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Head Above Water (film)

Head Above Water
Promotional film poster
Directed byJim Wilson
Screenplay byTheresa Marie
Based onHodet over vannet
by Nils Gaup
Produced byJohn M. Jacobsen
Jim Wilson
Starring
CinematographyRichard Bowen
Edited byMichael R. Miller
Music byChristopher Young
Production
company
Distributed byFine Line Features
Release dates
  • November 7, 1996 (1996-11-07) (Norway)
  • June 25, 1997 (1997-06-25) (United States)
Running time
92 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$32,212[1]

Head Above Water is a 1996 American black comedy thriller film directed by Jim Wilson and starring Harvey Keitel, Cameron Diaz, Craig Sheffer and Billy Zane. The film is a remake of Hodet over vannet by Norwegian film director Nils Gaup.

Plot

Newlyweds Nathalie and George are spending their vacation at her family's remote island beach house in Maine. Lance, who has known Nathalie since childhood, looks after the place. George goes on an overnight fishing trip with Lance to get to know him better.

Meanwhile, Nathalie's ex-boyfriend Kent arrives at the house, seemingly unannounced. He says that his girlfriend Evelyn recently left him because of his drinking problem. While Nathalie is in the bathroom, Kent grabs a bottle of vodka from George's supply. He makes a pass at her, while drinking directly from the bottle. The evening ends with him passing out on her marital bed. Waking up on the sofa, Nathalie discovers Kent dead, apparently from alcohol poisoning.

Panicked, Nathalie stores Kent's naked body in the cellar. When George returns from his fishing trip, she tries to conceal the night's events and act normal. However, George eventually notices that the cellar door under the dining table is not completely closed. George stomps on the floorboard and corrects the problem. George later finds the flowers and chocolate that Kent had given her. She admits that he gave her a surprise visit while George was on the fishing trip, and that she put his body in the cellar.

They take the body to the nearby tool shed, debating over what to do. The situation is further complicated because Kent's clothes are missing and his neck is broken by George stomping on the cellar door. George's being a prominent judge and Nathalie's history of pill addiction make him feel that they must dispose of the body themselves.

While the two decide to dispose of Kent's body in the ocean by tying him down with an old stove, Lance arrives, and the two are forced to rethink their plans. Nathalie and George return home. There, George discovers that Kent's bottle was actually not (ethyl) alcohol but methanol (methyl alcohol) which is poisonous. Kent's heart problems along with the disguised liquid drug led to his death. Nathalie later goes for a swim.

Coming back from her swim, Nathalie notices Kent's white linen suit drying on the porch of Lance's house. She insists on taking the suit to clean it. Believing that she has found a solution to their problem, Nathalie looks for George to tell him the good news. She spots George on the veranda. He has apparently already embedded Kent's dismembered body into the concrete steps. Horrified, Nathalie runs but is captured by George. After taking her back to the house, tying and gagging her, George goes out to finish the job. Nathalie frees herself, goes to Lance and explains the situation. Then, Nathalie sees the missing postcard Kent had sent her in Lance's house. Lance says that he meant to give it to her but forgot.

Nathalie then believes that Lance knew Kent was coming all along and switched the alcohol to kill him. Horrified, she runs to George, believing him to be an innocent victim in Lance's murder plot. Lance, insisting upon his innocence, follows Nathalie outside to the beach. Lance and Nathalie are eventually confronted by George, who ends up shooting Lance. Nathalie runs but is captured by George again. He has been drinking heavily but manages to cement Nathalie's legs in a metal container.

Afterward, George starts to have trouble walking and says that he cannot see. Nathalie realizes that George has unknowingly drunk the tainted liquor and that Kent really did die of a heart attack. George then falls off the high-rise veranda and is impaled by its spire. Because of this, Nathalie falls into the water and cannot surface on her own due to her cemented legs. However, a beach patrol boat passes by and Nathalie is rescued.

Nathalie is later in her own boat telling the beach patrolman her story. The patrolman, behind her, asks for a beverage, and Nathalie tells him to check in the cooler under the seat. Unbeknownst to Nathalie, George had added some of Nathalie's medication to the water bottle which the patrolman is about to drink.

Cast

Reception

Head Above Water holds a rating of 40% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 15 reviews.[2]

Marc Savlov of The Austin Chronicle gave a positive review, calling Diaz "a terrific comedienne, all fluttery gestures and cockeyed charm".[3] He added, "Keitel likewise sustains a single comic note throughout without wearing it too thin. As George starts to drink heavily and fall apart at the seams, Keitel tosses some of his trademark nastiness into the mix and the film really takes off. It's not a classic by any stretch of the imagination -- Head Above Water is simply too thin for that -- but it is an endearingly black comedy, with more than enough grisly chuckles to keep it afloat over its ricocheting 92-minute course."[3]

In the Los Angeles Times, Jack Mathews said, "These kind of keep-the-audience-guessing whodunits depend on the dialogue and the actors' chemistry, and 'Head Above Water' fails both tests. Keitel is badly miscast as the comically jealous husband; Sheffer…doesn't begin to convey the mystery implied by Lance; and Diaz, while clearly talented at light comedy, is stuck in the middle, sputtering in confusion over which is the better man."[4]

In The New York Times, Stephen Holden wrote, "Director Jim Wilson's approach to this material is fatally indecisive. One moment, 'Head Above Water' plays like a clanking melodrama, the next like a gallows comedy of corrupt yuppie manners. By the time the movie builds to a climactic sight gag involving two boats, a chain saw and a can of cement, the movie has lost its moorings and gone hopelessly adrift."[5]

References

  1. ^ "Head Above Water". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  2. ^ "Head Above Water". Rotten Tomatoes.
  3. ^ a b Savlov, Marc (June 27, 1997). "Head Above Water". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  4. ^ Mathews, Jack (June 25, 1997). "This 'Water' Is No Day at the Beach". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on May 9, 2016. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  5. ^ Holden, Stephen (June 25, 1997). "Violence on a Delayed Honeymoon". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 June 2023.