20260530-20180216-0-62934788
Critic's Rating: 4.0
Story: Set against the backdrop of Cold War, the film revolves around a lonely mute woman, Elisa Esposito (Sally Hawkins), who works as a janitor in a classified laboratory in Baltimore. Her isolated, mundane life takes a dramatic turn when she falls in love with a mysterious sea creature, dragged from South America to the lab by Colonel Richard Strickland (Michael Shannon), who terms it as an ‘asset’.


Review: Love can be found in the strangest places and Elisa stumbles upon it in a lab. Ironically, while the creature is trapped and tortured by Strickland for being dangerous, it is that very monster that’s most compassionate when it comes to Elisa. He sees her and acknowledges her existence unlike the rest. The creature makes her feel alive and worthy of being loved — something we all yearn for.


Leading the Oscar race with 13 nominations, on paper, Guillermo del Toro’s implausible love story may seem a tad preposterous. However, its beauty lies in the filmmaker’s vivid imagination and unique execution. Through sublime storytelling, evocative characters, spectacular production design and Alexandre Desplat’s soul-stirring music, del Toro’s suspenseful romance, transports you to another place and time. In times of growing cynicism and practicalities seeping into relationships, this enchanting fairy-tale with a hint of realism, is an exquisite piece of cinema that compels you to believe in miracles.


Right from the word go; the visionary filmmaker paints a visual and emotional masterpiece that strikes an incredible balance between reality and fantasy. Elisa’s banal existence and longing for an unusual adventure, her modest apartment placed on top of a movie theatre and unspoken conversation with her only friends Giles (Richard Jenkins), an elderly gay man craving for companionship and Zelda (Octavia Spencer), a caring woman, constantly cribbing about her useless husband Bruester… it is precious moments like these that resonate with you the most. Also, the actors — Sally Hawkins, Octavia Spencer, Richard Jenkins, Michael Shannon and Michael Stuhlbarg breathe life into this fantasy.


More than its visual brilliance, what captivates you the most is Del Toro’s ability to capture the minutiae of his ordinary characters’ everyday life. An unlikely amalgamation of supernatural, spiritual and sci-fi elements, The Shape of Water at heart, is a simple tale of hope and empathy. It rebuilds your faith in love, which isn’t and shouldn’t be defined by a certain shape or form.

Summary / Analysis

Spoiler alert! Please do not read the following plot summary if you have not seen the film.
Elisa Esposito (Sally Hawkins), who was found in a river as an orphaned child with wounds on her neck, is mute, and communicates through sign language. She lives alone in an apartment above a cinema, and works as a cleaning woman at a secret government laboratory in Baltimore at the height of the Cold War. Her friends are her closeted next-door neighbor Giles, a struggling advertising illustrator who shares a strong bond with her, and her African-American co-worker Zelda, a woman who also serves as her interpreter at work.


The facility receives a mysterious creature known as the Amphibian Man captured from the Amazon River by Colonel Richard Strickland, who is in charge of the project to study it. Curious about the creature, Elisa discovers it is a humanoid amphibian. She begins visiting him in secret, and the two form a close bond.

Seeking to exploit the Amphibian Man to American advantage in the Space Race, General Frank Hoyt orders Strickland to vivisect it. One scientist, Robert Hoffstetler—who is in truth a Soviet spy named Dimitri Mosenkov—pleads unsuccessfully to keep the Amphibian Man alive for further study and, at the same time, is ordered by his Soviet handlers to euthanize the creature. When Elisa learns of the Americans' plans for the Amphibian Man, she persuades Giles to help her free him. Mosenkov discovers Elisa's plot and chooses to help her. Though initially reluctant, Zelda becomes involved in the escape, and it is successful.

Elisa keeps the Amphibian Man in her bathtub, adding salt to the water to keep him alive. She plans to release the creature into a nearby canal when it will be opened to the ocean in several days' time. As part of his efforts to recover the Amphibian Man, Strickland interrogates Elisa and Zelda, but the failure of his advances toward Elisa hampers his judgment, and he dismisses them. Back at the apartment, Giles discovers the Amphibian Man devouring one of his cats. Startled, the Amphibian Man slashes Giles's arm and rushes out of the apartment. The Amphibian Man gets as far as the cinema downstairs before Elisa finds him and returns him to her apartment. The Amphibian Man touches Giles on his balding head and his wounded arm; the next morning, Giles discovers his hair has begun growing back and the wounds on his arm have healed. Elisa and the Amphibian Man soon become romantically involved, having sex in her bathroom, which she at one point fills completely with water.

Hoyt gives Strickland an ultimatum, asking him to recover the Amphibian Man within 36 hours. Meanwhile, Mosenkov is told by his handlers that he will be extracted in two days. As the planned release date approaches, the Amphibian Man's health starts deteriorating. Mosenkov leaves to rendezvous with his handlers, with Strickland tailing him. At the rendezvous, Mosenkov is shot by one of his handlers, but Strickland shoots the handlers dead and then tortures Mosenkov for information. Mosenkov implicates Elisa and Zelda before dying from his wounds. Strickland then threatens Zelda in her home, causing her terrified husband to reveal that Elisa had been keeping the Amphibian Man. Strickland searches Elisa's apartment and finds a calendar note revealing when and where she plans to release him.

At the canal, Elisa and Giles bid farewell to the creature, but Strickland arrives and attacks them all. Strickland knocks Giles down and shoots the Amphibian Man and Elisa, who both appear to die. However, the Amphibian Man heals himself and slashes Strickland's throat, killing him. As police arrive on the scene with Zelda, the Amphibian Man takes Elisa and jumps into the canal, where, deep under water, he heals her. When he applies his healing touch to the scars on her neck, they open to reveal gills like his. With Elisa's final tie to the surface world cut, they embrace. In a closing voice-over narration, Giles conveys his belief that Elisa lived "happily ever after" with the Amphibian Man.

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Guillermo Del Toro's fantasy drama continues to woo the audience with its unique story line. The film which is currently in the Oscar race in multiple categories has moviegoers fascinated with its unique amalgamation of romance with science fiction elements. Here is what a few Twitter users had to say about the critically acclaimed flick...






FAQs
  1. What is the release date of 'The Shape Of Water'?
    Release date of Michael Shannon and Michael Stuhlbarg starrer 'The Shape Of Water' is 2018-02-16.
  2. Who are the actors in 'The Shape Of Water'?
    'The Shape Of Water' star cast includes Michael Shannon, Michael Stuhlbarg, Octavia Spencer and Doug Jones.
  3. Who is the director of 'The Shape Of Water'?
    'The Shape Of Water' is directed by Guillermo Del Toro.
  4. Who is the producer of 'The Shape Of Water'?
    'The Shape Of Water' is produced by Guillermo Del Toro,J. Miles Dale.
  5. What is Genre of 'The Shape Of Water'?
    'The Shape Of Water' belongs to 'Adventure, Fantasy,Drama' genre.
  6. In Which Languages is 'The Shape Of Water' releasing?
    'The Shape Of Water' is releasing in English.