The Deep End
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Jonathan Tucker
Josh Lucas
Tajma Soleil
Ronnie Buttacavoli
Franco Delgado
Jordan Dorrance
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Lake Tahoe, California. A mother wakes early one morning to find the body of her closeted seventeen-year-old son's lover impaled on an anchor on the beach of their lakefront home. With her husband away and nowhere to turn, she makes a reckless decision to move the body and hide it in the lake. Soon she finds herself and her family in even greater danger when the body is found and, impossibly, she is confronted by blackmailers. She tries desperately to raise the money, but repeatedly fails. Inexplicably, one of the blackmailers softens and begins to help her. But can she trust him? And how can she explain to her now suspicious son what's going on with this stranger who suddenly begins stopping by to see her?
Cast
Jonathan Tucker
Josh Lucas
Tajma Soleil
Ronnie Buttacavoli
Franco Delgado
Jordan Dorrance
Raymond J Barry
Kip Ellwood
Richard Gross
Tamara Hope
Peter Donat
Kip Martin
Margot Krindel
Tilda Swinton
Goran Visnjic
Dwane B. Platt
Bill Mcgehee
Heather Mathieson
Holmes Osborne
Michael Pizzuto
Nelson Padgette
Crew
Jessica Abroms
Julie Adams
Megan B Agosto
Megan Agosto
Gianni Aliotti
Michael Anderson
Scott Ansell
James Barber
Sivan Baron
David Bergad
Mark Berger
Bryan Berry
Buffy Beyer
Rhonda Bingham
Everett Blix
Charles Bloomfield
Craig Borden
Debbie Brubaker
Cynthia Bystrak
Dale Cannedy
Paul Cardona
Lou Carlucci
James Carpenter
Xaime Casillas
Carmel Cathi
Matthew Cavaliero
Bundy Chanock
Bundy Chanock
Judy Chesnut
Katrina Chevalier
Richard Chuang
Dennis R Clark
Missy Cohen
Todd Corman
Francisco Cortes
Ray Curtis
Raqueli Dahan
Beth Depatie
Jeff Di Paolo
Louis Dicesare
Earl Douglas
Lori Dovi
Timothy R Durr
Robert Eber
Thom Ehle
Kip Ellwood
John Emory
Peter Epstein
Gerard Facchini
Patrick Farrell
Michael Farrow
Warren Feldman
Warren Feldman
Piotr Filipowski
Jason Fornal
Terri Fredlund
Ellen Freund
Rebecca Fulton
Anna Geyer
Dale Gibson
Aura Gilge
Hayley Goggin
David L Goodwine
Laura Greenlee
Chris Gridley
Paul Gugliuzza
Nathan Gunn
Christopher James Hall
Kent Hamilton
John M Hanashiro
Amanda Harding
Sebastian Harms
Robert Hawk
Jason Heapy
William Hobson
Michael Hoffer
Elizabeth Holding
Maggie Holley-muzio
Etina Hom
Steve Hurson
James Jaber
Renaldo Jackson
Robert Jauregui
Ben Jensen
Ethan Jensen
Brook Johnson
Brent M Jones
Ed Jones
William Judkins
Mel Kangleon
Ryan Khavari
Kay Kimler
Kimie Kimura-heane
Matthew Kinney
Michael Kitchens
Richard Lacy
William Laczko
Kristen Lamantia
Jerry Leonard
Melvin G Liel
Debra Light
David Logie
Hatch Logie
Glenn Mack
Harlan Mack
Patrick Maguire
Andon Major
Mindy Marin
Mindy Marin
Robert Marty
Mato
Jill Mattson
Dwayne Mcclintock
Dwayne Mcclintock
Kelly Mcgehee
Scott Mcgehee
Scott Mcgehee
Scott Mcgehee
Paul Meehan
Sabrina Merics
Dana Michaelsen
Marnie Moore
Chris Moseley
Idrissa Moulaye Sene
Dana Mulligan
Peter Nashel
Jason Newmark
John Nutt
Giles Nuttgens
Margie O'malley
Richard Olson
Rod Olson
David Parker
Brad Peterman
Martha Pike
Michael Pizzuto
Maurice Joseph Ravel
Frank Rinella
Elizabeth L Rogers
Lisa Rogers
Sabrina A Rosen
Andi Ruane
Pablo Santiago
Jeff Schonfield
David N Schrager
David Schrager
Jack Serino
Nathan Serratore
Amy Sheldon
Jim Sheldon
Jack Shepphird
David Siegel
David Siegel
David Siegel
Chris Slater
Larry Smith
Peter Burgess Smith
Andrew D Stadler
Linda Stanley
Jendy Stewart
Hayley Stuppel
Rob Sweeney
Christopher Tandon
Patti Tauscher
Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Paige Thomas
Christian Thompson
Chris Tolladay
David Torn
Jay Townsend
Viet Tran
Chris Trimble
Christina Tucker
Gloria Uribe
Truman Van Dyke
Nanci Wenz
John White
Christina Wilson
David D B Wilson
Terry Wyner
Robert Zajonc
Bobby Zajonic
Patrick Zimmerli
Lauren Zuckerman
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Remake - The Deep End
In 1947 Elizabeth Sanxay Holding wrote a novel entitled The Blank Wall which was adapted for the screen in 1949 as The Reckless Moment. Directed by Max Ophuls, the suspense thriller focused on Lucia Harper (Joan Bennett), a housewife who goes to desperate lengths to protect her daughter Bea from being arrested for a murder. But did she really commit one? Lucia definitely saw the body because she disposed of it without her daughter's knowledge. And her world is thrown into further turmoil by an unexpected visit from a blackmailer (James Mason) who has some incriminating love letters to sell. The Reckless Moment was well received in its day and features what many now believe is one of Joan Bennett's best performances. It is also highly regarded by fans of Max Ophuls. Yet, the film is not available currently on video, DVD, or laserdisc.
So don't hold your breath waiting for the re-release anytime soon. However, an alternative is to go see The Deep End (2001), a new adaptation of Holding's original novel by the filmmaking team of Scott McGehee and David Siegel. While the central plot is basically the same as The Reckless Moment, the setting has been changed from a Southern California beachfront to Lake Tahoe and Bea, the suspect daughter in the original, has been transformed into Beau, a gay teenager who is running around with an untrustworthy older man. The Deep End enjoyed a flurry of early rave reviews from most of the mainstream critics but now that it is going into general release, we are seeing more mixed reactions from other viewers; some prefer the Max Ophuls 1949 version while others are finding some major plausibility problems with the behavior of Margaret Hall (Tilda Swinton), the gay teenager's mother. One thing everyone seems to agree on, however, is Tilda Swinton's tour-de-force performance as the frantic mother. Roger Ebert wrote, "She is always believable as this harassed, desperate, loving mother. She projects a kind of absorption in her task; she juggles blackmail, murder, bank loans, picking up the kids after school - it's as if the ordinary tasks keep her sane enough to deal with the dangers that surround her." Swinton has previously been seen in such offbeat indie efforts as Orlando (1992), The War Zone (1999) and Female Perversions (1996). Her most famous mainstream film to date is probably The Beach (2000) in which she played Sal, the manipulative commune member who has an affair with Leonardo DeCaprio. With a little luck, The Deep End should expose Swinton to a much wider audience.
FROM A PULP NOVEL TO A FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT FILM TO A BRAND NEW REMAKE
Depending on how you approach Original Sin it's either a new version of a classic pulp novel (Cornell Woolrich's Waltz Into Darkness) or the latest Hollywood remake of a foreign classic (Francois Truffaut's Mississippi Mermaid (1969). Either way it promises to be a smarter than usual psychological thriller with enough star power from Antonio Banderas and Angelina Jolie to constitute its own heat wave.
The basic story remains much the same. In the 1880s a Cuban plantation owner (Banderas) meets a mysterious American woman (Jolie) who's answering his ad for a bride placed in a Baltimore newspaper. Though Banderas wants only a good, stable wife he is unexpectedly swept up in a raging passion. Still, there are a few unsettling signs that all is not what it appears to be. Jolie doesn't quite match the original description he'd received from the States plus she has some unexplained scars on her back (caused by husband Billy Bob Thornton?) and a trunk that is always locked.
Original Sin was produced by Via Rosa, Michelle Pfeiffer's production company. Actually, Pfeiffer had originally planned to star in it before scheduling conflicts arose; she's still listed as producer. However, director-writer Michael Cristofer knew exactly who to put in the lead role: Angelina Jolie, who he had directed in her breakthrough film Gia (1998) (which won her Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild awards).
Getting Banderas proved to be a lucky coincidence. As the actor told Out magazine, "When I was 15 I was lucky enough to watch Mississippi Mermaid, the movie Truffaut made of the same book. It was not very good, but it produced an incredible impact on me. When I met Melanie [Griffith, his wife], I told her the story of the movie. Years later we saw it, and the movie I had in my mind was completely different! When Michael Cristofer came to me with the script, I said, 'Oh, my God, I've been searching for this my whole life.'"
Original Sin started filming in Mexico in February 2000 under the title Dancing in the Dark (apparently later changed to avoid confusion with Lars Von Trier's Dancer in the Dark, 2000). The location was only a few miles from where Banderas had filmed The Mask of Zorro (1998). Pedro Armend¿z Jr. was added to the cast due to regulations requiring a Mexican actor in any films shot in Mexico, not a problem considering his notable career of a hundred plus movies.
Original Sin was originally planned for a Fall 2000 release but that was pushed back to take advantage of better dates. In fact, between the time of Original Sin's filming and release, Banderas was able to make Spy Kids which opened to generally wide acclaim.
A remake of Planet of the Apes might not seem like an especially wonderful idea. What's next? Live-action Scooby Doo? An updated Charlie's Angels? OK, those examples actually exist but you get the point. Expectations about Planet changed, though, when the stylish mood-master Tim Burton signed aboard to direct and enlisted Mark Wahlberg, not only one of the most promising young actors around but somebody with real box-office appeal. Wahlberg will be playing an astronaut on a routine space journey who unexpectedly ends up on a world where intelligent apes rule servile humans.
TIM BURTON'S PLANET OF THE APES
The story behind this new version stretches all the way back to 1993 when the film first attracted interest as a possible remake. Oliver Stone was co-producing and Arnold Schwarzenegger was tentatively set to star with Philip Noyce (Patriot Games, 1982) directing. This delicate set-up soon collapsed. Over the remaining years there were a variety of people considered for the project: For director, Stone himself, James Cameron, Peter Jackson, Chris Columbus, Robert Rodriguez; For writer, Sam Hamm (Batman, 1989), Graham Yost (Speed, 1994); For stars, Ben Affleck, Ben Kingsley, Gary Oldman, Johnny Depp. These names come from reports in trade papers or reliable sources but with such constant change they may have been little more than temporary considerations.
The people who actually made the remake came together in Spring of 2000. That's when the chaos finally settled into Tim Burton directing and Mark Wahlberg starring with key roles of apes going to Helena Bonham Carter, Tim Roth and Michael Clarke Duncan. One unusual choice is Kris Kristofferson as a human rebel. (Oddly enough Wahlberg is doing another remake immediately after Planet, this time of Charade). Filming started last November and took place in L.A., Arizona, Australia and Hawaii. The budget is rumored to be in the $100 million range (as compared to $5 million for the original). Though the story's broad outline is known, the details have been kept tightly guarded with only comments that the film isn't so much a strict remake as a rethinking of the original series. And what about the famous ending of the original? Supposedly Burton and company have avoided that entirely and instead filmed six different endings to confuse any spies or leaks. Linda Harrison, who appeared in the first two original films in the series, says on her website that she's doing a cameo in the new one. There are also unconfirmed rumors of cameos by George Clooney and Spike Jonze (Wahlberg's co-stars in Three Kings and apparently real-life friends). We do know that you can spot Burton regulars Glenn Shadix and Lisa Marie.
You might be curious about Charlton Heston, star of the original film. Reports have been sometimes yes and sometimes no about whether he would appear in the remake, supposedly as an ape this time around. Heston apparently did a make up test and was only able to commit to one day's work. Still, he's not currently listed in the cast but who knows what surprises await?
ROLLERBALL REMAKE DELAYED TILL THE FALL
Due in theatres this fall (after being previously advertised as a summer release) is a hyped-up, 21st Century remake of Rollerball. The new version promises to take full advantage of special effects technology not available for the 1975 original, as well as some apparently fearless stuntmen. The $80 million film is directed by action specialist John McTiernan (Die Hard, Hunt for Red October) and oddly enough marks his second remake in a row of a film originally by Norman Jewison (after The Thomas Crown Affair). The story remains more or less the same: Chris Klein (in the James Caan role) is uncertain about his future until he hears from suddenly wealthy buddy L.L. Cool J about a new underground sport called Rollerball, a mix of roller derby, motorcycling and sheer mayhem. Klein joins Rollerball and soon becomes one of its biggest stars, only to discover that the corporate boss is much more interested in ratings than in their well-being. The remake will be packed with such familiar faces as model Rebecca Romijn-Stamos (The X-Men), Jean Reno (Mission: Impossible) and pop singer Pink. Bring your crash helmets.
Remake - The Deep End
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Winner of the Excellence in Cinematography Award - Drama at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival.
Limited Release in United States August 8, 2001
Released in United States Summer August 8, 2001
Expanded Release in United States August 15, 2001
Released in United States on Video April 16, 2002
Released in United States 2001
Released in United States January 2001
Released in United States August 2001
Shown at Deauville Festival of American Film (in competition) August 31 - September 9, 2001.
Shown at Edinburgh International Film Festival (Gala) August 12-26, 2001.
Elizabeth Sanxay Holding's 1947 novel "The Blank Wall" was previously adapted for director Max Ophuls' "The Reckless Moment" (USA/1949) starring James Mason and Joan Bennett.
Fox Searchlight acquired domestic distribution rights at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival for a reported $4 million.
Completed shooting July 2000.
Began shooting June 25, 2000.
Limited Release in United States August 8, 2001
Released in United States Summer August 8, 2001
Expanded Release in United States August 15, 2001
Released in United States on Video April 16, 2002
Released in United States 2001 (Shown at Deauville Festival of American Film (in competition) August 31 - September 9, 2001.)
Released in United States January 2001 (Shown at Sundance Film Festival (Dramatic Competition) in Park City, Utah January 18-28, 2001.)
Released in United States August 2001 (Shown at Edinburgh International Film Festival (Gala) August 12-26, 2001.)