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What Lies Beneath

What Lies Beneath is a 2000 American supernatural horror thriller film directed by Robert Zemeckis from a screenplay written by Clark Gregg, based on a story by Sarah Kernochan and Gregg. It stars Harrison Ford and Michelle Pfeiffer, with Diana Scarwid, Joe Morton, James Remar and Miranda Otto appearing in supporting roles. It was the first film released by Zemeckis' production company, ImageMovers. The original film score was composed by Alan Silvestri.

What Lies Beneath
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRobert Zemeckis
Screenplay byClark Gregg
Story bySarah Kernochan
Clark Gregg
Produced bySteve Starkey
Robert Zemeckis
Jack Rapke
Starring
CinematographyDon Burgess
Edited byArthur Schmidt
Music byAlan Silvestri
Production
companies
Distributed byDreamWorks Distribution LLC (North America)
20th Century Fox (International)
Release date
  • July 21, 2000 (2000-07-21)
Running time
130 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$100 million[1]
Box office$291.4 million[1]

What Lies Beneath was theatrically released on July 21, 2000, by DreamWorks Pictures and 20th Century Fox. It received generally mixed reviews, with critics praising Pfeiffer's performance but criticizing the screenplay. However, the film was a box office success, grossing $291.4 million worldwide against a production budget of $100 million, becoming the tenth highest-grossing film of the year.

What Lies Beneath was nominated for the Saturn Award for Best Horror Film at the 27th Saturn Awards, in addition to nominations for Zemeckis and Pfeiffer for Best Director and Best Actress, respectively. At the 7th Blockbuster Entertainment Awards, Ford and Pfeiffer won Favorite Actor – Suspense and Favorite Actress – Suspense, and Scarwid was nominated for Favorite Supporting Actress – Suspense.

In 2002, a Bollywood remake, titled Raaz, was released.

Plot

Former cellist Claire Spencer and her husband Norman, an accomplished scientist and professor, live a quiet life at their lakeside home in Vermont. Their relationship is strained, particularly after Claire's daughter, Caitlin, leaves for college. Claire notices their new neighbors, Mary and Warren Feur, have a volatile relationship and, after Mary is unseen for several days, suspects Warren may have killed her.

Claire believes she sees a woman's body in the lake, and senses an unseen presence in the house. A framed article about Norman falls off his desk and shatters, leading Claire to discover an odd key inside a vent. She finds her bathtub mysteriously filled, and sees another woman's reflection in the water. Confiding in a psychiatrist, Claire and her mystic friend, Jody, hold a failed séance. She finds the bathtub filled again with the message, "You know," written on the steamy mirror, while her computer inexplicably types the initials "MEF".

Convinced she is haunted by Mary's ghost, Claire confronts Warren, but Mary is alive and well, explaining that she went to stay with her mother in Providence after a fight with Warren. On the back of Norman's article, Claire finds a story about a missing woman named Madison Elizabeth Frank — "MEF". She tracks down Madison's mother and visits her daughter’s bedroom, where she steals a lock of Madison's hair and notices a photo of her wearing an unusual necklace.

Performing a ritual from a book, Claire attempts to conjure Madison. Seemingly possessed by her spirit, she aggressively seduces Norman, shocking him by speaking as Madison until she drops the lock of hair. Becoming herself again, Claire recalls a repressed memory about Norman's affair with a student, Madison, which he admits happened during a rough patch in their marriage. Claire leaves to spend the night with Jody, who reveals that a year earlier, she saw Norman arguing with a woman at a café in Adamant, a nearby town.

Returning home, Claire finds Norman unconscious in the tub, which he assures her was an accident and not a suicide attempt. He tells her that an unstable Madison confronted him at home when he ended their affair, but denies killing her. Standing on the dock with Madison's hair, Claire is pulled into the lake by an unseen force, spotting a jewelry box matching Madison's necklace. Norman pulls her to safety, and together they burn the lock of hair.

Claire's suspicions return when Norman claims not to know the café in Adamant, where she sees the same necklace and jewelry box at a nearby shop. Recovering the box from the lake and unlocking it with the key from Norman's office, she finds Madison's necklace inside. She confronts Norman, who says that he came home to find Madison had killed herself; in desperation, he pushed her car into the lake with her body inside. Norman agrees to confess and calls the police, but Claire discovers he dialed 411 instead. He paralyzes her with halothane, admitting that he murdered Madison when she threatened to expose their affair to the dean.

Norman places Claire in the bathtub, filling it with water to stage her suicide. As he removes Madison's necklace from Claire's neck, her face contorts into Madison's corpse and he jerks back, smashing his head on the sink and knocking him unconscious. As the water level rises, Claire recovers enough to partially close the tap and dislodge the stopper, barely surviving drowning. She flees in Norman's truck, but he climbs on and attacks her. They crash into the lake, dislodging Madison's car and her body while Norman tries to drown Claire. Madison grabs Norman, allowing Claire to escape as Norman drowns and Madison's ghost drifts away. Later that winter, Claire places a rose on Madison's grave.

Cast

  • Michelle Pfeiffer as Claire Spencer, Norman's wife.
  • Harrison Ford as Dr. Norman Spencer, a successful college professor and scientist, Claire's second husband.
  • Diana Scarwid as Jody, a mystic and Claire's best friend.
  • Miranda Otto as Mary Feur, Norman and Claire's neighbor.
  • James Remar as Warren Feur, Norman and Claire's neighbor and Mary's husband.
  • Katharine Towne as Caitlin Spencer, Claire's daughter and Norman's stepdaughter.
  • Ray Baker as Dr. Stan Powell
  • Joe Morton as Dr. Drayton, a therapist whom Claire visits upon Norman's urging.
  • Amber Valletta as Madison Elizabeth Frank, a murdered young woman with whom Norman has had an affair.
  • Wendy Crewson as Elena

Production

Documentary filmmaker Sarah Kernochan had adapted a personal experience with the paranormal as a script treatment featuring a retirement aged couple dealing with restless but compassionate spirits. DreamWorks commissioned a rewrite from actor-writer Clark Gregg. This script was later delivered in 1998 by Steven Spielberg himself to his director friend Robert Zemeckis,[2] who had signed a deal for DreamWorks to distribute the films of newly founded production company ImageMovers, and announced interest in doing a thriller film.[3] Harrison Ford then signed to star on the film, even agreeing to clear room in his schedule for the project.[4] Michelle Pfeiffer then followed as DreamWorks started to deal with 20th Century Fox regarding the film's distribution.[5] Ford and Pfeiffer were Zemeckis' first and only choices for the lead roles.[3] Fox agreed to distribute both What Lies Beneath and Zemeckis' other project Cast Away, with the thriller having DreamWorks doing the domestic distribution and Fox the international one.[6]

Zemeckis filmed What Lies Beneath while Cast Away was shut down to allow Tom Hanks to lose weight and grow a beard for his character's development.[7] As Gregg had to remain with production for rewrites, he had to decline Aaron Sorkin's offer to read for a major role in Sports Night - though Sorkin would later write for Gregg a minor role in the final episodes of the series.[8]

Reception

Box office

What Lies Beneath opened in 2,813 theaters in North America and grossed $29,702,959 for an average of $10,559 per theater. It reached the number one spot at the box office upon opening, beating X-Men.[9] The film ended up earning $155,464,351 domestically and $135,956,000 internationally for a total of $291,420,351 worldwide, close to triple its production budget of $100 million.[1]

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 47% based on 126 reviews, with an average rating of 5.50/10. The site's critics consensus reads: "Robert Zemeckis is unable to salvage an uncompelling and unoriginal film."[10] Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 51 out of 100, based on 35 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[11] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[12]

The New York Times wrote that, "at the start, [Zemeckis] zaps us with quick, glib scares, just to show he still knows how, but his heart isn't in this kind of material anymore. His reflexes are a little slow."[13] The Los Angeles Times called it "spooky with a polished kind of creepiness added in... What Lies Beneath nevertheless feels more planned than passionate, scary at points but unconvincing overall."[14] Roger Ebert awarded the film 2 out of 4 stars, writing for the Chicago Sun-Times: "Lacking a smarter screenplay, it milks the genuine skills of its actors and director for more than it deserves, and then runs off the rails in an ending more laughable than scary. Along the way, yes, there are some good moments."[15][16] Time Out thought that, "after a slow build that at times makes every hair stand on end – Zemeckis rolls out every thriller cliché there is. A pity, because until then it's a smart, realistically staged, adult-oriented and extraordinarily effective domestic chiller."[17] Empire wrote: "The biggest surprise is, perhaps, that what emerges is no masterpiece, but a semi-sophisticated shocker, playfully homaging Hitchcock like a mechanical masterclass in doing 'genre'. The first hour is great fun... It's an enjoyably giddy ride, certainly, but once you're back from the edge of your seat, you realise most of the creaks and groans are from the decomposing script."[18]

Michelle Pfeiffer received some positive notice for her performance. Roger Ebert called her "convincing and sympathetic."[15]

In his review, Ebert said that he felt the problem with Zemeckis' desire to direct a Hitchcockian film (What Lies Beneath contains several musical, visual and plot references to Psycho and Vertigo, among other Hitchcock films) was Zemeckis' decision to involve the supernatural, a device Ebert felt Alfred Hitchcock himself would never have done.[15]

Accolades

Award Category Subject Result
ASCAP Award Top Box Office Films Alan Silvestri Won
Blockbuster Entertainment Awards[19] Favorite Actor - Suspense Harrison Ford Won
Favorite Actress - Suspense Michelle Pfeiffer Won
Favorite Supporting Actress - Suspense Diana Scarwid Nominated
Golden Trailer Award Best Horror/Thriller Nominated
Nastro d'Argento Silver Ribbon for Best Male Dubbing Michele Gammino Won
Saturn Award[19] Best Horror Film Jack Rapke Nominated
Steve Starkey Nominated
Robert Zemeckis Nominated
Best Director Nominated
Best Actress Michelle Pfeiffer Nominated

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "What Lies Beneath (2000) - Box Office Mojo". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
  2. ^ Sloane, Judy. "Starburst magazine issue 268, What Lies Beneath director interview". www.visimag.com.
  3. ^ a b "What Lies Beneath (2000) – Production Notes" (Press release). 20th Century Fox. 2000.
  4. ^ "'Beneath' pairs Ford, Zemeckis; D'Onofrio nabs 'Abbie'". Variety. June 4, 1998.
  5. ^ Fleming, Michael (October 16, 1998). "Pfeiffer joins Ford in 'What'". Variety.
  6. ^ Petrikin, Chris (October 14, 1998). "Pairing for Zemeckis". Variety.
  7. ^ Kehr, Dave (December 17, 2000). "'Cast Away' Director Defies Categorizing". The New York Times. p. 15.
  8. ^ Adams, Erik (September 13, 2011). "Clark Gregg". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
  9. ^ Harrigan, Tom (July 26, 2000). "'What Lies Beneath' opens in top spot; 'X-men' drops to second". The News & Observer. Associated Press. p. 49. Retrieved September 21, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  10. ^ "What Lies Beneath". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved April 5, 2019.
  11. ^ "What Lies Beneath reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved December 26, 2009.
  12. ^ "CinemaScore". cinemascore.com.
  13. ^ Mitchell, Elvis (July 21, 2000). "'What Lies Beneath': If Only Her Husband Hadn't Made That Horrible Mistake". The New York Times.
  14. ^ Turan, Kenneth (July 21, 2000). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on July 27, 2010. Retrieved July 27, 2010.
  15. ^ a b c Ebert, Roger (July 21, 2000). "What Lies Beneath :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved December 25, 2021.
  16. ^ Ebert, Roger (July 21, 2000). "What Lies Beneath". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved April 15, 2022.
  17. ^ "What Lies Beneath Review – Film". Time Out.
  18. ^ "Review of What Lies Beneath". Empire.
  19. ^ a b "What Lies Beneath (2000) – Awards". IMDb. Retrieved December 26, 2009.

External links

what, lies, beneath, other, uses, disambiguation, 2000, american, supernatural, horror, thriller, film, directed, robert, zemeckis, from, screenplay, written, clark, gregg, based, story, sarah, kernochan, gregg, stars, harrison, ford, michelle, pfeiffer, with,. For other uses see What Lies Beneath disambiguation What Lies Beneath is a 2000 American supernatural horror thriller film directed by Robert Zemeckis from a screenplay written by Clark Gregg based on a story by Sarah Kernochan and Gregg It stars Harrison Ford and Michelle Pfeiffer with Diana Scarwid Joe Morton James Remar and Miranda Otto appearing in supporting roles It was the first film released by Zemeckis production company ImageMovers The original film score was composed by Alan Silvestri What Lies BeneathTheatrical release posterDirected byRobert ZemeckisScreenplay byClark GreggStory bySarah KernochanClark GreggProduced bySteve StarkeyRobert ZemeckisJack RapkeStarringHarrison FordMichelle PfeifferDiana ScarwidJoe MortonJames RemarMiranda OttoCinematographyDon BurgessEdited byArthur SchmidtMusic byAlan SilvestriProductioncompaniesDreamWorks Pictures20th Century FoxImageMoversDistributed byDreamWorks Distribution LLC North America 20th Century Fox International Release dateJuly 21 2000 2000 07 21 Running time130 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 100 million 1 Box office 291 4 million 1 What Lies Beneath was theatrically released on July 21 2000 by DreamWorks Pictures and 20th Century Fox It received generally mixed reviews with critics praising Pfeiffer s performance but criticizing the screenplay However the film was a box office success grossing 291 4 million worldwide against a production budget of 100 million becoming the tenth highest grossing film of the year What Lies Beneath was nominated for the Saturn Award for Best Horror Film at the 27th Saturn Awards in addition to nominations for Zemeckis and Pfeiffer for Best Director and Best Actress respectively At the 7th Blockbuster Entertainment Awards Ford and Pfeiffer won Favorite Actor Suspense and Favorite Actress Suspense and Scarwid was nominated for Favorite Supporting Actress Suspense In 2002 a Bollywood remake titled Raaz was released Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical response 4 3 Accolades 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksPlot EditFormer cellist Claire Spencer and her husband Norman an accomplished scientist and professor live a quiet life at their lakeside home in Vermont Their relationship is strained particularly after Claire s daughter Caitlin leaves for college Claire notices their new neighbors Mary and Warren Feur have a volatile relationship and after Mary is unseen for several days suspects Warren may have killed her Claire believes she sees a woman s body in the lake and senses an unseen presence in the house A framed article about Norman falls off his desk and shatters leading Claire to discover an odd key inside a vent She finds her bathtub mysteriously filled and sees another woman s reflection in the water Confiding in a psychiatrist Claire and her mystic friend Jody hold a failed seance She finds the bathtub filled again with the message You know written on the steamy mirror while her computer inexplicably types the initials MEF Convinced she is haunted by Mary s ghost Claire confronts Warren but Mary is alive and well explaining that she went to stay with her mother in Providence after a fight with Warren On the back of Norman s article Claire finds a story about a missing woman named Madison Elizabeth Frank MEF She tracks down Madison s mother and visits her daughter s bedroom where she steals a lock of Madison s hair and notices a photo of her wearing an unusual necklace Performing a ritual from a book Claire attempts to conjure Madison Seemingly possessed by her spirit she aggressively seduces Norman shocking him by speaking as Madison until she drops the lock of hair Becoming herself again Claire recalls a repressed memory about Norman s affair with a student Madison which he admits happened during a rough patch in their marriage Claire leaves to spend the night with Jody who reveals that a year earlier she saw Norman arguing with a woman at a cafe in Adamant a nearby town Returning home Claire finds Norman unconscious in the tub which he assures her was an accident and not a suicide attempt He tells her that an unstable Madison confronted him at home when he ended their affair but denies killing her Standing on the dock with Madison s hair Claire is pulled into the lake by an unseen force spotting a jewelry box matching Madison s necklace Norman pulls her to safety and together they burn the lock of hair Claire s suspicions return when Norman claims not to know the cafe in Adamant where she sees the same necklace and jewelry box at a nearby shop Recovering the box from the lake and unlocking it with the key from Norman s office she finds Madison s necklace inside She confronts Norman who says that he came home to find Madison had killed herself in desperation he pushed her car into the lake with her body inside Norman agrees to confess and calls the police but Claire discovers he dialed 411 instead He paralyzes her with halothane admitting that he murdered Madison when she threatened to expose their affair to the dean Norman places Claire in the bathtub filling it with water to stage her suicide As he removes Madison s necklace from Claire s neck her face contorts into Madison s corpse and he jerks back smashing his head on the sink and knocking him unconscious As the water level rises Claire recovers enough to partially close the tap and dislodge the stopper barely surviving drowning She flees in Norman s truck but he climbs on and attacks her They crash into the lake dislodging Madison s car and her body while Norman tries to drown Claire Madison grabs Norman allowing Claire to escape as Norman drowns and Madison s ghost drifts away Later that winter Claire places a rose on Madison s grave Cast EditMichelle Pfeiffer as Claire Spencer Norman s wife Harrison Ford as Dr Norman Spencer a successful college professor and scientist Claire s second husband Diana Scarwid as Jody a mystic and Claire s best friend Miranda Otto as Mary Feur Norman and Claire s neighbor James Remar as Warren Feur Norman and Claire s neighbor and Mary s husband Katharine Towne as Caitlin Spencer Claire s daughter and Norman s stepdaughter Ray Baker as Dr Stan Powell Joe Morton as Dr Drayton a therapist whom Claire visits upon Norman s urging Amber Valletta as Madison Elizabeth Frank a murdered young woman with whom Norman has had an affair Wendy Crewson as ElenaProduction EditDocumentary filmmaker Sarah Kernochan had adapted a personal experience with the paranormal as a script treatment featuring a retirement aged couple dealing with restless but compassionate spirits DreamWorks commissioned a rewrite from actor writer Clark Gregg This script was later delivered in 1998 by Steven Spielberg himself to his director friend Robert Zemeckis 2 who had signed a deal for DreamWorks to distribute the films of newly founded production company ImageMovers and announced interest in doing a thriller film 3 Harrison Ford then signed to star on the film even agreeing to clear room in his schedule for the project 4 Michelle Pfeiffer then followed as DreamWorks started to deal with 20th Century Fox regarding the film s distribution 5 Ford and Pfeiffer were Zemeckis first and only choices for the lead roles 3 Fox agreed to distribute both What Lies Beneath and Zemeckis other project Cast Away with the thriller having DreamWorks doing the domestic distribution and Fox the international one 6 Zemeckis filmed What Lies Beneath while Cast Away was shut down to allow Tom Hanks to lose weight and grow a beard for his character s development 7 As Gregg had to remain with production for rewrites he had to decline Aaron Sorkin s offer to read for a major role in Sports Night though Sorkin would later write for Gregg a minor role in the final episodes of the series 8 Reception EditBox office Edit What Lies Beneath opened in 2 813 theaters in North America and grossed 29 702 959 for an average of 10 559 per theater It reached the number one spot at the box office upon opening beating X Men 9 The film ended up earning 155 464 351 domestically and 135 956 000 internationally for a total of 291 420 351 worldwide close to triple its production budget of 100 million 1 Critical response Edit On Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 47 based on 126 reviews with an average rating of 5 50 10 The site s critics consensus reads Robert Zemeckis is unable to salvage an uncompelling and unoriginal film 10 Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 51 out of 100 based on 35 critics indicating mixed or average reviews 11 Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of B on an A to F scale 12 The New York Times wrote that at the start Zemeckis zaps us with quick glib scares just to show he still knows how but his heart isn t in this kind of material anymore His reflexes are a little slow 13 The Los Angeles Times called it spooky with a polished kind of creepiness added in What Lies Beneath nevertheless feels more planned than passionate scary at points but unconvincing overall 14 Roger Ebert awarded the film 2 out of 4 stars writing for the Chicago Sun Times Lacking a smarter screenplay it milks the genuine skills of its actors and director for more than it deserves and then runs off the rails in an ending more laughable than scary Along the way yes there are some good moments 15 16 Time Out thought that after a slow build that at times makes every hair stand on end Zemeckis rolls out every thriller cliche there is A pity because until then it s a smart realistically staged adult oriented and extraordinarily effective domestic chiller 17 Empire wrote The biggest surprise is perhaps that what emerges is no masterpiece but a semi sophisticated shocker playfully homaging Hitchcock like a mechanical masterclass in doing genre The first hour is great fun It s an enjoyably giddy ride certainly but once you re back from the edge of your seat you realise most of the creaks and groans are from the decomposing script 18 Michelle Pfeiffer received some positive notice for her performance Roger Ebert called her convincing and sympathetic 15 In his review Ebert said that he felt the problem with Zemeckis desire to direct a Hitchcockian film What Lies Beneath contains several musical visual and plot references to Psycho and Vertigo among other Hitchcock films was Zemeckis decision to involve the supernatural a device Ebert felt Alfred Hitchcock himself would never have done 15 Accolades Edit Award Category Subject ResultASCAP Award Top Box Office Films Alan Silvestri WonBlockbuster Entertainment Awards 19 Favorite Actor Suspense Harrison Ford WonFavorite Actress Suspense Michelle Pfeiffer WonFavorite Supporting Actress Suspense Diana Scarwid NominatedGolden Trailer Award Best Horror Thriller NominatedNastro d Argento Silver Ribbon for Best Male Dubbing Michele Gammino WonSaturn Award 19 Best Horror Film Jack Rapke NominatedSteve Starkey NominatedRobert Zemeckis NominatedBest Director NominatedBest Actress Michelle Pfeiffer NominatedSee also EditList of ghost filmsReferences Edit a b c What Lies Beneath 2000 Box Office Mojo Box Office Mojo Retrieved October 31 2022 Sloane Judy Starburst magazine issue 268 What Lies Beneath director interview www visimag com a b What Lies Beneath 2000 Production Notes Press release 20th Century Fox 2000 Beneath pairs Ford Zemeckis D Onofrio nabs Abbie Variety June 4 1998 Fleming Michael October 16 1998 Pfeiffer joins Ford in What Variety Petrikin Chris October 14 1998 Pairing for Zemeckis Variety Kehr Dave December 17 2000 Cast Away Director Defies Categorizing The New York Times p 15 Adams Erik September 13 2011 Clark Gregg The A V Club The Onion Retrieved October 31 2022 Harrigan Tom July 26 2000 What Lies Beneath opens in top spot X men drops to second The News amp Observer Associated Press p 49 Retrieved September 21 2022 via Newspapers com What Lies Beneath Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Retrieved April 5 2019 What Lies Beneath reviews Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved December 26 2009 CinemaScore cinemascore com Mitchell Elvis July 21 2000 What Lies Beneath If Only Her Husband Hadn t Made That Horrible Mistake The New York Times Turan Kenneth July 21 2000 What Lies Beneath MOVIE REVIEW Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on July 27 2010 Retrieved July 27 2010 a b c Ebert Roger July 21 2000 What Lies Beneath rogerebert com Reviews Chicago Sun Times Retrieved December 25 2021 Ebert Roger July 21 2000 What Lies Beneath RogerEbert com Retrieved April 15 2022 What Lies Beneath Review Film Time Out Review of What Lies Beneath Empire a b What Lies Beneath 2000 Awards IMDb Retrieved December 26 2009 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to What Lies Beneath What Lies Beneath at IMDb What Lies Beneath at AllMovie What Lies Beneath at Box Office Mojo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title What Lies Beneath amp oldid 1160036748, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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