MovieChat Forums > What Lies Beneath (2000) Discussion > Anyone Else Think This Movie Sucks?

Anyone Else Think This Movie Sucks?


I found it hokey, derivative, predictable, and just plain bad.

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I thought it was pretty ordinary, up to the last 45 minutes - which were GODAWFUL! Watched it on TCM last night and wondered why I'd never seen it before- then realized Zemeckis was the director. I haven't liked anything of his since Used Cars and Romancing the Stones so I probably avoided it when it was released. His films are always overlong, messy, bloated, and way overrated. This was no exception.

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I don't believe either watched the same movie I did----this is a classic,it's scary,and it's not a damn SAW ripoff, and it definitely isn't "overlong, messy, bloated, and way overrated" the way you claim it is. Sounds like you just hate the film because it's cool to hate it, that 's all!

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Yup...all the cool kids are randomly disliking old thrillers from 13 years ago nowadays...

I enjoy the movie, but I can also understand the criticisms, particularly bloated and overlong.

When you're 17 a cow can seem dangerous and forbidden...am I alone here?

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yes this movie did suck its borrrring


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I HATED it. I mean, it had good production values, was well acted (especially by the villain), had decent suspense, believable characters and was well directed. I still thought it stunk. I didn't know why and I couldn't put my finger on WHY my dislike of this movie bordered on the irrational, and then when I saw a review of the movie on the BBC and it hit me like a ton of bricks: The reviewer hated the movie for the same reasons I did, but he was able to formulate his thoughts in a more cohesive argument - that this was a 'horror' movie for people who HATE horror movies. It's a facsimile of what someone who REALLY doesn't like or even 'understand' horror or ghost stories would make; it's bloodless, devoid of tension, has no REAL atmosphere of dread or helplessness and it's attempts at red herrings and misdirection are amateurish at best.

To show how sanitized it really is, witness the 'dead body' of the murder victim - it is perfectly preserved and with the trendy clothes it is draped in, look like it's ready for a photo shoot! The fact that the victim is played by a supermodel heightens the unreality of it all (As opposed to Stir Of Echoes which was released one year earlier, and better in every respect to this movie, but had NO big pretty-looking stars, a believable run-down and grim urban environment, a scary rotting corpse for a ghost and working class protagonists. The disconnect is heightened by the fact that although the movie was marketed as a 'horror' film, the director boasts that this is a suspense thriller instead - a successor to Hitchcock, which is a bizarre claim as Hitch never dealt with ghosts or the supernatural! Perhaps the marketing Department realized that they'd have more success selling this movie as a so-called 'horror' movie because it flops as a suspense flick: At NO time in this movie's running length did I feel that the main heroine was in any kind of danger at all. The only reason this movie did so well was because every other film of the summer in which this movie was released was an empty, effects-driven spectacle. So a relatively low-key movie like this did well merely for the fact that it was a change of pace from the others and offered something different. That the something 'different' that was offered was mediocre is redundant; it was a box office hit - and in Hollyweird, making money is all that counts!

Everyone in this film is an unlikeable cypher to move the plot along: They exist merely to allow the director to show-off his impressive array of camera tricks and to prove to the world how clever he is by trotting out a stale, worn-out plot that Hitchcock would have rejected. The leads are so self-absorbed that if the ghost could talk and have an opinion, they would shout it down so that THEIR voices could be heard over as THEIR opinions are so much more important. Seriously, EVERYONE was a cardboard cut-out that you'd find in a Lifetime Movie-Of-The-Week; that the performances were good only made the film worse - it showed how wasted the acting talent was on this flick! But what REALLY gets my goat is how everyone involved thinks that they're involved in some innovative, ground-breaking piece of cinema - especially the director, who compared this movie to something Hitchcock would do now, which is strange as Hitch would always allow for some innovative twist to upend the traditional narrative while Zemeckis plays it safe and follows the rule-book to a T.


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I like this movie, and in no way do I pretend it is perfect as it is not, nor would I try to talk anyone else into liking it but so many of your comments/observations do not make any sense to me that I wanted to comment or ask what exactly you mean by some of this stuff.

1. "this was a 'horror' movie for people who HATE horror movies. It's a facsimile of what someone who REALLY doesn't like or even 'understand' horror or ghost stories would make; it's bloodless, devoid of tension, has no REAL atmosphere of dread or helplessness..."

I don't really get this at all. Horror is my favorite genre and I really like this movie. I do not, however, consider it a horror movie. I am not arguing how it was marketed, I am just saying I do not consider this a horror movie and it is not in the horror section on my DVD shelf. I saw it in the theater and it was pretty much what I expected it to be, so I don't recall thinking the ads were misleading or anything like that but it was 13 years ago, so I also will not pretend to remember precisely what the ads were like.

As far as being bloodless...so what? Gore and blood does not make a movie horrific or scary. Two of the scariest horror movies I have ever seen have just about no blood in them at all. Although, again, I do not consider this a horror flick. Devoid of tension and atmosphere...I guess that's a matter of opinion.


2. "witness the 'dead body' of the murder victim - it is perfectly preserved and with the trendy clothes it is draped in, look like it's ready for a photo shoot!"

The body was rotted. I don't know what you are talking about when you say it was ready for a photo shoot. The only time the body turned fully "normal" was after it was drifting away after the struggle and that was not really what it looked like in reality, that was just supposed to be symbolic or whatever you want to call it. It is shown at various stages of rot from beginning to end but that's about as close as one can get to saying it was perfectly preserved and again, the segments where it appeared preserved or normal were not "real." As far as the clothes--well the body was strapped/lodged in place, it was not bouncing around the ocean getting hammered and beat up. And even so, the clothes were not pristine as you imply, until the shot of the body drifting away after the struggle, as already discussed.


3. "As opposed to Stir Of Echoes which was released one year earlier, and better in every respect to this movie, but had NO big pretty-looking stars, a believable run-down and grim urban environment, a scary rotting corpse for a ghost"

SoE is one of my all-time favorite ghost movies, but your statement about the ghost being a scary rotting corpse is just flat out untrue. The ghost was just that of a girl who looked pale and had somewhat dark circles under her eyes. She was absolutely in no way rotting, decomposing, wasting or anything like that, you are just completely wrong, so either your memory fails you or you are deliberately making a false statement in order to make your argument seem more valid. I don't know which it is, but the statement is inaccurate and that is a fact, not a matter of opinion.


4. "At NO time in this movie's running length did I feel that the main heroine was in any kind of danger at all."

She was never in danger until the end so I don't know why anyone would feel that way anyway. The presence of a ghost automatically means there is danger and threat of violence or death against the hero/heroine by said ghost? At no time did the ghost ever try to harm her, that was never her intent; she was trying to communicate with her, not hurt her. Sounds like maybe you yourself do not "understand" ghost stories. I would be scared to death if I saw a ghost, but that would be the case even if it was not intending to hurt or threaten me. The only individual who wanted to hurt her was the human villain and even that was only in the end when he felt he had no other choice, not through the rest of the movie. If you truly never felt she was in danger by him in the end even as she sat immobilized, by his hand, drowning in a tub, then I guess that can be chalked up to either you being so disengaged by the time it reached that point (which is fair, I mean if you didn't like it then you didn't like it) that you simply checked out and didn't care or you already figured the bad guy won't win and she will be okay (also fair, because that is usually what happens) and therefore just didn't buy into it at all.


5. "everyone involved thinks that they're involved in some innovative, ground-breaking piece of cinema - especially the director, who compared this movie to something Hitchcock would do now..."

I do recall being really irritated at the commentary on the dvd, and I do remember the director being kind of arrogant over this film and having it turn me off a bit, so I am not arguing that, nor am I arguing that it was groundbreaking. And I agree that the director comparing himself to Hitchcock was silly. Kind of reminds me of when that crap band Oasis said they would be bigger than the Beatles, the band they were clearly trying to imitate. Even so, I don't think this is a crap movie.


Again, everyone is entitled to his opinion, no arguments here but some of the things you point out are just flat out untrue and some other things you point out really sound to me like they are coming from someone who is saying that this movie is made for and by people who don't understand horror or ghost stories yet himself does not seem to "understand" those things either.



"It's Minnie Pearl's murder weapon."

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Horror is my favorite genre and I really like this movie. I do not, however, consider it a horror movie. I am not arguing how it was marketed, I am just saying I do not consider this a horror movie and it is not in the horror section on my DVD shelf.

First off, I thoroughly enjoyed reading your deconstruction and basically agree with everything you said.

With regards to genre classification, I always struggle with this, and it's made increasingly difficult with a considerably large and ever growing film collection. 'Horror' is such a large umbrella, particularly on IMDb, that many films outside of what one typically associates with horror still falls within its shadow, so long as it's even remotely scary/creepy. Especially anything with ghostly or haunted themes. For myself, I have all my blood & gore films in my 'Horror' folder, but all my genuinely scary psychological films, such as The Innocents etc, I keep in my 'Supernatural' folder. Along with What Lies Beneath. Just seems more apt to me than 'Horror'.




EDSKRPHW

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Thanks! I wrote a lot but I seriously couldn't stand to let the original post just sit there with no reply.

I agree that the genre of horror encompasses a huge variety of films and I also have this DVD in a section that has ghost stories and supernatural elements, not horror.


"The cover of this book is so misleading. It never snows like the cover implies that it does."

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daughterofolaf, great post. I completely agree with all your points.

The beauty is I'm learning how to face my beast ~ Blue October

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OMG....the dead body in the ocean isFord pinned down, in thecwaterot normally "perfectly preserved". She's rotted put. HOWEVER, whenever Claire was in danger, she more or less came to life, in order to save Claire from her husband. She actually had be one C L aire's pritectrice, from the beginning. She "became decrepit" once agsin, only AFTER she was able to keep Harrison Ford in the water, and allow Claire to swim up and escape to safety.

I thought this movie was very well made. Yes, it's a horror, slight fantasy/supernatural/spirit - world mystery, but it was very well made. With all the TECHNICALCGI/slash'em-up crap that's made, and Batmans, and other crap, this film is WAAAAYYYY better.

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It's very average, I wouldn't call it bad, I've seen far far worse.

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didnt like it at all!

Perfection Doesn't Exist, But You Have to Look For It Anyway

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Anyone Else Think This Movie Sucks?


Noooo

This body else thinks it was pretty fun and a real rollercoaster ride with 2 of my favourite stars in it and a nice looking ghost too. I liked the scenery/setting as well.


I had to kill Bob Morton because he made a mistake. Now it's time to erase that mistake

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I love this movie and always have. Plus it has one of my favorite movie "dream" homes.

Remember us, for we too have lived, loved and laughed

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thank you for this thread, I enjoy What lies Beneath but completely forgot Stir of Echoes.

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Totally boring, even the acting isn't that good.

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