CAUTION: This review contains spoilers, although
frankly, it doesn't reveal much more information than
the film's trailer does.
"Take Me Away!"
The most thought-provoking aspect of What Lies Beneath lies in its title. As a generic
horror/mystery/suspense film, What Lies Beneath
provides some good scares, but mostly tired plot
devices and a host of Hitchcockian references that,
frankly, border on fetishism (actually, fetishism is
pretty Hitchcockian in its own right, but that's
another story). The title, however, is great. Do those
three words form a question or a claim? Certainly the
stark advertising poster with its blank white
background featuring only a woman's hand gripping the
side of a white bathtub implies the former. Who is the
woman? Is she dead or alive? Why has she slipped so
far down into the tub that only her hand is visible?
We know one thing for sure: this bathtub scene is no
Calgon moment.
The film's opening shot reinforces the question posed
by the title, as the credits appear over dark,
mist-covered water, which is eventually replaced by
the superimposed image of a filled bathtub. We are in
the Spencers' Vermont lakeside home. Claire (Michelle
Pfeiffer) and her husband Norman (an increasingly
crumpled-looking Harrison Ford) are preparing to take
Claire's daughter Caitlin (Katherine Towne) off to
college. It's a new beginning for the Spencers, and
not just the daughter: Claire and Norman are going to
be alone for the first time, just the two of them.
There are indications at this early point in the film
that Claire might not be altogether stable, or, at the
very least, that people around her consider her to be
somewhat frail. At first it seems that Caitlin,
Norman, and Claire's best friend Jody (Diana Scarwid)
are simply overprotective, worried about how she'll
handle her only child leaving home. Claire assures
them that she's fine. She says, as if it's
self-explanatory: "I have Norman, the garden, the
house." (Did I mention that this film takes place,
like, now?).
Turns out that Norman and company have more than just
empty-nest syndrome to worry bout when it comes to
Claire: she had smashed her car into a tree a year
before and nearly died. "It was an accident!" Claire
whines, but nobody seems convinced. Worse, when she
starts hearing noises and seeing things when she's
alone every night while Norman slaves away at the
university lab where he's the DuPont Chair of
Biogenetics no one believes her. Instead, they
ruffle her hair, kiss her on the forehead, and,
finally, send her off to the local psychiatrist (whose
cutting-edge techniques include having Claire suck on
a fireball).
But this is a thriller, which means that Claire isn't
imagining the creepy, wan face she sees reflected in
the bathwater, the steamy mirror, and the lake.
Someone, or something, is trying to communicate with
her, and it's not long before you know it's a ghost
and that Claire may be less innocent than she appears
at first. "You know!" the ghost writes in the steamy
mirror, suggesting some complicity on her part. After
several wrong turns and missed opportunities, she
finally goes online (she's a modern-day victim), where
she finds a newspaper photo of the ghost, who turns
out to be a girl named Madison (Amber Valletta), a
student mysteriously missing from the college where
Norman is employed. Then Claire recovers a memory from
the year before, when she walked in on Norman and
Madison having sex in her library (this led to her car
wreck). When confronted, Norman admits to the affair,
but insists he had nothing to do with Madison's
disappearance.
There are lots of lies in What Lies Beneath. The
title asks not only what lies beneath the water, but
also what lies beneath Claire's perfect exterior? Or
better, what lies beneath our assumption that she is
perfect, being a good mother, wife, homemaker,
neighbor, and friend, as well as beautiful and
talented (she went to Julliard and still plays the
cello, reportedly well enough to make listeners weep).
But no one appreciates her perfection. The daughter
is only onscreen long enough to say goodbye and never
returns; the neighbors aren't interested in Claire's
neighborliness; and Jody, though she obviously cares
about Claire, nevertheless reinforces her frailty
while bolstering her own self-image as (perfect?)
friend and sounding board.
And then there's Norman. The film's poster stresses
his perfection: "He was the perfect husband until
his one mistake followed them home." It's a curious
choice, really, since Norman isn't on screen very
much, and is decidedly inadequate whenever you do see
him. He's a self-obsessed workaholic, has serious
Daddy issues, and is almost never home, effectively
abandoning Claire. Add to that the fact that he used
Claire's convenient loss of memory as a
get-out-of-jail-free card and I'd say old Norman is a
far cry from perfect.
But featuring the "perfect husband" in the promotional
materials works at a couple of levels. First of all,
Harrison Ford carries more box office clout than
Pfeiffer (undeservedly, I might add). Second, the
film never really makes Norman seem perfect, so the
viewer's expectation from the promo is immediately
undermined and builds suspense. Is there a third
possibility, though? Are audiences more apt to be
attracted to a story about a perfect husband who
stumbled during a moment of weakness and is now at the
mercy of some vengeful bitch? Certainly it's a formula
that has worked before (most obviously with Fatal Attraction). I suppose that the "he was a perfect
husband" thing sells more tickets than the more
accurate tagline: "She was the perfect wife until she
started putting two and two together."
With Norman's admission of guilt and Jody's confession
that she knew about his affair, the title is less a
question than a declaration of the layered falsehoods
surrounding Claire and, by extension, everyone's
primary relationships: what lies beneath the surface
guise of loyalty, concern, or even friendship? And
once one recognizes the untruths, another version of
the same question arises: what lies beneath those
deceptions? Self-interest? Greed? Denial? Desire?
The list of possibilities is endless and there isn't
one clear-cut answer. Certainly Norman's desire to
surpass his dead father's reputation as a scientist
(he has a theorem named after him) is a factor behind
his lies. But what of Jody's? What of Claire's lies to
herself? Is it self-preservation or is it her pride
that refuses, until brutally confronted, to
acknowledge that her life is not what it seems to be?
Actually, these are serious questions that What Lies Beneath asks us, concerning our constructions of
ourselves and our lives, the fictions we put together
for whatever reasons to make our lives more
palatable, to mask our selfishness or our anger.
Though he's obviously not a reliable source, Norman
makes a pretty good observation concerning Claire when
he calls her "a passive-aggressive masterpiece." She
is, and that's worth noticing. While homicidal maniacs
are actually pretty rare, films make big bucks cashing
in on our fear of this social anomaly. The scarier
reality, made all too well known of late, is the
violence and rage that lies beneath the guise of, if
not perfection, at least normalcy.