Chris Kentis Movies
A filmmaker whose early success could be cited as the perfect inversion of the sophomore slump, director
Chris Kentis first took the reigns for the noirish 1997 drama
Grind before tapping straight into audiences deepest fears with the 2004 shot on video thriller
Open Water. Described by many as a hybrid of
Jaws and
The Blair Witch Project,
Open Water told the harrowing tale of a vacationing couple on a diving excursion who are accidentally left behind in shark infested waters. Shot for just 300,000 dollars on weekends and holidays over the course of a few years, the film found success at the Sundance Film Festival before being picked up by Lions Gate Films for widespread distribution. Following his graduation from New York University's Tisch Shool of the Arts film program,
Kentis and Columbia University graduate wife
Laura Lau opted to write the screenplay for a small scale drama called
Grind. A seething tale of an ex-con whose affair with his brother's wife sparks a series of tragic consequences, the film was largely ignored by critics and audiences and subsequently relegated to a quiet life on home video. Undaunted by the lack of reception received by their freshman effort,
Kentis and
Lau decided to make a digital film in 2000 -- their efforts fueled by a haunting tale of two divers left in the ocean never to be seen again. It was a mere six days before
Kentis had completed the initial script, with
Kentis and
Lau touching it up in the months that followed. When the couple had procured the talents of a few respected but little-known actors and the most professionally renowned dive and shark specialists in the industry, they took to the ocean to begin the long process of shooting the feature. When the couple screened a rough cut of the feature at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival audience reception was wildly supportive, and a positive review in Variety helped to fuel the hype machine. By the time the film was picked up by Lions Gate shortly thereafter, public anticipation was at a fever pitch for the film labeled the scariest excursion into the ocean since
Jaws. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

- 1996
- NR
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A young man trying to break out of his blue collar life in New Jersey finds himself snared by a web of crime and deceit in this independent drama. Just released after an 18-month stretch in prison, 20-year-old Eddie Dolan (Billy Crudup) has few prospects and nowhere to go, so he appears on the doorstep of his older brother Terry (Paul Schulze). Terry takes him in, giving him a place to stay and helping him get a job at the factory where their dad Nick (Frank Vincent) has worked nearly all his adult life. However, times are not happy around the Dolan household; money is tight, and Terry's relationship with his wife Janey (Adrienne Shelly) has been rocky since the birth of their first child six months before. Eddie starts earning some extra cash by joining up with a group of car thieves pulling insurance scams, and in time, he makes enough money to buy a muscle car, which he races in his spare time. On the night shift at the factory, Eddie spends his days working on his car, while Janey, bored with her new role as a stay-at-home mom, starts spending more and more time with him; eventually they move past friendship into an affair, which like Eddie's involvement with the carjackers becomes only more dangerous in the weeks to come. Grind marked the feature debut for writer/director Chris Kentis; Billy Crudup's appearance predated his breakthrough roles in Inventing the Abbotts and Everyone Says I Love You, though both of those films were released before Grind could find a distributor. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Adrienne Shelly, Billy Crudup, (more)

- 2011
- R
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Chris Kentis and Laura Lau (Open Water) return to terra firma for this remake of the "real time" Uruguayan thriller La Casa Muda. Their summer cottage vandalized by squatters during the off-season, Sarah (Elizabeth Olsen), her father, and her uncle begin the laborious process of cleaning the place up when noises from within hint they are not alone. Now the deeper Sarah ventures into the derelict building, the further the secrets of her dark past are dragged out into the light. As with La Casa Muda, Silent House was shot in one continuous take, a production style that allows the viewer to experience the swelling tension of Sarah's horror firsthand as she unlocks a diabolical mystery. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Elizabeth Olsen, Adam Trese, (more)

- 2003
- R
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Independent filmmaker Chris Kentis directs the dramatic thriller Open Water, based on a true story. Susan (Blanchard Ryan) and Daniel (Daniel Travis) are a busy married couple on an island vacation. They board a vessel called the Reef Explorer with a group of other scuba divers, traveling 15 miles out to sea. Since they are certified to dive in open waters, the couple breaks off from the group to go exploring. The Reef Explorer accidentally leaves without a proper head count, leaving them stranded in shark-infested waters. Kentis and producer wife Laura Lau did all the filming themselves in the actual ocean without extraneous special effects, while the actors wore special steel-mesh under their wetsuits in the scenes where actual sharks were involved. Open Water was shown at the Sundance Film Festival in 2004 as part of the American Spectrum competition. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Blanchard Ryan, Daniel Travis, (more)

- 2010
-
From the filmmakers behind Open Water comes the most harrowing tale of survival at sea ever to be recorded in naval history, the story of the USS Indianapolis. Famously recounted by Robert Shaw's Quint character in Jaws, the World War II tale surrounds a ship's sinking by a Japanese submarine as they were on their way back from a secret mission to deliver parts of the atom bomb. After five days in the water with no distress signal sent, malnourishment and scores of sharks decimated the 900 crewmen in the water before a patrol spotted the survivors and began the rescue. 317 men were pulled out alive, including Captain Charles Butler McVay III, whose controversial court-martialing and subsequent survivor guilt led him to suicide in 1968. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide
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- 2008
-
The Open Water filmmaking duo of Chris Kentis and Laura Lau tackle the legal system with this untitled thriller concerning a woman who is driven to paranoia when she's mistakenly charged in a legal case where she acts as her own defense. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide
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