Genre:
Fantasy
Director: M. Night Shyamalan
Starring: Paul Giamatti, Bryce Dallas Howard,
Jeffrey Wright, Bob Balaban, Freddy Rodriguez, Sarita Choudhury,
Jared Harris, Bill Irwin
RunTime: -
Released By: Warner Bros
Rating: PG
Opening Day: 27 July 2006
Synopsis
:
In
"Lady in the Water," a story originally conceived
by writer-director M. Night Shyamalan for his children, a
modest building manager named Cleveland Heep (Paul Giamatti)
rescues a mysterious young woman (Bryce Dallas Howard) from
danger and discovers she is actually a narf, a character from
a bedtime story who is trying to make the treacherous journey
from our world back to hers. Cleveland and his fellow tenants
start to realize that they are also characters in this bedtime
story. As Cleveland falls deeper and deeper in love with the
woman, he works together with the tenants to protect his new
fragile friend from the deadly creatures that reside in this
fable and are determined to prevent her from returning home.
Movie
Review:
M. Night Shyamalan’s latest film “Lady in the
Water” is based upon a bedtime story he wrote for his
children. It was also directly responsible for his leaving
Disney and taking up residence at Warner Bros when they didn’t
like his script.
In all honesty, I can’t say Disney was wrong in their
assessment. The film bristles with Shyamalan’s ego,
some of his artistic decisions, including that of casting
himself in a pivotal role as a man who may be the world’s
intellectual savior, so absurd they’re almost laughable.
There’s much here that’s truly histrionic in its
ineptness, and telling the writer-director to consider a rewrite
to make things more cohesive and less unintentionally silly
wasn’t exactly bad advice.
But for all its faults, the craftsmanship on display and the
mysteriously melancholic mood the director effortlessly weaves
are so intoxicating; “Lady in the Water” couldn’t
help but win me over. Reservations aside, and while I’m
sure my sentiments won’t land me anywhere close to the
majority of critical opinion, this is one picture where I’m
almost glad to be swimming against the metaphorical tide.
Cleveland
Heep (Paul Giamatti) manages The Cove apartment complex as
if it were a piece of his own extended family. He treats every
resident with compassion and care, taking after their needs
like an unemotional observer floating around, trying to make
their lives better. He’s a loner with a heart of gold,
a man seemingly happy to take care of his residents even as
his own needs are left collecting dust over next to an unlit
fireside. But his secrets are painful; Heep is far more willing
to deal with his tenants’ problems that look at the
scars hidden by his past.
All that changes when he discovers the mysterious Story (Bryce
Dallas Howard) living apparently underneath the complex’s
swimming pool. She claims to be some sort of mythological
creature called a Narf, sent to The Cove to inspire one of
the residents to write a book that could change the direction
of humanity. But standing in her way is a vicious, wolf-like
animal eager to get her, and if Story’s tale is to be
believed than it might just be up to Cleveland to save his
new friend from almost certain death.
This is the most flawed part of Shyamalan’s script,
since there’s little chance that all of the characters
would be so foolish to believe everything Cleveland is telling
them, but then again, it’s all part of the experience.
Despite the scary creature, this has children’s tale
written all over it, and unless you’re ready to succumb
to a temporary state of ignorance, you’ll find it’s
very hard to enjoy the flick without constantly. The movie
even looks like a children’s book, thanks most in part
to Christopher Doyle’s brilliant work behind the camera,
but it’s the film’s cast that ultimately seals
the deal.
Perhaps
this is why Giamatti was cast in the main lead. He’s
simply impeccable as the good-natured Cleveland, showcasing
his talent as one of few actors who can pull off both dramatic
and comedic performances in the same role. The more absurd
Shyamalan’s script got, the more forceful and mesmerizing
Giamatti became. There is a moment late in the film that should
never have worked where a silly sermon of comical melodrama
nearly broke my heart, Giamatti delivering a cadence of pathos,
pain and forgiveness that stirred me all the way to my very
soul.
It is at that moment when I knew “Lady in the Water”
had me in the palm of its raggedly disheveled hands. Like
a fairy tale coming to its climax I can’t wait to see
what the man’s next chapter is going to explore.
Movie Rating:
(An enigmatic bedtime story that will stir the child in you)
Review
by Lokman B S
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