Eye For Film >> Movies >> The Deep End (2001) Film Review
The Deep End
Reviewed by: Angus Wolfe Murray
The world is pristine. Everything in Scott McGehee and David Siegel's thriller has a painterly look. Images are framed to keep the dust out. Even emotions wear clothes.
Tilda Swinton gives a performance of such quality, it catches you unawares. The title suggests indoor swimming, when there is only the clear beauty of Lake Tahoe and little control, once Margaret Hall (Swinton) discovers the body of her son's lover on the beach under the pier.
This is a story of deception and blackmail. It flows like mercury through the veins of the plot. It is also the story of a mother, attempting to guard her children against dangers beyond her reach.
At the centre are three people - Margaret who hides the body to protect her family, Alek Spera (Goran Visnjic) who has a videotape of her 17-year-old son having sex with the dead man and Beau (Jonathan Tucker), the boy himself, who is unaware of what destruction he has unleashed.
The relationship between them changes as ultimatums pass and accidents happen. Margaret's inherent decency is of no help to her now. She has stepped off the parapet, where fear is the only enemy.
The writer/directors, who caused a stir on the arthouse circuit with their 1993 debut, Suture, have avoided every cliche of film noir. Also, they reject the fashion for hip hop editing and handheld intimacy, reaching beyond a threat of violence to the beating heart beneath.
Reviewed on: 10 Aug 2001