Deep Water Movie Review - A Thriller about Toxic Marriage
With her deep insight of the psychopathic mentality and her flair for constructing a tortuous yarn, Highsmith, the mistress of the psychiatric thriller novella, makes her writing sizzle. Ana de Armas is among our greatest beautiful movie actresses right now, and she'll be playing Marilyn Monrroe in the Andrew Dominik-directed biopic Blonde later this year. With back-to-back great performances in The Way Back, 49-year-old Ben Affleck has matured like vintage wine, still looking astonishingly buff despite gaining muscle mass for the Batman films.
I was excited for Deep Water because I was a follower of Lyne and Highsmith and enjoyed what Affleck and Armas brought to the game. The 115-minute thriller, which will be available on amazon Prime Video on march 18, moves at a frenetic pace, features superb achievements, and kept me speculating where it was going. Lyne and his columnists Zach Helm and sam Levinsson do make some substantial changes to the original material, which causes Deep Water to share some percussion with Affleck's preceding relationship gone bad film Gone girl (2014), but I don't fancy.