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Lady in the Water

  • 2006
  • T
  • 1h 50min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,5/10
106.726
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Bryce Dallas Howard in Lady in the Water (2006)
Trailer for Lady in the Water
Riproduci trailer1:40
15 video
73 foto
Dark fantasyDrammaFantasiaMisteroThriller

Il custode Cleveland Heep salva quella che pensa sia una ragazza dalla piscina condominiale di cui si occupa. Quando scopre che lei è il personaggio di una favola della buonanotte che sta ce... Leggi tuttoIl custode Cleveland Heep salva quella che pensa sia una ragazza dalla piscina condominiale di cui si occupa. Quando scopre che lei è il personaggio di una favola della buonanotte che sta cercando di tornare a casa, collabora con i condomini per proteggere la sua nuova amica dall... Leggi tuttoIl custode Cleveland Heep salva quella che pensa sia una ragazza dalla piscina condominiale di cui si occupa. Quando scopre che lei è il personaggio di una favola della buonanotte che sta cercando di tornare a casa, collabora con i condomini per proteggere la sua nuova amica dalle creature intente a farla rimanere nel nostro mondo.

  • Regia
    • M. Night Shyamalan
  • Sceneggiatura
    • M. Night Shyamalan
  • Star
    • Paul Giamatti
    • Bryce Dallas Howard
    • Jeffrey Wright
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,5/10
    106.726
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • M. Night Shyamalan
    • Sceneggiatura
      • M. Night Shyamalan
    • Star
      • Paul Giamatti
      • Bryce Dallas Howard
      • Jeffrey Wright
    • 1.1KRecensioni degli utenti
    • 230Recensioni della critica
    • 36Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 10 vittorie e 11 candidature totali

    Video15

    Lady in the Water
    Trailer 1:40
    Lady in the Water
    Lady in the Water
    Trailer 0:31
    Lady in the Water
    Lady in the Water
    Trailer 0:31
    Lady in the Water
    Lady in the Water
    Clip 0:49
    Lady in the Water
    Lady in the Water
    Clip 0:57
    Lady in the Water
    Lady in the Water
    Clip 0:58
    Lady in the Water
    Lady in the Water
    Clip 0:50
    Lady in the Water

    Foto73

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    Visualizza poster
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    + 67
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali52

    Modifica
    Paul Giamatti
    Paul Giamatti
    • Cleveland Heep
    Bryce Dallas Howard
    Bryce Dallas Howard
    • Story
    Jeffrey Wright
    Jeffrey Wright
    • Mr. Dury
    Bob Balaban
    Bob Balaban
    • Harry Farber
    Sarita Choudhury
    Sarita Choudhury
    • Anna Ran
    Cindy Cheung
    Cindy Cheung
    • Young-Soon Choi
    M. Night Shyamalan
    M. Night Shyamalan
    • Vick Ran
    Freddy Rodríguez
    Freddy Rodríguez
    • Reggie
    Bill Irwin
    Bill Irwin
    • Mr. Leeds
    Mary Beth Hurt
    Mary Beth Hurt
    • Mrs. Bell
    Noah Gray-Cabey
    Noah Gray-Cabey
    • Joey Dury
    Joseph D. Reitman
    Joseph D. Reitman
    • Long Haired Smoker
    Jared Harris
    Jared Harris
    • Goatee Smoker
    Grant Monohon
    • Emaciated Smoker
    John Boyd
    John Boyd
    • One-Eyebrow Smoker
    Ethan Cohn
    • Glasses Smoker
    June Kyoto Lu
    June Kyoto Lu
    • Mrs. Choi
    • (as June Kyoko Lu)
    Tovah Feldshuh
    Tovah Feldshuh
    • Mrs. Bubchik
    • Regia
      • M. Night Shyamalan
    • Sceneggiatura
      • M. Night Shyamalan
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti1.1K

    5,5106.7K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    8ava71

    Don't just see it looking for a twist

    After the sixth sense people have been expecting M. Night to shock and amaze them time after time. This is of course impossible. He made signs and the village which had their twists but left the audience with more of an "oh yeah" feeling. More importantly though his movies have become deeper in their actual message, his newest film is no different. if all you want is the amazement of a twist your in for a disappointment. Instead look at this movie for the message of hope it leaves you with, or the humor that abounds, the great acting involved, or even the amazing visual style and suspense. but don't just sit in the theater waiting to be surprised, your just wasting your time and missing the point of a really good movie.
    7ghostofmrpalmer

    Not a great movie, but certainly not as bad as you've heard

    To start off with, I actually liked this movie, and at first I couldn't understand why some many people hated, but upon reflection i can see what some people reacted to so harshly.

    One thing I liked about the film is the simple story, or more accurately, the atmosphere. M. Night has always been better at creating a mood than fleshing out a story, but the premise of Lady in the Water works for me: It about people reacting to a fairy tale happening in real life. This concept probably put a lot of people off, the fact of the matter is this concept hasn't been used a lot (but it has been done before, i.e. Peter Weir's "The Last Wave", a deeper and more philosophical film), and people aren't used to it. Like I said, I liked it, but most of my friends thought it was stupid.

    The main thing that people hated was M. Night's own acting in the film, and on this I agree. He was without a doubt the worst thing in the film. It was a disgusting example of self-indulgence and self-importance, and more than that, he's just a terrible actor and he should stop.

    The one thing that I really had a hard time stomaching was the extended sequences with the party band, Silvertide. They were so awful I wanted to walk out of the movie. Picture a blonde version of The Black Crows with even less talent ripping through and f*(^king up a version of Dylan's "Maggie's farm".

    Those few things aside, the rest of the cast was great, I thought the story was simple and decent enough, the "film critic" part with Bob Balaban was funny, but M. Night was asking for it with that one, and the movie as a whole was entertaining.

    M. Night started out as the new golden boy of Hollywood with "The Sixth Sense", but many have felt he's lost his touch. The truth is he hasn't lost his touch, he just hasn't grown as a director. With "The 6th Sense", "Unbreakable", "Signs", "The Village", and now "The Happening", he keep tilling the same field. it's getting old. "The 6th Sense" was great, mostly because it was fresh, "Unbreakable" was entertaining for me at least due to the comic book references, but "Signs", "The Happening", and especially "The Village" were just plain terrible. "Lady In The Water" was a nice diversion from his formula, but it's getting tired. Perhaps M. Night would benefit from directing a script written by someone else, and not built around some moronic "twist" at the end, and most definitely not acting in it.
    8cherold

    I don't care what anyone else says, I like this a lot

    Wow, people sure do hate this movie. I don't understand why it has engendered such hostility. I mean, I can see problems in the movie that people could object to, but people are calling this the worst movie in years and the like, and I find that completely out of proportion.

    So here's what I think: Direction Shyamalan has made movies before featuring ostensible everyman types, but this time he has moved away from Hollywood-everyman to a genuine everyman by casting Paul Giamatti as a sad sack building super. Giamatti is likable and quite funny, and the movie starts off with a breezy humor that instantly made me like it.

    There are problems when the plot kicks in with the appearance of a young woman named Story. It turns out she might be a creature called a narf from a Chinese fairytale, so the first problem is, narf isn't remotely Chinese-sounding.

    Still, I liked the way the movie builds, as Giamatti tries to help her and discovers neighborliness and credulity aren't dead. I enjoy the movie's optimism about people even if I don't share in it, and I like the way he spreads his typical revelations throughout instead of sticking them all at the end.

    While people have claimed the story is slow, I thought it was well paced. And while I can admit to many of the criticized plot holes, I just don't care; it had the feel of a little fairy tale of the modern age, which I found quite charming. And the movie is frequently amusing, which counts for a lot with me.

    My main criticism is that Lady in the Water would be a much better film with two minutes taken out. Shyamalan decided to savage movie critics, apparently stung by the deserved panning of The Village (which inexplicably received more positive criticism than this film). That's fine in itself, but in one scene Shyamalan simply steps outside of the movie to make fun of the critic. In itself it's a rather amusing scene, but you don't carefully create an atmosphere and encourage a suspension of disbelief and then just shock the audience into the real world in a petty act of vengeance. Shyamalan ignores one of the fundamental rules of film making; if any scene, even if it's the best scene in the film, takes away from the whole, you cut it. I'm very disappointed in Shamalyan for allowing his bitterness to trump his common sense.

    It's a small thing, and I won't say it ruined the movie, but it was jarring. And perhaps that's part of why the reviews are so bad, because that scene made people drifting along on the movie's logic snap awake and start thinking about everything that was wrong. Although that's just a theory. Anyway, cut out that two minutes and it would be a considerable improvement.

    As for people complaining the movie isn't that scary, well, I don't think it was trying to be that scary. I do think the director's intent is more important than what he's done in other movies. Just because he usually tries to scare us doesn't mean he is this time; I think he was just going for some mild suspense.

    Anyway, while others are saying Shyamalan has lost it, but for me he's been consistent; one good movie, one bad one. Sixth Sense (great), Unbreakable (tedious, but interesting ending), Signs (good movie, tremendous ending), The Village (wretched) and Lady in the Water (funny and charming).

    So I don't have high hopes for the next one, but this one was quite enjoyable.
    8the_scandal_cha

    I know I am in the minority here, but I enjoyed it

    First off, I can see why this film is going to be a box-office flop and why critics and audiences alike will not like it. I, who usually disagrees with most audiences, at least, thoroughly enjoyed this film. The storyline itself is rather ridiculous, I must say. Some girl shows up in a pool? She's a what-a narf? I went into the movie thinking I would hate it, but I came out knowing that I had seen a work of art. That's right. It was art.

    First of all, it's a good family film, with enough tense moments to keep you watching, and enough laugh-out-loud moments to calm you down. It was refreshing for once to see a film with good, clean humour. The dialogue was not necessarily hilarious, but the actors, especially Paul Giamatti (Cleveland) delivered the lines extremely well.

    The acting was tremendously well done also. Paul Giamatti is always fantastic, and while Bryce Dallas Howard seemed to act in the same manner as she did in The Village, she was still convincing. The ensemble cast worked well together. Some might bash M. Night for casting himself in a not-so-cameo role, but he proved that he can actually act! No, his performance will not win him an Oscar, nor should it, but I think there is definite talent there. I hope to see him in bigger roles, in films not his own.

    The plot had many twists, maybe too many, but no matter. I kept trying to guess what was going to happen, but it I was always wrong. It was quite interesting.

    What most made this film a work of art was the directing. M. Night has a rare talent that will go completely under the radar for this film because no one will see it. The camera angles were inventive-that's right, inventive. I may be one of the few who actually cares about camera angles and how a scene looks, but it looked great. The final product was polished.

    I truly believe this film is M. Night's best work. He made the story up himself, wrote a screenplay that made us laugh, smile, cringe, and jump just a little, and directed a great ensemble cast including himself. Quite a feat.

    So before everyone starts ranting about how stupid the storyline is or how "so-not-scary" the film is, just appreciate the uniqueness of the film, and remember what makes this film good. Forget the crazy story. It's everything else!
    rooprect

    M. Night Shyamalan writes a children's book

    It might sound like a joke, that the master of modern macabre, the man who wove such disturbingly morbid tales like "The Sixth Sense", would write a children's book. But he did. And that's the key to understanding and enjoying this movie.

    Sometime after the births of his 3 daughters, Shyamalan found himself, as all parents do, ad-libbing a bedtime story to entertain his younguns. It began as a fairytale set in the family's back yard, weaving creative dimensions around common things like the swimming pool, the sprinklers, the tall grass, etc. Who knows how many such stories were rejected by his toughest critics (his daughters), but this one persisted and became a family favorite. Over time & retelling, he refined it, gave it more depth and got it to the point where he realized that this would make a great children's book like the ones he himself grew up on: "Where the Wild Things Are", "The Giving Tree" and such. Lo & behold, he did it.

    Where YOUR story begins is that you're considering whether to watch this movie. "Lady in the Water" (the movie) was intended to accompany the book, not as a cinematic replacement but rather as a way to launch the book. As he says on the DVD interviews, this movie is like a "big brother" to the book, introducing it to the world and then allowing the book to flourish on its own in the years to come as, he hopes, a more enduring work of art.

    Therefore, this film is NOT some adult story disguised as a fairytale, not like the darkly humorous "Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory" (1971) or the bitingly satirical "Edward Scissorhands" (1990) or the very complex & symbolic "Pan's Labyrinth" (2006). No, "Lady in the Water" is a simple, sweet children's story with perhaps a salty coating for adults, but inside it's a children's story nonetheless.

    So you're sitting there thinking, "Ok then why is it rated PG-13 instead of G? And why does the trailer show a lot of dark, brooding and creepy shots like in Shyamalan's suspense flicks?" Well, I agree that it's a weird way to present a children's story, but I figure it's Shyamalan's way of reaching out to the adults who might end up reading the book to their kids. The movie does have spots of great acidic humor as only adults will understand. It has moments of violence and frightening visuals. There are some oblique references to pot smoking. And it has a chick who's basically naked through the entire movie (nothing is shown explicitly, but nudity is implied well enough). However, the core story remains very sweet and children's-booky. And that may disappoint many adults who are expecting something more complicated or challenging.

    My advice to adults would be to focus not on the plot but instead on the characters. The characters are very well crafted, full of unspoken depth and some with a profound sorrow that's out of place in fairy tales. Paul Giamatti plays the lovable, dorky maintenance guy at the center of the story, but through his excellent performance in brief moments we see that his is deeply haunted by an unspeakable terror in his past. Similarly, Shyamalan himself makes a significant appearance as a secondary character who is haunted by an equally disturbing future. Another character, who only has about 2 lines in the movie, is seen glaring at the world with utter contempt & cynicism--perhaps someone who is haunted by the present. These subtle things are not essential to the fairytale, but they add tremendous characterization for those of us who aren't satisfied with a simple fairytale written for kids.

    Oh, I forgot the absolute best character, Bob Balaban who plays a comically arrogant, jaded, cynical film critic who insists that there is no originality left, and all stories are predictable to a fault. He goes so far as to start predicting how his own role in "Lady in the Water" will play out, comically chipping away at the proverbial 4th wall which separates fictional characters from us, the audience. His big scene toward the end of the movie had me absolutely howling.

    So there you have it. "Lady in the Water" will certainly not be everyone's cup of tea, but it presents something I've never seen before: a genuine fairytale, perhaps as seen through the eyes of an adult, but still unmistakably written for kids. It's sort of like attending a puppet show where, occasionally the sweaty puppeteer lifts up the curtain and asks someone to get him another beer. I can't think of any other way to describe it.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      The reason for the film's $70 million production budget, despite being set in one location, was because the apartment complex and the pool were built for the film. Some of this film was shot in Levittown, Pennsylvania at a Jacobson logistics warehouse site (director M. Night Shyamalan had committed to using filming locations in Pennsylvania). The set, built on the warehouse site, includes the apartment complex and a half city block of row houses. Occasional footage was shot inside the overflow area of the warehouse. Most of the filming was completed after Jacobson work hours.
    • Blooper
      (at around 32 mins) When he sees Vick's book "The Cookbook," Cleveland Heep says to himself, "This is s-s-s-s-silly." Stutterers often do not have a stammer when talking to themselves; they stutter primarily when talking to other people. However, Cleveland's stutter is a symptom of Post-traumatic Stress, in which case the stutter typically remains constant regardless of social situation until the stress is dealt with.
    • Citazioni

      Story: [holding Cleveland's journal] Your thoughts are very sad. Most are of one night. A night a man entered your home when you were not there. He stole many things and killed your wife and children. That is when you stopped being happy. You were a doctor. I am very sorry for you. You believe you have no purpose. You help all that live here.

      Cleveland Heep: Anybody can do this job, Story.

      Story: You have a purpose. All beings have a purpose.

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      After the movie has ended, and all of the credits have scrolled, there appears the following dedication from M. Night Shyamalan: "To my daughters, I'll tell you this story one more time. But then go to bed."
    • Connessioni
      Featured in HBO First Look: Lady in the Water (2006)
    • Colonne sonore
      El Cayuco
      Written by Tito Puente

      Performed by Mambo All-Stars

      Courtesy of Peer-Southern Productions, Inc.

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    • Is the story here actually based on a Chinese folk tale?
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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 29 settembre 2006 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Warner Bros (France)
      • Warner Bros. (Spain)
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • La dama en el agua
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Levittown, Pennsylvania, Stati Uniti
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Warner Bros.
      • Blinding Edge Pictures
      • Legendary Entertainment
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 70.000.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 42.285.169 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 18.044.396 USD
      • 23 lug 2006
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 72.785.169 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 50min(110 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • SDDS
      • Dolby Digital EX
      • DTS-ES
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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