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What Lies Beneath (2000)
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What Lies Beneath, the new Robert Zemeckis supernatural
thriller starring Michelle Pfeiffer and Harrison Ford, opens with a literal shock:
Pfeiffer nearly lights herself up while messing around with a hairdryer in her steamy
bathroom. The accident consists of a few sparks jumping out of a wall-plug, and its
mainly intended to settle the audience down in its seats its the equivalent
of a comedian saying, "I just flew in from Boston and, boy, are my arms tired!"
The only problem is that for the next two-plus hours, Beneath does nothing but
repeat variations on that pipsqueak little zap. The movie is a series of perfunctory
scares suitable mainly for teens who want a reason to grab hold of each other, but from
any other perspective its a shrill and predictable mess.
Pfeiffer and Ford play Claire and Dr. Norman Spencer, a shining
middle-aged couple who have just packed their only child off to college. Normans
scientific work keeps him busy at the lab, leaving Claire alone for much of the time in
their magazine-cover home on the banks of a New England lake. Almost as soon as her
daughter leaves home, strange things begin occurring to Claire in her solitude: household
appliances take on a mind of their own, spectral whispers fill the house late at night,
and shes plagued by visions of a drowned woman. Its largely through a series
of coincidences that Claire determines that the spirit haunting her is the ghost of a
young graduate student whom Norman rejected after a brief affair, and that her husband is
hiding more than past love affairs from her. (Why the ghost doesnt punish Norman
directly is anyones guess.)
What Lies Beneath is a woman-in-jeopardy TV movie done on a
large scale, with rhythms so mechanical that you can see exactly where the networks will
be splicing in the Alpo ads a couple of years from now. Clark Greggs decaying story
draws cliches to it like flies theres a wisecracking best friend, a
scene-stealing family pooch, and so on and the movie abounds in clumsy red
herrings, such as a next door neighbor who may or may not have murdered his wife. The
early hints that the affair stemmed from Normans failure to match his fathers
academic achievements, and Claires resentment over her decision to abandon a musical
career for her family, ultimately dont have any bearing on Beneaths
action theyre just things the characters talk about in between the ghostly
visitations. When Norman admits that he covered up the girls death to preserve his
professional and family life, and he demands of Claire, "What should I have
done?," its the only real question anyone asks in the entire movie.
Unfortunately, no one associated with the proceedings not Claire, not Zemeckis, and
not Gregg seems interested in offering an answer.
Zemeckis and Gregg arent even interested in the genre
theyre working in. Theyre indifferent to the things that separate the merely
startling from the genuinely scary, and theyve left untouched nearly all the
possibilities for humor in their story. It was ticklish when the mother in Poltergeist
responded with delight to the spirits that invaded her kitchen, but Claire Spencer is such
an emotional blank that we dont care how she feels about the front door opening on
its own whenever she approaches it. (Its equally hard to understand why the ghost
veers between scaring the bejabbers out of Claire and extending whimsical courtesies to
her.)
Zemeckis won a Best Director Oscar for Forrest Gump,
but he hasnt bothered to form even one memorable sequence in What Lies Beneath.
For long stretches theres simply nothing going on, as when Pfeiffer wanders
endlessly through the neighbors yard repeating "Hello? Hello?" in a flat,
nasal voice, or when her attempt to unplug the bathtub with her big toe is turned into a
labor of Hercules. And for a story that revolves around temptation and infidelity, Beneaths
sense of sexuality is pathetically stunted Claires quick bite on
Normans lip in the middle of a kiss is made to seem like an exercise in high kink.
The movies one surprise lies in its casting of Harrison Ford as a
villain, especially one whos the outsized demon that Norman turns out to be. Ford
has specialized in white-bread heroes for so long that it would be lovely if hed
really gone against the grain, but in truth hes merely traded in one stereotype for
another. Hes such a joyless, vacant onscreen presence nowadays that, with several
kings ransoms tucked away in his mattress, its hard to understand why he
clings to a profession that he openly disparages in interviews. Is it so he can throw
himself into lines like, "You know what Ive got at stake in this paper"? What
Lies Beneath might well have been better off had it given James Remar a shot at Dr.
Norman Spencer. Remar (he played the homicidal escaped convict in Walter Hills 48 Hrs.)
looks in fighting trim as the fishy neighbor, and he gives the movie its one macabre jolt
when he mocks Claires paranoia with a bit of lightning-quick pantomime.
Zemeckis has laced his movie with visual echoes of past thrillers
(mainly some Hitchcock pictures), but these mostly serve to make you yearn for a better
movie. What Lies Beneath is a picture that got made only because it could
get made, and everything in it is spelled out in some cases, literally. After
Claire has learned that the dead womans initials were M.E.F., she checks out a
missing persons website and, finding the name Madison Elizabeth Frank there, not only
touches each initial, but says them out loud in turn. This time around, Zemeckis has made
a movie thats for Forrest Gump.
- Tom Block