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Known for his rich orchestral scores laced with lush sounds, James Newton Howard’s compelling score for Lady In The Water compliments Shyamalan’s eerie tale.
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Lady in the Water is written, produced and directed by M. NIGHT SHYAMALAN. Perhaps his most original and daring film yet, Lady in the Water began as an impromptu bedtime story Shyamalan invented for his two young daughters. “The way I tell stories to my kids is very freeform – whatever pops into my head and comes out of my mouth,” he says of their nightly ritual.
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Lady in the Water tells the legend of Story (BRYCE DALLAS HOWARD), a mesmerizing nymph-like young woman, and Cleveland Heep (PAUL GIAMATTI), the broken-spirited building superintendent who discovers that she is actually a Narf – a character from an ancient and epic bedtime story – who has journeyed to the human world to fulfill a vital and sacred purpose.
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Known for his rich orchestral scores laced with lush sounds, James Newton Howard’s compelling score for Lady In The Water compliments Shyamalan’s eerie tale. Tracks such as "Ripples In The Pool" and "The Healing" take the listener to a serine place of solitude while “Walkie Talkie” and “The Great Eatlon” bring out feelings of suspense and urgency the film so powerfully conveys. The soundtrack emphasizes a full orchestral approach, featuring members of the world-famous Los Angeles Master Chorale who have worked with him previously on Waterworld, The Devil's Advocate and Snow Falling on Cedars among others.
Bob Dylan’s music is featured throughout the film, although it has more of an underlying presence. Silvertide (appearing courtesy of J Records) belt out their take on the popular track “It Ain’t Me Babe” and appear in a cameo performance singing “Maggie’s Farm.” England native singer-songwriter Amanda Ghost delivers a beautiful rendition of “Every Grain of Sand” and Minnesota indie rock band A Whisper in the Noise beautifully remake “Times They Are A’Changin’” by incorporating strings, piano, lush-toned electronics, and atmospheric singing.
Lady In the Water marks James Newton Howard’s 5th M. Night Shyamalan film with past collaborations including Unbreakable, Signs, The Sixth Sense and The Village which garnered him an Academy Award® nomination. Howard took up film scoring in 1985 and hasn't stopped since making him a leading figure in Hollywood's new film composing generation. His work has been acknowledged by multipleOscar®, Emmy®, Golden Globe® and Grammy® nominations, as well as an Emmy® win in 2001 for "Outstanding Main Title Theme Music" for the television show Gideon's Crossing. Adding to his already rich catalogue, he most recently composed the robust score for the blockbuster King Kong.
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Lady in the Water is written, produced and directed by M. NIGHT SHYAMALAN. Perhaps his most original and daring film yet, Lady in the Water began as an impromptu bedtime story Shyamalan invented for his two young daughters. “The way I tell stories to my kids is very freeform – whatever pops into my head and comes out of my mouth,” he says of their nightly ritual.
“Do you know that someone lives under our pool?” is what popped out of Shyamalan’s head on that particular night, sparking a story that played out for days and weeks on end. “It developed into this kind of odyssey,” he recalls. “There was something at the heart of this story that made me want to tell it every night, and to keep it going. After the story finally ended, my daughters and I kept talking about it and what happened to the characters. It resonated with us in an unusual fashion.”
Lady in the Water was shot entirely on location in Leavittown, Pennsylvania, approximately 20 miles outside of Philadelphia, at the site of a former 3M tape manufacturing plant. The 81 acre property provided an area large enough to construct the film’s principal set, an expansive apartment building called The Cove, as well as warehouse space for interior sets, workshop and office space, and a massive water tank (previously used by 3M as a fire tank) for the underwater sequences.
The close proximity of the various facets of production on the compound made it possible for Shyamalan to shoot Lady in the Water in sequence. From the moment Cleveland introduces himself to Mr. Farber, the film was shot scene-for-scene as the story unfolds in the script (with the exception of the underwater sequences, which were filmed at the end of the production schedule).
The Cove – a U-shaped, 5 story, 57-unit apartment complex complete with a center courtyard, swimming pool and a detached bungalow bordering on a sprawling wooded meadow – was built from the ground up under the supervision of production designer Martin Childs.
Childs, an Oscar winner for his set designs for Shakespeare in Love, had never been to Philadelphia and drove around the city’s suburbs to absorb the architecture as he was researching and developing ideas for the look of The Cove, which Shyamalan envisioned as a “transitory” building housing tenants whose lives are in state of flux. “I tried to imagine the sort of social feel that a building like The Cove might have, with its residents from different ethnic backgrounds, of different ages and social classes,” Childs recalls.
Rather than create a stylized structure with inherent architectural ambience (like the foreboding atmosphere exuded by a Gothic building, for example), Childs and Shyamalan purposely chose a nondescript design for The Cove – one that would give no hint of the diverse worlds cohabiting within or portend the events to come. “We decided to create a completely ‘blank’ building that would be given character by the characters inside it,” Childs explains. “In a sense it was a blank page upon which the story could be written.”
A scale model was made of Childs’ design for the complex, which he and his team strategically placed on the 3M property where the massive set was to be built. Then they calculated how sunlight would fall onto the building from various angles. Using computer diagrams to chart the trajectory of the sun and how it changed the light flow onto the building, Childs determined how to best position and construct the horseshoe-shaped structure, with its “open end” facing what would become a wooded area.
The art department and construction team built and dressed the complex in seven weeks. Nine of the units were “built out” and fully dressed as the residences of the film’s principal characters. “The complex had everything but plumbing and heating,” confirms producer Sam Mercer. In fact, The Cove was so realistic, during production a memo was distributed to the cast and crew reminding them: Please do not use the sinks and/or bathrooms in the apartment sets. They may look real, but they’re NOT!”
As in the story, each tenant’s apartment is a microcosm unto itself, reflecting not only the character of the inhabitant, but how he or she relates to the outside world – from the warmth and tradition of Mrs. Choi’s home to the learned and solitary feel of Mr. Leeds’ bookish abode, to Mrs. Bell’s nurturing, animal-friendly environment or the lethargic, unstructured vibe of the Smokers’ apartment.
Childs and his art department so thoroughly outfitted the tenants’ living spaces, many members of the cast remarked that they became more deeply acquainted with and connected to their characters upon entering their apartments. Some reactions were more visceral than others; as Shyamalan recalls, “When I walked in the Smokers’ apartment for the first time it looked like somebody had vomited on the walls.”
The interior of Cleveland’s bungalow was built on stage as well as practically, with anonymity as a guide. “In Cleveland’s bungalow we wanted an absence of past because he keeps his past stuffed away and never talks about it,” says Childs of the caretaker’s modest surroundings. “There are some older items in there but those could easily be left by previous caretakers, like the filing cabinets. There’s nothing there to learn about Cleveland – unless you’re nosy, like Story.”
Vick and Anna’s apartment was also created as an interior set, along with The Cove’s mailroom, laundry room and basement hallways. These sets were built in life-size dimensions, without removable “fly walls” typical of most interior sets, in keeping with Shyamalan’s desire for authenticity. For a key scene that takes place in the mailroom, 20 cast members crowded into the tiny set along with key crew and equipment.
In designing Story’s secret alcove beneath the swimming pool, a set that was built and then submerged in the production’s massive water tank for filming, Childs found insight in a comment Story makes to Cleveland the first time she comes to his bungalow. “Story tells Cleveland that he has a beautiful sofa, but it’s actually quite ordinary,” the designer notes. “I got the idea that Story thinks The Cove is a pretty special place, so she decided to recreate something that looks a bit like it in the home she’s made for herself.”
Story’s niche is a treasure trove of shiny objects that she has collected during her stay. “She’s drawn to shiny objects but she doesn’t know their value,” Childs says, “so among the diamonds there are some scrunched up soda cans and a piece of tinfoil from Mrs. Choi’s orchid display.”
The swimming pool is not only Story’s conduit to and from the human realm, but it also serves as the nucleus between the rigid grid of the apartment complex, the organic world that is beginning to encroach upon it, and the mysteries of Story’s mythological home. “The pool is the point at which all the worlds collide,” Childs observes. “On one side you have the man-made building. On the other side you have nature in the shape of the forest. Underneath you have Story’s world. So the pool is literally the heart of the building where all of these worlds meet.”
After construction, the pool was painted with gradations of color to add to its mystery – beginning with light blue at the top edges and deepening to a black-blue at the bottom. Shyamalan and Childs’ penchant for detail extended to the pool’s grill, which is based on the design of a sewer grate in a pivotal sequence from Alfred Hitchcock’s classic thriller Strangers on a Train, in which a character inadvertently drops an incriminating piece of evidence down the drain.
It is through this grate at the bottom of the pool that Cleveland discovers Story’s secret world beneath The Cove. Paul Giamatti and the dive team, led by stunt coordinator Jeff Habberstad, filmed these underwater scenes on two sets submerged in a 350,000 gallon water tank. Dubbed “Big Bertha” by the crew, the tank housed a 20-foot tunnel that Giamatti had to navigate in the dark with no breathing apparatus, as well as the set for Story’s alcove, which Cleveland discovers at the end of this long passageway.
“The first day we got in the pool to practice, he was completely natural,” says Habberstad of Giamatti, who impressed the stunt team with his ease in the water and his ability to hold his breath for long periods. “He even seemed to prefer to stay underwater between takes while we were preparing for the next shot.”
Habberstad developed Cleveland’s improvised breathing method – by which he breathes air from underneath Story’s collection of glassware with a straw-like tool – in his own swimming pool before teaching it to Giamatti. (The actor performed this stunt himself without a breathing apparatus or the benefit of special effects.)
“We were able to do things that we would not have been able to do with any other actor,” Shyamalan attests. “It was dangerous. Not only did Paul have to hold his breath as he was swimming and acting, but he couldn’t see very well because it was very dark in the tank and the water was filled with particles so that it would feel muddier and more organic. And I do long takes.”
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Lady in the Water tells the legend of Story (BRYCE DALLAS HOWARD), a mesmerizing nymph-like young woman, and Cleveland Heep (PAUL GIAMATTI), the broken-spirited building superintendent who discovers that she is actually a Narf – a character from an ancient and epic bedtime story – who has journeyed to the human world to fulfill a vital and sacred purpose. Temporarily trapped between realms, her mission and maybe even her fragile existence in jeopardy, she has taken refuge in Cleveland’s building, living in the cool dark passageways beneath the swimming pool.
Story’s quest to return to her world is fraught with danger, inhibited by ferocious creatures whose attempts to stop her carry catastrophic consequences for the human realm. As Cleveland and his fellow tenants work together to unravel the mystery of her destiny, they discover that they too are fated to be characters in this extraordinary story unfolding in the real world around them.
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1. PROLOGUE
2. THE PARTY
3. CHARADES
4. RIPPLES IN THE POOL
5. THE BLUE WORLD
6. GIVING THE KII
7. WALKIE TALKIE
8. CEREAL BOXES
9. OFFICER JIMBO
10. THE HEALING
11. THE GREAT EATLON
12. END TITLES
13. THE TIMES THEY ARE A_CHANGIN'
written by Bob Dylan
performed by A Whisper in the Noise
14. EVERY GRAIN OF SAND
written by Bob Dylan
performed by Amanda Ghost
15.IT AIN'T ME BABE
written by Bob Dylan
performed by Silvertide
16. MAGGIE'S FARM
written by Bob Dylan
performed by Silvertide
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BRYCE DALLAS HOWARD (Story)
PAUL GIAMATTI (Cleveland Heep)
SARITA CHOUDHURY (Anna Ran)
JEFFREY WRIGHT (Mr Dury)
FREDDY RODRIGUEZ (Anna Ran)
BILL IRWIN (Mr. Leeds)
JARED HARRIS (Goatee Smoker)
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