What Lies Beneath (2000) USA
What Lies Beneath Image Cover
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Director:Robert Zemeckis
Studio:Dreamworks Video
Producer:Robert Zemeckis, Cherylanne Martin, Jack Rapke, Joan Bradshaw, Mark Johnson
Writer:Sarah Kernochan, Clark Gregg
Rating:4
Rated:PG-13
Date Added:2007-03-06
Purchased On:2007-06-03
ASIN:B00003CXI7
UPC:0667068640625
Price:$9.98
Awards:4 wins & 5 nominations
Genre:Suspense
Release:2001-01-29
IMDb:0161081
Duration:130
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:2.35:1
Sound:Dolby
Languages:English, DTS, English, Dolby Digital 5.1, Commentary by director Robert Zemeckis, Unknown
Features:First Look Behind-the-Scenes Featurette
Robert Zemeckis  ...  (Director)
Sarah Kernochan, Clark Gregg  ...  (Writer)
 
Harrison Ford  ...  Dr. Norman Spencer
Michelle Pfeiffer  ...  Claire Spencer
Diana Scarwid  ...  Jody
Joe Morton  ...  Dr. Drayton
James Remar  ...  Warren Feur
Miranda Otto  ...  Mary Feur
Amber Valletta  ...  Madison Elizabeth Frank
Katharine Towne  ...  Caitlin Spencer
Victoria Bidewell  ...  Beatrice
Eliott Goretsky  ...  Teddy
Ray Baker  ...  Dr. Stan Powell
Wendy Crewson  ...  Elena
Sloane Shelton  ...  Mrs. Templeton
Tom Dahlgren  ...  Dean Templeton
Micole Mercurio  ...  Mrs. Frank
Dennison Samaroo  ...  PhD Student #1
Jennifer Tung  ...  PhD Student #2
Rachel Singer  ...  PhD Student #3
Daniel Zelman  ...  PhD Student #4
Comments: He was the prefect husband until his one mistake followed them home.

Summary: A good old-fashioned thriller that wears its Alfred Hitchcock pedigree proudly on its sleeve, What Lies Beneath stars Harrison Ford and Michelle Pfeiffer as picture-perfect married couple Norman and Claire Spencer, who seem happy and content with a fabulous house, college-age daughter and still-active libidos. When said daughter heads off to college, Claire starts obsessing about her new neighbors, and becomes convinced that the moody husband killed the neurotic wife, and that the wife's ghost has a desperately important message for her. Yes, it's true, there is a ghost, and there is a message, but it has decidedly more personal--and life-threatening--implications for Claire and Norman. Suddenly, that car crash last year that Claire can barely remember and the circumstances surrounding it start falling into place, and Claire begins to realize Norman may have a secret.
Director Robert Zemeckis loads the first half of What Lies Beneath with humorous cheap thrills (the suddenly ringing phone, etc.) that poke fun at Claire's dilemma while simultaneously making you tense beyond belief. Between each goofy thrill, though, is one true one that will make you jump out of your seat, including a bathtub that keeps filling itself. And all the while, Zemeckis subtly telegraphs the fissures in the Spencers' marriage, slowly revealing that all is not well between these two. Yes, it's a blatant Hitchcock homage to movies such as Rear Window and Suspicion, but it's sleekly made, entertaining and engrossing. Ford does his stoic thing well (and looks great doing it), and Diana Scarwid provides a refreshingly lighthearted turn as Claire's best pal, but it's pretty much Pfeiffer's movie all the way, and she carries the film on her not-so-fragile shoulders. And the third act is a suspense tour de force, complete with a breathtaking sequence featuring Pfeiffer and that menacing bathtub. In a time of obvious horror films, What Lies Beneath is an intelligent, fun thrill ride that will leave you breathless. --Mark Englehart