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Daniel Travis

News

Daniel Travis

Open Water True Story: The Real Shark Encounter That Inspired The Movie
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2003's Open Water shark movie is based on actual events surrounding the disappearance of an American couple scuba diving in the shark-infested waters around the Great Barrier Reef off the coast of Queensland, Australia. The movie was written and directed by Chris Kentis, and produced by Kentis' wife Laura Lau — both avid divers. The couple shot the film over the span of two years, and they funded the project with $130,000 of their own money. The movie became a sleeper hit, upended the Killer Shark genre, and went on to earn over $54 million worldwide.

The Open Water shark movie tells the terrifying story of a couple, Daniel Kintner (Daniel Travis) and Susan Watkins (Blanchard Ryan), who go on a diving expedition and find themselves stranded 20 miles offshore. What makes Open Water a different type of killer shark movie than say, The Meg franchise or Deep Blue Sea, is that it's based...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 1/20/2025
  • by Tom Russell, Greg MacArthur
  • ScreenRant
A 20-Year-Old Shark Movie That's Scarier Than Jaws Streams for Free in December
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Open Water, which has a 71% on Rotten Tomatoes, is getting a new streaming home starting in December. The shark horror film, which is loosely based on a true story, was released in 2004, but starting on Dec. 1, it can be streamed for free on Tubi.

Open Water stars Blanchard Ryan as Susan Watkins and Daniel Travis as Daniel Kinter, scuba divers who accidentally are stranded in shark-infested waters after their tour boat leaves them. The abandoned couple must contend with sharks and other marine creatures as they struggle to stay alive in the cold ocean.

Cbr named the film one of the 10 Must-Watch Horror Movies Set at Sea, and called it an example of minimalist filmmaking done correctly. In the movie, the majority of the time is centered around the couple, adrift in the ocean. However, it stands out from other shark films because of its use of real-life sharks in its production.
See full article at CBR
  • 11/16/2024
  • by Deana Carpenter
  • CBR
Graeme Revell, Chris Kentis, Laura Lau, Steve Lemme, Blanchard Ryan, Saul Stein, Daniel Travis, Estelle Lau, John Charles, Michael E. Williamson, and Cristina Zenato in Open Water (2003)
Open Water (2003) – Wtf Really Happened to This Horror Movie?
Graeme Revell, Chris Kentis, Laura Lau, Steve Lemme, Blanchard Ryan, Saul Stein, Daniel Travis, Estelle Lau, John Charles, Michael E. Williamson, and Cristina Zenato in Open Water (2003)
It’s time for a new episode of the Wtf Really Happened to This Horror Movie? video series, and in this one we’re looking at the tragic true events that inspired the 2003 shark thriller Open Water (watch it Here). To find out all about it, check out the video embedded above.

Wtf Really Happened to This Horror Movie? is sort of a spin-off from our show Wtf Happened to This Horror Movie. Wtf Really Happened to This Horror Movie? dives into movies that were based on or “inspired by” true stories, real people, and actual historical events so we can try to separate fact from fiction.

Written and directed by Chris Kentis, Open Water has the following synopsis: Daniel and Susan embark on a tropical vacation with their scuba-diving certifications in tow. During a group dive, the two separate themselves from the others to dive a little deeper. An...
See full article at JoBlo.com
  • 4/28/2023
  • by Cody Hamman
  • JoBlo.com
Top 100 Horror Movies: How Truly Horrific Are They?
Top 100 horror movies of all time: Chicago Film Critics' choices (photo: Sigourney Weaver and Alien creature show us that life is less horrific if you don't hold grudges) See previous post: A look at the Chicago Film Critics Association's Scariest Movies Ever Made. Below is the list of the Chicago Film Critics's Top 100 Horror Movies of All Time, including their directors and key cast members. Note: this list was first published in October 2006. (See also: Fay Wray, Lee Patrick, and Mary Philbin among the "Top Ten Scream Queens.") 1. Psycho (1960) Alfred Hitchcock; with Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh, Vera Miles, John Gavin, Martin Balsam. 2. The Exorcist (1973) William Friedkin; with Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair, Jason Miller, Max von Sydow (and the voice of Mercedes McCambridge). 3. Halloween (1978) John Carpenter; with Jamie Lee Curtis, Donald Pleasence, Tony Moran. 4. Alien (1979) Ridley Scott; with Sigourney Weaver, Tom Skerritt, John Hurt. 5. Night of the Living Dead (1968) George A. Romero; with Marilyn Eastman,...
See full article at Alt Film Guide
  • 10/31/2014
  • by Andre Soares
  • Alt Film Guide
“The Worst Holiday Breaks in Film” – by Kim Newman
To celebrate the release of Retreat, in which Thandie Newton and Cillian Murphy unwisely try to patch up their failing marriage by spending time alone in the only cottage on a remote Scots island, here’s a guide to the movies’ worst holiday destinations compiled by film critic and author Kim Newman. These films tell you all the things you don’t see in the brochures.

And Soon the Darkness (1970)

Destination: Northern France | Holidaymakers: Pamela Franklin, Michele Dotrice | Major snag: Psycho Killer

This is a cautionary tale about the perils of venturing abroad, especially if you happen to be two English girls in short shorts who decide to go on a cycling tour of an area of France where several young women have mysteriously disappeared. It’s a slow burn of a movie, beginning with the petty discomforts – unfriendly guest-houses, leering locals, squabbles – of a shared trip, then escalating to cat-and-mouse with a maniac.
See full article at Nerdly
  • 10/11/2011
  • by Phil
  • Nerdly
DVD Releases: October 5th, 2010, or The Most Expensive Day in Horror History!
Another week in October, another bounty crop of horror DVDs and Blu-rays. This week we have home entertainment from recent theatrical releases of nightmares of the mind as well as re-releases of classic and campy horror, all with boatloads of extras.

Then there are other horror titles that are being re-released on Blu-ray or in packs for double dipping. On top of that, horror offerings from Asia, past seasons of TV shows, manga, novels, and even video games are all vying for our pocketbooks. And we still have four more weeks of October to go.

Next year October needs to begin in August.

Human Centipede: First Sequence

Directed by Tom Six

Human Centipede: First Sequence (review) was a sensation ever since its first mention. Stephen Colbert even talked about it at the 2010 Emmys Awards broadcast! The premise cannot be simpler. Two pretty American girls are on a road trip through Europe.
See full article at DreadCentral.com
  • 10/5/2010
  • by kwlow
  • DreadCentral.com
HorrorBid's Top 10 Horror Films of the 2000's You Haven't Seen
The 2000's—the decade of iPods, social networking websites and economic hardship—were an interesting decade for horror movies, to say the least. You either loved them, or you downright hated them. From remakes, re-imaginings, reboots, restarts and resets to foreign imports to a resurgence of low-grade schlock, the 2000's were not without gore for fans across the globe....

At the end of the 90s, horror movies were almost non-existent. They were doing nothing new—trying only to steal the fame that Scream harnessed in 1995. Theatres were flooded with neo-Slasher knockoffs, and mediocrity ran amok. If it weren’t for The Blair Witch Project and The Sixth Sense, the 90s would have drowned in a sea of its own plainness. Once the 90s ended and the new millennium began, horror slowly glided on the watered-down plotlines of the should-not-be-classics of I Know What You Did Last Summer and Urban Legend,...
See full article at Horrorbid
  • 12/13/2009
  • by admin
  • Horrorbid
Chris Kentis
Open Water
Chris Kentis
Open Water, made by the husband-and-wife team of Chris Kentis and Laura Lau, raises the question of how harrowing an experience a movie can put its audience through and still stake a claim as entertainment. Of its 79 minutes, more than 60 feature two scuba divers, accidentally abandoned by their boat in the middle of the ocean, being menaced by sea creatures, physical ailments and their own mounting fears. Clearly, this one will divide viewers, but the vote here is that Open Water is an unpleasant experience.

After unnerving festivalgoers in the Hamptons and Park City, the movie opens Friday in major cities and rolls out nationally Aug. 20. If Lions Gate can capitalize on the fear factor, Open Water could develop a cult following. But it is hard to envision repeat viewings or any great number of people willing, even vicariously, to undergo the couple's ordeal.

Only a handful of movies have dealt with the plight of people stranded at sea. Most memorable are Alfred Hitchcock's Lifeboat, where the emphasis is on the relationships among the diverse characters in the boat; the climatic sequence in Steven Spielberg's Jaws; and more recently Dead Calm and Deep Blue Sea. Of these, Open Water is about as stripped down as you can get: no boat, no other people -- just the wide and hostile sea.

Daniel and Susan (Daniel Travis and Blanchard Ryan) are a stressed-out yuppie couple heading for an island holiday in an attempt to lessen the strain of workaholic lives. Several days into the vacation, they board a local dive boat for a 30- to 40-minute underwater excursion. Through careless head-counting by the operator, the boat takes off before they surface.

And so it begins. Tantalizingly, other boats are on the horizon but not close enough to offer easy rescue. Before they can make a decision which way to swim, a strong current makes it for them by pulling them further out to sea. Jellyfish sting, a shark swims by, a barracuda bites Susan and David suffers leg cramps. Then another shark investigates, David goes nuts, each blames the other for their predicament, and more sharks appear. The only comic relief comes when Susan screams, "I wanted to go skiing!"

Unlike, say, Jack London's classic existential story To Build a Fire, in which a man stranded in the wilderness confronts his own mortality, the film never develops any deeper meaning or moral. Things just go from bad to worse. Occasionally, the filmmakers cut back to shore to tease us with shots of people enjoying life and partying. There is something a wee bit sadistic in these interjections, however, which build not tension but frustration.

This is an accomplished film, demonstrating what a guerrilla crew of four people and two actors can pull off. The actors believably portray the stranded couple without resorting to histrionics. Without any visual effects or other gimmickry -- yes, those sharks are real -- the two filmmakers subtly heighten the terror as the seascape goes from lush and simmering to blood red.

The snippets of island songs and music work their way into the story subtly, underscoring the mood but not calling attention to themselves. The digital transfer is smooth so that Kentis and Lau's cinematography, both above and below the surface, all too convincingly locates us in a watery wilderness with no help in sight.

OPEN WATER

Lions Gate Films

Plunge Pictures

Credits:

Writer-director-editor: Chris Kentis

Producer: Laura Lau

Directors of photography: Chris Kentis, Laura Lau

Music: Graeme Revell

Cast:

Susan: Blanchard Ryan

Daniel: Daniel Travis

Seth: Saul Stein

Estelle: Estelle Lau

Davis: Michaeal E. Williamson

Linda: Christina Zenarro

Junior: John Charles

MPAA rating: R

Running time -- 79 minutes...
  • 9/3/2004
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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