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Watching the trailer, I couldn’t help but think of another 2001 surprise thriller released almost exactly one month later, the underwhelming Don’t Say a Word. Pulling a bait-and-switch trick, showing off The Deep End as a fast-paced, flashy, bloody thriller, audiences and critics seemed to bite. Rated at 90% on Rottentomatoes among the Top Critics with stellar reviews creating some Oscar buzz for Swinton (it is good, but not that good), the public was willing to buy tickets and powered the total box office to $8.8 million ($12.5 million adjusted). Released August 10, 2001, the film didn’t make any box office dent until Labor Day weekend, where over the extended frame, it grossed almost $1.8 million in 326 theaters. Two weeks later, the film hit its top location count at 412. Doing well for a little thriller made on the cheap with a budget of $3 million, the film didn’t burn out until the last week of September when it had its first big fall – the same weekend Don’t Say a Word was released. Nominated and winning some awards on the film festival circuit (almost all for Swinton), the biggest nomination The Deep End received was for Best Actress in a Drama at the Golden Globes (she lost out to Sissy Spacek for In the Bedroom although fellow nominee Halle Berry won the Oscar for Monster’s Ball in the end). With a decent screenplay improved upon by terrific acting and better-than-needed directing, The Deep End turns a shallow opportunity for thrills into a much deeper and satisfying emotional adventure. Verdict: With Us 7 out of 10
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Friday, November 1, 2024 © 2024 Box Office Prophets, a division of One Of Us, Inc. |