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Not to be confused with Hideo Nakata’s Dark Water or the English language remake it inspired, the directorial debut of Mariano Baino represents a modern foray into archaic demonology, blasphemy and ever growing depravity. Imperfect and not even close to the towering mastery of Russell’s film but still a curious little number which paved the way for the Hell episodes in Doom 3.
Loosely inspired by the
works of H.P. Lovecraft, Dark Waters concerns
a young Englishwoman haunted by recurring nightmares of Satanic rites who
travels to a remote island in the Ukraine coast in search of an answer to her
bizarre bad dreams. Unbeknownst to her, deep
in the countryside is a hidden Satanic convent of nuns on a mission to unleash
the antichrist into our world. Though
borrowing heavily from the likes of Sam Raimi’s The Evil Dead with just a few hints of Clive Barker tossed in for
good measure, Dark Waters is an oddly
disturbing cocktail of abstract occult imagery ala Begotten and conventional genre thriller with more than a few
unfortunate clichés mixed in.

There are series of images
recalling the more grotesque abstractions found in Christophe Gans’ Silent Hill interspersed with other
scenes that do little to advance the film or enhance our interest in the
characters. Where Dark Waters succeeds admirably however is the Satan soaked
atmosphere with deep caves lit up by candlelight, giving the unholy underground
church a modern gothic look. Equally
strong if not stronger is the sound design which near the third act begins to
emit a series of strange demonic cries and roars, echoing the backwards talking
demon tape recording in The Exorcist.
I’m a sucker for these kinds of Gothic horror films dealing with sacrilege and demonology, but I’d be lying if I said Dark Waters offered more than facile surface features. Our leading female protagonist, though going through her own myriad of swimming and writing in blood and gore, never clicked with me and the final Lovecraftian finale treads a fine line between genuinely disturbing body horror and high camp creature feature prostheses. Worth a look for those of you who share my penchant for demonic gothic horror but I can’t agree that it’s a “lost masterpiece”. Curious but far from being in league with the likes of Bava or Barker.
Score:
- Andrew Kotwicki