Water (2006)
Runtime: 2 hrs 20 mins
Genre: Dramas
Starring: Lisa Ray, Seema Biswas, Kalbushan Kharbadna, Waheeda Rehman, Rishma Malik
DVD Info
Release:
Aug 29, 2006
DVD Features:
- Keep Case
- Widescreen - 2.35
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 5.1 - Hindi
- Subtitles - English, Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Material:
- Audio Commentary - Deepa Mehta - Director
- Behind-The-Scenes - 1. Featurette
- 2. "The Story Behind The Making of WATER"
Buy It On DVD
Reviews
Powerful tale that unfortunately fails to provide any kind of real historical context for the oppression of Indian widows.
Perhaps the adversity of making the movie allowed the filmmakers and actors to empathize more fully with the subject and characters of Water.
... the incidence of violence against women at home or in institutions give Mehta's 1938 tale a currency that confirms the old notion "actions change, but attitudes do not."
Surprisingly, not much has changed in the last 70 years. The tradition of sequestering widows continues in India. Mehta deserves praise for spotlighting this situation. WATER is one of the year's best films.
Though it's a story told with feminist sensitivity, it's also the most relevant perspective for such injustice to women.
Full of lush, fluid cinematography and evocative music, Water is an important look at a social injustice, and Mehta's most accomplished film yet.
... gorgeous and heartbreaking... full of glorious, unforgettably pretty images... But they do not overpower Mehta's involving drama or the exceptionally fine performances of her stars...
Quite possibly the best picture of the year thus far, with no fewer than three of the most luminous female performances I have ever seen onscreen.
Controversial for exposing the rigidity of the Hindu religion.
Mehta prevailed, and this scandalous, beautiful and very moving tale of repression, hope and a tragedy is her triumph, and Hindu India's shame.
Water simmers at the injustice heaped upon these women because of religious tradition.
Both a high-minded glossy soap opera, in the tradition of a Darryl F. Zanuck forbidden-love potboiler like 'Island in the Sun,' and a fierce expose of the mistreatment of women encouraged by fundamentalist religious tradition...
For those who can accept Mehta's approach, it's a remarkably rewarding film.
All the pat plotting and discourse in the world can't extinguish the fire of a film this well-intended, sensitively acted and beautifully filmed.
The movie's sentimental vision rests on the flimsy idea that 'real' religion never sanctions cruelty.
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