| | | Features: DVD, Pan and Scan (TV Format), Aspect Ratio 1.33:1, Dolby Digital (5.1) DTS, Audio Commentary, Documentary. Deleted Scenes. Featurette, Interviews, English, Spanish Subtitled, Based on true events, Open Water follows an American couple, Daniel and Susan (Daniel Travis and Blanchard Ryan) on an island vacation. Upon arrival at their hotel, we learn that Daniel and Susan's relationship is under strain from their workaholic lifestyles, and they need a vacation even more than they realized. The next morning the loving and rested couple, certified scuba divers, board a local dive boat for an underwater tour of the reef. The boat is crowded with other vacationers, and due to a series of innocent miscommunications and a distracted crew, the couple is, after only 40 minutes or so underwater, accidently left behind. What follows is the story of their ordeal: cold, alone and miles from land, the couple is adrift in shark-infested water.
 Editor's Note
 Proving that the power of imagination is much more terrifying than what meets the eye, OPEN WATER is Chris Kentis's intensely realistic deep-sea drama, "based on true events." The film's leering digital video camera allows viewers to float like shark-bait, stranded in the middle of the ocean with Susan and Daniel (Blanchard Ryan and Daniel Travis), a bickering married couple who have just been abandoned by their scuba-diving boat in the Caribbean. As the tension escalates between the troubled twosome--who are cold, tired, dehydrated, and more than a little scared--the tragedy of the situation is exacerbated by a series of very unfortunate conditions. While a current sweeps them far from where the boat left them, and deep dark clouds pass menacingly overhead, the sea-life just below the surface is clearly not of the friendly variety. Yes, those are real sharks, folks. Meanwhile, Daniel, who watched Shark Week on television, is no stranger to the perils at hand, and finds himself battling shock. Minutes pass like hours, with the light shifting on the water and the constant motion of the waves adding to this unfathomable nightmare. The shimmering blues of wide expanses of sea are offset by dazzling underwater photography, yet the mood remains bleak. And while no special effects, abrupt developments, or abrasive gore are present here, the film instills such fear that viewers will be frozen awaiting the surprising conclusion. A day at the beach will never be quite the same again.
| Features | Full Screen Presentation |  | Scene Selection |  | Subtitles: English, Spanish |  | Theatrical Trailer |  | Director And Producer Commentary |  | Interactive Menus |  | Interviews with Cast & Crew |  | Behind the scenes 'making of' documentary |  | Commentary by Cast, Director and Producer |  | Deleted Scenes |  | Deconstructing the Shark Myth: A Shark Conservation Piece |  | On the High Seas: The unexpected journey from small film concept to big cinema success |  | Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1, DTS 6.1 |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Lions Gate |
 | Release Date: 2/14/2006 |
 | Running Time: 81 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 2004 |  | Catalog ID: 17151 |  | UPC: 00031398171515 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English |  | Video: Color |
| Cast & Crew
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| | Professional Reviews | Entertainment Weekly "OPEN WATER becomes a slow and steady descent into pure fear. Kentis has a born filmmaker's instinct for physical detail..." 08/20/2004 p.100-1Movieline's Hollywood Life "The premise is inherently chilling..." 07/01/2004 p.86 Rolling Stone "Kentis never lets up on the tension. You can feel the water, stretching against an unsheltering sky, seep into your bones....Eighty sweat-job minutes of imaginative, jolting suspense." 09/02/2004 p.150 USA Today "The intensity never lets up..." 09/03/2004 p.10E Uncut "The two leads do admirable acting jobs..." 10/01/2004 p.142 Chicago Sun-Times "[The film] exerts a powerful emotional despair that is way beyond scary." 12/24/2004 p.11 |
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