Watch: Dark Water 2005 123movies, Full Movie Online – Dahlia Williams and her daughter Cecelia move into a rundown apartment on New York’s Roosevelt Island. She is currently in the midst of divorce proceedings and the apartment, though near an excellent school for her daughter, is all she can afford. From the time she arrives, there are mysterious occurrences and there is a constant drip from the ceiling in the only bedroom. There are also noises coming from the apartment directly above hers, though it would appear to be vacant. Is the apartment haunted or is there a simpler explanation?.
Plot: Dahlia Williams and her daughter Cecelia move into a rundown apartment on New York’s Roosevelt Island. She is currently in midst of divorce proceedings and the apartment, though near an excellent school for her daughter, is all she can afford. From the time she arrives, there are mysterious occurrences and there is a constant drip from the ceiling in her daughter’s bedroom.
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5.6/10 Votes: 63,387 | |
47% | RottenTomatoes | |
52/100 | MetaCritic | |
N/A Votes: 848 Popularity: 19.058 | TMDB |
Teenagers!
Don’t know about you all, but I’ve sort of had it up to here with teenagers. Walter Salles’ *Dark Water* flopped because of teenagers. The geniuses up the highway from me at the Walt Disney Company tried to market this psychological drama — in SUMMER! — to teenagers as a slasher film . . . OOPS. When the teenagers discovered that the film’s primary concern was with a troubled single mother, fresh from a nasty divorce and currently embroiled in a custody fight, they lost patience with it (the screen offering no steaming entrails oozing from savagely slashed pregnant abdomens and such) and commenced downloading ring-tones from Katazo on their cellphones in the darkened theaters. The epilogue to the sorry saga of this film’s release? The teenagers infest this website with their 1-star reviews and poor grammar and ALL CAPS SENTENCES. Look, I’ve got an idea: I think it’s high time that the folks at IMDb create an entirely separate website — let’s call it “IMDbTeen” — in which the children can vent their spleen and leave THIS site for the rest of us to discuss movies. And no, banishing the youngsters to the discussion boards won’t cut the mustard — the Ritalin-addicted kids, thumbs sore from their PSPs, have obviously found their way to the review pages. Or perhaps IMDb, which is owned by Amazon, can follow their corporate parent’s lead and force teenagers to identify themselves as such — the rest of us can then ignore their comments.Pardon the W.C. Fields rant, but *Dark Water* is too good a film to be hijacked by walking pimple sacks, sorry. Here is a great work of art that has been virtually disowned by its director because of the poor box office returns. Hey, Salles, if you’re reading this, there’s no reason for you to hang your head in shame over this picture. I, for one, appreciated your baroque homage to Polanski’s *Repulsion*, and can even state that the performance you get out of Jennifer Connelly actually surpasses Deneuve’s work in that earlier film. Connelly thoroughly inhabits the role — an unglamorous one that asks this beautiful actress to dress in ratty clothes while suffering from constant migraines. She convinces us as a desperate case, both financially and emotionally, and also convinces us that Dahlia is an honest-to-goodness mom (Connelly has a couple of kids in real life, which not only helps, but is a necessity on an actress’ resume if she presumes to play this part). And it’s not just Connelly who scores in the acting department: John C. Reilly as the superintendent delivers an immortal monologue (mostly improvised, according to the DVD extras) as he offers Dahlia and her daughter a grand tour of the hideous housing project on Roosevelt Island that is the setting of the movie. “Where’s the living room?” asks Dahlia. “This is it,” effuses Reilly, “It’s both bedroom AND living room! It’s what they call a DUAL-USE room. Look at it — it’s huge!” Anyone who has ever dealt with a real estate agent will recognize Reilly’s canny mix of friendliness and utter untrustworthiness. A-class talent such as Pete Postlethwaite and Tim Roth also make significant contributions as the building’s janitor and Dahlia’s lawyer, respectively.
But the prime virtue of the film is in the photography and set design. *Dark Water* is that rarest of horror films: it’s set in the city. Roosevelt Island, to be precise, that run-down spit of land across the river from Manhattan, encrusted with Soviet-bloc inspired tenement housing. (“The Brutalist style,” as Reilly would have it.) Salles’ DP has a field day in this environment, getting some nice aerial shots of the brick and cement rat maze, as well as some low shots pointing up toward the tenement towers’ imposing height. The weather is usually rainy (the incessant leitmotiv of the film is water, obviously), the sky is gun-gray, smokestacks dominate the horizon, the overall color palette consists of institutional gray, poverty-row brown, icky black, depression blue. The interiors, specifically of Dahlia and Ceci’s apartment — along with the mysterious 10-F directly upstairs — is a fond homage to Catherine Deneuve’s greasy, miserable apartment in Polanski’s *Repulsion*, with some nods thrown towards the Coens’ *Barton Fink* along the way (especially in regards to the peeling plaster and moist dry-wall and overall dilapidation).
But is *Dark Water* really scary? Presumably, this would be the point. It’s probably not scary enough to scare the pimple sacks, but it’s scary enough for those who’ve had to deal with life’s most fundamental problems, such as raising a child alone, or finding oneself crippled by either physical or mental handicaps, aggravated by an unhappy past, WHILE raising a child alone. In other words, it’s scary enough for grown-ups, who can find terror in watching their children cross a busy intersection. And in any case, Salles delivers a few choice jolts along the way, which I won’t spoil. But the genius of the film is in its atmosphere: an unrelenting brooding menace that feeds off of urban misery. *Dark Water* is depressing and scary.
And splendid. 9 ardent stars out of 10.
A lot more than a remake
Having seen both the Japanese original and Walter Salles’ remake i find the remake was the best thing that could happen to this story. Salles picks up the original story without making just a copy. He fills the gaps (and there were plenty), corrects a lot of little flaws and adds the credibility that was lacking in the original. The original was in parts a horror movie, and a very poor one so. Predictable behavior, foreseen turnings, forced mysteriousness – the usual problems i have with so many horror movies. The other part is a family drama, with a weird happy end. The happiness of which intrudes into the horror story and further degrades it. Salles goes more than a step further here by not making a simple horror movie. Rather he’s making a stressful movie. Stress? The stresses of everyday life in a difficult situation. A recent divorce, fighting for the custody of the child, low budget, cheap noisy apartment with wet ceiling, trouble at school, no contact with neighbors, careless caretakers and managers. It’s a context fueled by very real issues people are struggling with every day. The mysterious components only add to this and drive it, until they finally take over. Very dense atmosphere and Jennifer Connelly’s excellent acting make you feel this stress. What more can you ask for?
Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 45 min (105 min), 1 hr 43 min (103 min) (unrated)
Budget 30000000
Revenue 68357079
Status Released
Rated PG-13
Genre Drama, Horror, Mystery
Director Walter Salles
Writer Kôji Suzuki, Hideo Nakata, Takashige Ichise
Actors Jennifer Connelly, Ariel Gade, John C. Reilly
Country United States
Awards 6 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix DTS, Dolby Digital, SDDS
Aspect Ratio 2.39 : 1
Camera Panavision Panaflex Gold II, Panavision Primo Lenses, Panavision Panaflex Millennium, Panavision Primo Lenses
Laboratory Technicolor, Hollywood (CA), USA
Film Length (6 reels)
Negative Format 35 mm (Kodak Vision2 500T 5218)
Cinematographic Process Panavision (anamorphic)
Printed Film Format 35 mm (Kodak Vision Premier 2393)