Open Water (film)

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For other uses, see Open water.

Open Water

Directed by

Chris Kentis

Produced by

Laura Lau

Written by

Chris Kentis

Starring

Blanchard RyanDaniel Travis

Distributed by

Lions Gate Entertainment

Release date(s)

August 6, 2004

Running time

79 min.

Language

English

Budget

$130,000

Followed by

Open Water 2

Open Water is a 2004 film inspired by a true story about an American couple, Tom and Eileen Lonergan, who in 1998 went out with a scuba diving group, Outer Edge Dive Company, on the Great Barrier Reef. They were accidentally left behind because the dive-boat crew failed to take an accurate headcount. There were 26 other divers and five crew members, all of whom failed to notice that the couple was not on board.

The film was financed by director Chris Kentis and his wife, producer Laura Lau, both avid scuba divers. The movie cost $130,000 to make and was bought by Lions Gate Entertainment for $2.5 million after its screening at the Sundance Film Festival. Before filming began, the Lonergans’ experience was re-created for an episode of ABC’s 20/20, and the segment was repeated after the release of Open Water. Clips from the film were also featured on NBC in Troubled Waters, a Dateline episode (July 7, 2008) with Matt Lauer interviewing two professional divers, Richard Neely and Ally Dalton, who were left adrift at the Great Barrier Reef by a dive boat on May 21, 2008.

Contents

1 Plot

2 Cast

3 Production

4 Week of the DVD release

5 Reception

6 Awards

7 Other

8 References

9 See also

10 External links

//


Plot

Daniel Kintner (Daniel Travis) and Susan Watkins (Blanchard Ryan) are an unmarried couple frustrated that their hard-working lives don’t allow them to spend much time together. The last names of the main characters (revealed on their ID cards) are the same as Alex Kintner and Chrissie Watkins, two of the shark attack victims in Jaws.

They decide to pack up and head out on a scuba diving vacation to help relieve their everyday stress and improve their relationship. On their second day, Daniel and Susan join a group scuba dive. Some on board their boat express nervousness about sharks, but the dive instructor dismisses the danger with a joke. There is a head count, and the passenger total is recorded as 20.

Daniel and Susan get in the water along with the rest of the divers. One man, Seth, finds that he has forgotten his mask. He gets upset over it and gets verbally pushy with the boat’s crew, but knowing the expectations of safe diving practices, he begrudgingly stays on the boat. Daniel and Susan decide to separate from the group while underwater. A woman who is having problems with pressure equalization returns early to the boat with her partner. There are already three people back on the boat, so this is recorded by one of the crew as three “ticks” on their tally sheet. After this tally, Seth asks to borrow the mask of the woman who just surfaced, and he coerces the woman’s reluctant dive partner into another dive with him. The tally is not changed because the man maintaining the tally did not see this happen. Half an hour later, the rest of the group begins returning to the boat, and during that period the tally is incremented normally as each diver arrives on board. Going by the two earlier tallies, the total on board comes to 20, though in reality the accurate count is 18. The boat leaves, and although a few belongings of Daniel and Susan are on the boat, most of the dive group do not know the others beyond their dive partners, so no one happens to associate the stored belongings of Daniel and Susan with their absence on the boat.

Soon after the boat leaves, Daniel and Susan return to the surface and look for the boat. They see the boat gradually receding away in the distance and believe the group will return in reasonable time for them, as they assume someone on board would notice their belongings.

Stranded at sea, Daniel and Susan rehash a few old disputes, bicker about the wisdom of swimming for occasional boats seen in the distance, battle bouts of hunger and mental exhaustion, and eventually notice sharks circling them below the surface. Susan is afraid of the sharks, but Daniel tries to comfort her, saying, “Sharks are attracted to wounded fish,” and concludes that they should try to stay calm and not splash around. Soon they are stung by jellyfish, while several times sharks appear to try to figure out what they are. Susan receives a small bite from a shark, but doesn’t realize it. Daniel notices this as he goes under to check out the “nipping” feeling she has. He sees that it is a small fish feeding on the exposed flesh of her bite wounds, but he doesn’t tell her that the wound is a shark bite.

Later, a shark bites Daniel, and…(and so on)

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