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The Lady in the Water: A Bedtime Story by M. Night Shyamalan

By Mark Whittington, published Aug 07, 2006
Published Content: 689  Total Views: 609,484  Favorited By: 36 CPs
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Rating: 3.0 of 5
In M. Night Shyamalan’s The Lady in the Water, a nebbish, stuttering, very sad apartment superintendent named Cleveland Heep, played by Paul Giamantti, discovers a girl named Story, played by Bryce Dallas Howard, swimming after hours in the apartment pool. It turns out that Story is a kind of water nymph called a Narf.

Story is in the apartment pool for a reason. She needs to contact her human “vessel” in order to help him to fulfill his destiny. Then she has to return to her home, the “Blue World”, while avoiding being eaten by a grassy, horror of a creature called a “Scrunt.” One can never accuse M. Night Shyamalan of following standard Hollywood formula. He is not known as the new age Hitchcock for nothing.

The strength of The Lady in the Water does not lay in it’s story, which seems to be forced and filled with holes if one examines it too closely, but in the characters. Heep has to rally help from some of the many colorful residents of the apartment complex in order to help Story make it home. These include a cat lady played by Mary Beth Hurt, a puzzle aficionado played by Jeffrey Wright, a young dreamer with writers block played by M. Night Shyamalan himself, a bodybuilder who has developed only one side of his body played by Freddy Rodríguez and an acerbic film and book critic played by Bob Balaban. 

My personal favorite, though, is Yong-Soon Choy, played with exuberance by Cindy Cheung. Choy is a much too modern and Americanized Chinese American student to suit her more traditional mother. They are always having the usual mother-daughter spats in Chinese while Heep looks on bemused. But it is she who relates the story of the Narf which, while is a mythology made up by M. Night Shyamalan, is supposed to be Chinese in origin.

One of the reasons that the story seems lacking is that everybody in it seem to realize that they are in a story. The trick is to find out ones part in it. This is the conceit of M. Night Shyamalan’s The Lady in the Water. It doesn’t quite work, though.

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The original point of story's visit was to inspire the writer to finish his book, because it would lead to important changes in the future, and the characters wanted to help like that because in a way they were hard wired to behave that way. Each of their roles was built into them, and in the case of Mr Heep, he used to be a doctor and he *SPOILER* ended up being the healer. I personally enjoyed how M. NIght kind of attacked the mainstream movie industry, because if you look at it there really is no creativity left in the world..Overall, it was a good movie, but only if you want something that is kind of outside his usual genre.

Posted on 07/04/2008 at 1:07:03 AM

 
Yup, I'd have to agree that this definitely is not one of M. Night's best works. I remember feeling completely bored in the first half an hour of the film, and to top it all off, the storyline was poorly developed. Sure, the characters had a wide array of diversity to them, but that wasn't enough to make up for the poor plot and almost non-existent character development. After watching the film, I recall feeling lost... There were too many unanswered questions: What was the true point behind Story's visit? Why did all the characters want to help just like that? Quite honestly, the part I enjoyed most about the film was when Mr. Heep confronted the scrunt and realized that he wasn't the Guardian. I'd say that if you wanted to see some of M. Night's better films, you'd better stick to "The Sixth Sense," "Signs," and "The Village."

Posted on 05/09/2007 at 1:05:00 AM

 
bullshit

Posted on 08/28/2006 at 12:08:00 PM

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