for it is that it has a creepy
premise that is based on a terrible true story. The problem is that it is
really not something that needed to be told in the length of a feature length
film. This story could probably have a just been a half hour documentary that
would have been more interesting.
The Netflix sleeve claimed that Open Water is a mix of Jaws
and the Blair Witch Project. I think that is a bit of a stretch. For
one thing, the sharks are more like an unfortunate by-product of being the
ocean where in Jaws the shark is the
antagonist of the film. It is also not like The Blair Witch Project since the
camera operator does not play a part directly in the film. The movie is creepy
as an idea but fails to be scary. There are a lot more movies that are “based
on a true story” that involve a lot more drama, are much more horrific, and
have characters that are more developed. If you are looking in the horror
genre check into Wolf Creek or the
original Texas Chainsaw Massacre and
if you are looking into drama on the high seas look no further than The Perfect Storm.
I’ll admit the ocean can be eerie. When I imagine
swimming in open water it gives me the sort of tingly fear that I’d feel if I
were floating in space. Except in the ocean, there could be giants living
in the dark lurking and possibly hunting you. For all the build up, the
tragedy is somewhat underwhelming by the lack of character development and the
shoddy quality of the film and sound. Is Open
Water worth seeing? Probably not, considering that there have been
movies that have attempted what this film has done and succeeded. Open Water is the sort of movie that you
watch and quickly forget because nothing stands out. Instead you might go into
the ocean and if you swim in the open ocean you might feel a chill as you
slowly recollect the basic plot of this movie. Open Water has become the campfire story that people will end up
telling kids about traveling and what terrifying things can occur to a person
when their guard is not kept up.
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