Vic and Melinda Van Allen are a married couple with a young daughter Trixie, living in a small town in Louisiana. A strange agreement with their loveless marriage as that Melinda is allowed to take any number of lovers as long as she does not desert her family.
Prime Video will premiere acclaimed British Director Adrian Lyne’s new erotic thriller Deep Water in the UK and Worldwide (excluding the U.S., China, Russia and Middle East) on 18th March. Based on the Patricia Highsmith novel of the same name, Deep Water is Lyne’s first Directorial film in 20 years following the worldwide success of his previous films including Indecent Proposal, Unfaithful and Fatal Attraction.
Ben Affleck and Ana de Armas star as Vic and Melinda Van Allen, an affluent New Orleans couple whose marriage is crumbling under the weight of resentment, jealousy, and mistrust. As their mutual provocations and mind games escalate, things quickly turn into a deadly game of cat and mouse as Melinda’s extramarital dalliances start going missing. With sizzling and complex performances from Ben Affleck and Ana de Armas and helmed by one of the most celebrated filmmakers of the genre, Deep Water marks the return of the A-list erotic thriller, grabbing your attention from the start and refusing to let go as you discover just how far a person will go.
Tracy Letts, Rachel Blanchard, Dash Mihok, Lil Rel Howery, Jacob Elordi, Finn Wittrock, and Kristen Connolly also star.
A New York suburban couple Connie (Diane Lane) and Ed’s (Richard Gere) marriage goes astray as Connie has an adulterous fling, with Paul (Olivier Martinez). Risking her marriage and pretty much her lifestyle, for an affair which contains sex like she never had in her marriage. She was bored and ended up spending quite a lot of time with Paul during the day while her husband was at work and their son was at school. I will not reveal what happens at the end as I think the twists it takes are very good. I do like when she has a flashback to the day she met Paul and thinks about the way it should have gone, which I think just helps to show that every decision we make can go two ways and change everything, or you can keep it all the same.