--- In [email protected], off_world_beings 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], Bhairitu <noozguru@> wrote:
> >
> > I saw "Lady in the Water" which is M. Night Shyamalan's latest 
film 
> > yesterday afternoon.  Unfortunately I didn't find the film that 
good 
> and 
> > agree with some of the reviewers such as S.F. Chronicle's Mick 
> LaSalle 
> > (who I often don't agree with).  In fact I  think his best film 
thus 
> far 
> > has been "The Sixth Sense." >>.

I totally agree with regard to Sixth Sense.

I use filmcritic.com and find that I in sync with his taste
and opinions.  3 stars to "Lady in the Water" :


http://filmcritic.com/misc/emporium.nsf/84dbbfa4d710144986256c290016f
76e/e8b3a737cc1897ca882571b000096a19?OpenDocument

Lady in the Water /  David Thomas
"Is it possible for a film to be cheesy and interesting all at once? 
That's the question posed by M. Night Shyamalan's latest effort, 
Lady in the Water, a film that manages to throw in enough twists and 
turns to keep you engaged until the last schmaltzy drop.

The film begins, appropriately enough, with a fable. A cave-painting 
style animation lays the groundwork for the fairy tale that's about 
to play out in a sleepy apartment complex called The Cove. After 
this ultimately unnecessary introduction, we meet Cleveland Heep 
(Paul Giamatti), caretaker of the complex, and a gaggle of eccentric 
residents. One night Cleveland spies someone in the residential pool 
who isn't supposed to be there. Slipping and falling in, he's saved 
from drowning by the mysterious stranger, a young woman named Story 
(Bryce Dallas Howard). Like its heart, the film wears its post-
modernism on its sleeve.

Through a legend meted out in fits and starts by an elderly, vaguely 
stereotypical Chinese woman and her daughter, Cleveland learns that 
this woman is, in fact, a narf, which is not, as one might suspect, 
some kind of undercover DEA pixie, but is instead a water nymph 
meant to bring great change and awakening and yadda, yadda, yadda. 
But before you can say "ancient Chinese secret," Cleveland finds out 
that there are monsters in this legend, as well, and must spend the 
rest of the film trying to negotiate safe passage home for Story by 
enlisting help from the motley tenants.

Finding out who these helpers are and just how they will help is 
part of the fun and frustration of the film. Although Shyamalan 
manages to find neat and clever ways to fit them into his puzzle, 
the puzzle itself seems to be manufactured as the film progresses. 
Every ten or fifteen minutes, the plot stops so that the woman and 
her daughter can, in often clumsy exposition, reveal another part of 
the myth that they inexplicably left out before. A game like this is 
much less fun if it seems like the rules are just being made up as 
you go along.

At the same time, the elements that make for any good Shyamalan film 
are here. There are very few directors (Spielberg and Scorsese among 
them) who virtually shot for shot find the most interesting place to 
put the camera, and Shyamalan is one. He also knows how to cast a 
film, and Giamatti's performance here ranks easily with Willis' in 
The Sixth Sense or Gibson's in Signs. In what should be one of the 
film's most saccharine moments, he delivers a nearly tear-worthy 
speech.

Which brings us, inevitably, to the cheese. Being a fairy tale, Lady 
in the Water is susceptible to moments of artifice, and with lines 
like "The great Elon is coming," it can be hard not to chuckle. On 
the other hand, writers like Joss Whedon manage to bring the 
fanciful into the modern without taking the viewer out of the moment 
(and it would be very interesting to see him write and Shyamalan 
direct a project like this).

There is maybe half of a great film here. In many ways, this is 
Shyamalan's Close Encounters, in which in an ordinary man discovers 
he's living in an extraordinary world. And many of the themes of 
faith, purpose, and self-discovery explored in Signs and The Sixth 
Sense are all touched upon here, but are posited in a far less 
convincing way. Lady in the Water is not without its magical 
moments, but you really have to want them.
"






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