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Aussi profond que l'océan

Original title: The Deep End of the Ocean
  • 1999
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
23K
YOUR RATING
Michelle Pfeiffer in Aussi profond que l'océan (1999)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer0:31
1 Video
99+ Photos
Drama

A family's reaction when Ben, the youngest son, is kidnapped and then found nine years later living in the same town where his family had just moved.A family's reaction when Ben, the youngest son, is kidnapped and then found nine years later living in the same town where his family had just moved.A family's reaction when Ben, the youngest son, is kidnapped and then found nine years later living in the same town where his family had just moved.

  • Director
    • Ulu Grosbard
  • Writers
    • Jacquelyn Mitchard
    • Stephen Schiff
  • Stars
    • Michelle Pfeiffer
    • Treat Williams
    • Whoopi Goldberg
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    23K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ulu Grosbard
    • Writers
      • Jacquelyn Mitchard
      • Stephen Schiff
    • Stars
      • Michelle Pfeiffer
      • Treat Williams
      • Whoopi Goldberg
    • 143User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
    • 45Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 0:31
    Official Trailer

    Photos144

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    Top cast52

    Edit
    Michelle Pfeiffer
    Michelle Pfeiffer
    • Beth
    Treat Williams
    Treat Williams
    • Pat
    Whoopi Goldberg
    Whoopi Goldberg
    • Candy
    Jonathan Jackson
    Jonathan Jackson
    • Vincent (age 16)
    Cory Buck
    Cory Buck
    • Vincent (age 7)
    Ryan Merriman
    Ryan Merriman
    • Sam
    Alexa PenaVega
    Alexa PenaVega
    • Kerry (age 9)
    • (as Alexa Vega)
    Michael McGrady
    Michael McGrady
    • Jimmy Daugherty
    Brenda Strong
    Brenda Strong
    • Ellen
    Michael McElroy
    • Ben
    Tony Musante
    Tony Musante
    • Angelo
    Rose Gregorio
    • Rosie
    John Kapelos
    John Kapelos
    • George
    Lucinda Jenney
    Lucinda Jenney
    • Laurie
    John Roselius
    John Roselius
    • Bastokovich
    K.K. Dodds
    K.K. Dodds
    • Theresa
    Joey Simmrin
    • Schaffer
    Holly Towne
    • Martha
    • Director
      • Ulu Grosbard
    • Writers
      • Jacquelyn Mitchard
      • Stephen Schiff
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews143

    6.322.6K
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    Featured reviews

    7raymond-15

    Michelle Pfeiffer looks great and plays her role with passion

    Here we have a story that starts slowly but develops into a tense emotional drama. Michelle Pfeiffer is not only nice to look at but she plays the role of a frantic mother in search of her abducted 3-year old with great passion and at times hysteria. Whoopi Goldberg who plays the part of top policewoman in charge of investigation gives a moving sympathetic performance. What I greatly admire in this actor is the clear enunciation of her speech. I missed not a word delivered with clarity and depth of meaning. The film explores the feelings of children and parents caught up in the problems associated with child adoptions. Where does this baby belong: with his biological mother or his adopted father? It's an interesting film because the problem is real and with us to-day. The ending may surprise you.
    cinemel

    Satisfying, intense emotional drama

    Ulu Grosbard has directed this fine adult drama adapted from the best-selling novel by Jacquelyn Mitchard. Michelle Pfeiffer and Treat Williams portray Beth and Pat Cappadora, parents of three youngsters. On a trip to her high school reunion, Beth loses her three year old son in a busy hotel lobby. The boy is absent from the family for nine years, after which he is surprisingly returned to his birth family. This is just the bare bones of the plot. However, it is the touching performances of all of the principals which transcend the television movie-of-the-week sound of the plot.

    Michelle Pfeiffer adds another moving performance to her gallery of roles. If the film had been released in the fall of 1998, as was originally planned, she might have had an Academy Award nomination. Treat Williams' role is less defined, but it is alway a pleasure to watch this under-used and under-rated actor. However, it is Jonathan Jackson and Ryan Merriman as the oldest son and the lost boy who make this such an emotionally satisfying drama. Whoopi Goldberg adds some needed humor to the serious proceedings as the detective assigned to the case.

    Stephen Schiff, writer for the New Yorker, has done a lean adaptation of the novel. Grosbard has unpretentiously directed this fine cast. "The Deep End of the Ocean" is one of the best contemporary dramas to come along in quite a while.
    Tisha-McGhee

    Decent, but the book is better...

    I think that I would have liked this movie a LOT more if I'd never read the book! If anyone of you have the chance, READ the book! Oh, it's AWESOME!!! In my opinion, the movie left out some stuff that would have made it a LOT more interesting!!! Some people seem to think that parts of the movie are unrealistic, but when you read the book and get all the detail and everything, it starts to become a lot more believable than it is in the movie. Plus, the older brother has a MUCH larger role in the book, which makes more sense than how they protrayed him in the movie. Anyway, I guess you can tell, what I'm trying to say is, READ THE BOOK!!!! :-)
    7Gunnar_Runar_Ingibjargarson

    See this, Great movie!

    Beth Cappadora (Michelle Pfeiffer) is at her high school reunion when her 3-year-old son disappears from his brother's care. The little boy never turns up, and the family has to deal with the devastating guilt and grief that goes along with it. Nine years later, the family has relocated to Chicago. By a sheer fluke, the kid turns up, living no more than two blocks away. The authorities swoop down and return the kid to his biological parents, but things are far from being that simple. The boy grew up around what he has called his father, while his new family are strangers to him; the older son, now a teenager, has brushes with the law and behavioral problems. His adjustment to his lost brother is complicated by normal teenage churlishness, and the dad (Treat Williams) seems to expect everything to fall into place as though the family had been intact all along. It's a tightrope routine for actors in a story like this, being careful not to chew the scenery while at the same time not being too flaccid or understated. For the most part, the members of the cast deal well with the emotional complexity of their roles. Though the story stretches credulity, weirder things do happen in the real world. The family's pain for the first half of the film is certainly credible, though the second half almost seems like a different movie. Whoopi Goldberg plays the detective assigned to the case; casting her is a bit of a stretch, but she makes it work. All in all, a decent three-honky movie in the vein of Ordinary People.
    bob the moo

    A TV movie with spit, polish and a well-known cast

    Beth Cappadora is at a reunion in a hotel when her middle child of three goes missing. At first the search is informal but it grows increasingly frantic and official as they realise that Ben has been taken by somebody. The family never fully recovers and carry the scars for years. Nine years later the family have moved to Chicago to start a new life. When Beth has a local boy come to the block to cut the grass, she believes that he must be Ben because her looks just like him despite the age. The police recover Ben but is it fair to take him away from the people Ben now considers his family?

    The plot summary gives the impression that this is just a standard weepy that would easily screen on a weekday afternoon. However the presence of a couple of well known names in the cast list suggests that this film will give the subject a more serious approach that acts more as drama than weepy. Partly the latter is true but not 100%, and the film is still essentially a sort of weepy that has a control of it's emotions and is actually quite stable but not to the point where it is an engaging debate.

    The material should be thought provoking but it isn't really. What I thought would be the main thrust of the film was really just mentioned in the final 20 minutes and it was not only obvious that it was coming but it was quite logically dealt with without real emotion - this is not a `Sophie's Choice' situation but something quite lacking. The start of the film is OK but it deals with the loss too easily and I never got overwhelmed with the emotions the family must feel. Towards the end the film does a good job looking at the effects the whole thing has had on the other son's character but even this lacks an emotional punch.

    The cast are good on paper but they seem strangely stilted. Pfeiffer is a good actress who sadly doesn't seem to get as much good work as she gets older. Here she tries hard but can't get across what her character must be feeling inside. Williams is an OK support for her and does OK. Jackson is quite good and his character became more interesting to me than the return of Ben itself. Goldberg hangs around but attempts to give her a character through one line of dialogue about her sexuality and security in her job are so out of the blue that I was left wondering where it came from.

    Overall this is not a weepy because it aims higher than that and doesn't wrench all the emotion out of every scene to get the audience. However it doesn't aim high enough or reach the level where it is emotional or thought provoking, the end result being an interesting film that is a notch above the level of daytime TV weepy but not as worthy or moving as it wants to be.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      After Pat and Beth have a fight (following Ben's disappearance), Pat goes for a ride in his car and young Vincent comes along to smooth the waters. In his hand, he plays with a cassette tape. It is the soundtrack to Grease 2 (1982), which starred Michelle Pfeiffer.
    • Goofs
      When Beth is in Candy's office at the police station, Candy is standing at her desk with her back to an outside window. The scene is cut about halfway through to eliminate a line that Candy must have said. The result of the cut, though, is that people walking outside (who you see through the window) appear to jump forward 10 feet or so.
    • Quotes

      Candy Bliss: This is a nice imitation of a life you've got here.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: 8mm/The Other Sister/Just the Ticket/200 Cigarettes/Eight Days a Week (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Energy
      Written by Michael Knott

      Performed by Bomb Bay Babies

      Courtesy of Windswept Pacific Entertainment

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 5, 1999 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El lado profundo del mar
    • Filming locations
      • Foxborough, Massachusetts, USA(Shot pans down on a white church)
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Mandalay Entertainment
      • Via Rosa Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $38,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $13,898,649
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,558,400
      • Mar 14, 1999
    • Gross worldwide
      • $28,121,100
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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