críticas
Apesar de em Portugal "Lady in the Water" só chegar ao grande ecrã em Setembro, está a partir de hoje em exibição nos Estados Unidos.
Finding Magic Somewhere Under the Pool in 'Lady in the Water'
By MANOHLA DARGIS
Published: July 21, 2006
IT was just around the time when the giant eagle swooped out of the greater Philadelphia night to rescue a creature called a narf, shivering and nearly naked next to a swimming pool shaped like a collapsed heart, that I realized M. Night Shyamalan had lost his creative marbles. Since Mr. Shyamalan’s marbles are bigger than those of most people, or so it would seem from the evidence of a new book titled “The Man Who Heard Voices” (and how!), this loss might have been a calamity, save for the fact that “Lady in the Water” is one of the more watchable films of the summer. A folly, true, but watchable.
Para ler em New York Times - Movies
The Deep End
A mermaid, a pool, and one seriously nutty director: Lady in the Water.
By Dana Stevens
Posted Thursday, July 20, 2006, at 5:49 PM ET
Lady in the Water (Warner Bros.) marks M. Night Shyamalan's official leap off the deep end. Not everyone agrees on Shyamalan's talent as a filmmaker, but few, up till now, have questioned his sanity. Two earlier films, The Sixth Sense and The Village, were cleverly constructed, airtight allegorical worlds that turned neatly inside out at the end to become different worlds, while Signs was a somber exploration of what might happen if one well-known brand of occult craziness—the kind involving aliens, crop circles, and tinfoil hats—turned out to be, in fact, justified.
Para ler em Slate - Movies
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