IMDb RATING
6.0/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
A girl travels to an island, after the death of her father, to find out why the father funded a monestary on the island.A girl travels to an island, after the death of her father, to find out why the father funded a monestary on the island.A girl travels to an island, after the death of her father, to find out why the father funded a monestary on the island.
- Awards
- 1 win & 2 nominations total
Mariya Kapnist
- Mother Superior
- (as Maria Kapnist)
Albina Skarga
- Old Blind Woman
- (as Alvina Skarga)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaElizabeth is travelling to the monastery on a bonneted PAZ-651 minibus.
- Alternate versionsThe 2006 DVD edition from NoShame Films is Mariano Baino's director's cut that actually shortens the film by approximately 7 minutes. The newly excised footage that was seen in earlier versions can now be seen in the 'deleted scenes' section.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched: A History of Folk Horror (2021)
Featured review
Often the camera-work struck me as surreal, entrancing and dreamlike, picking unusual shots or showing unusual images. I think it is fair to compare this movie with some of Argento's better horror work such as Suspiria and Inferno, even though it is not at that level. Dark Waters takes its time, though, and does not at all have a rock pace like Argento, at least in spots, has in his films.
Another fair comparison might be to Fulci's Demonia, but I feel this was better than that.
There is relatively little dialogue, making this, perhaps "pure cinema." Unfortunately, what dialogue there was was sometimes very low, so that I had to keep raising and lowering the volume, possibly a flaw of the DVD copy I viewed (possibly actually a VCD, I think). However, some characters' accents were also a little difficult to decipher, and while that may have been intentional, it would have been nice to have had an option of subtitles.
Some of the characters' motivation was also mysterious to me. Are all the nuns on the same side or not? Whose side are they on? Why was Sarah different than Elizabeth? Why was the father sending money to the nuns? Where was the church located?
Despite these questions, I was very taken by the movie, and would watch it again.
Another fair comparison might be to Fulci's Demonia, but I feel this was better than that.
There is relatively little dialogue, making this, perhaps "pure cinema." Unfortunately, what dialogue there was was sometimes very low, so that I had to keep raising and lowering the volume, possibly a flaw of the DVD copy I viewed (possibly actually a VCD, I think). However, some characters' accents were also a little difficult to decipher, and while that may have been intentional, it would have been nice to have had an option of subtitles.
Some of the characters' motivation was also mysterious to me. Are all the nuns on the same side or not? Whose side are they on? Why was Sarah different than Elizabeth? Why was the father sending money to the nuns? Where was the church located?
Despite these questions, I was very taken by the movie, and would watch it again.
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