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Dark Water (Japanese: 仄暗い水の底から, Hepburn: Honogurai mizu no soko kara, lit. "From the Depths of Dark Water") is a 2002 Japanese supernatural horror film directed by Hideo Nakata and written by Yoshihiro Nakamura and Kenichi Suzuki, based on the short story collection by Koji Suzuki. [1]
Two films based on the story "Floating Water" from Suzuki's book Dark Water: Dark Water, a Japanese horror film directed by Hideo Nakata; Dark Water, a remake of the 2002 film directed by Walter Salles; Dark Water, a 2007 film starring Chartchai Ngamsan; Dark Waters, an American legal thriller film directed by Todd Haynes
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Dark Water played in 2,657 theaters with a complete average run of 3.2 weeks. The film made $10 million, which is 39% of the movie's total gross, on its opening weekend. It went on to make $25.5 million in the US [3] and between $18.9 million [2] and $24 million [3] in the international box office, adding up to a worldwide box office total of $44.4 to $49.5 million.
Dark Water is the English title of a collection of short stories by Koji Suzuki, originally published in Japan as Honogurai mizu no soko kara (Kanji: 仄暗い水の底から; literally, From the Depths of Dark Waters). The book was first published in 1996 and released in 2004 in an English translation.
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He is most familiar to Western audiences for his work on Japanese horror films such as Ring (1998), Ring 2 (1999) and Dark Water (2002). [3] Several of these were remade in English as The Ring (2002), Dark Water (2005), and The Ring Two. [4] Nakata was scheduled to make his English-language debut with True Believers, but later pulled out.
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