Summary

  • Deep Water is a psychological thriller that explores the twisted dynamics of a loveless marriage and the dangerous mind games played by the main couple.
  • The ending of Deep Water sees Vic and Melinda's relationship become more passionate after Vic kills two of her lovers, solidifying their toxic bond.
  • Trixie, the couple's young daughter, knows more about her parents' marriage than they let on and supports Vic's actions, indicating a disturbing family dynamic.

The psychological thriller Deep Water's ending explained that Vic and Melinda’s dangerous mind games might not be over with. Directed by Adrian Lyne (Fatal Attraction, Indecent Proposal), Deep Water is a twisted tale of the seemingly loveless marriage between Vic (Ben Affleck) and Melinda Van Allen (Ana de Armas). Adapted from the 1957 novel of the same name by Patricia Highsmith, Hulu’s Deep Water crafts a new ending to the story that adds more complex nuances to the characters’ high-stakes romance.

Deep Water, which is primarily told from the perspective of Vic, follows the manipulative couple as they raise their six-year-old daughter in a tight-knit community where gossip spreads like wildfire. Since Vic lacks a certain passion that Melinda seeks, the couple enters into an agreement where Melinda is allowed to take lovers as long as she doesn’t break up their family. Deep Water sees the couple’s arrangement take a twisted turn when Vic begins to crack. By the end of Deep Water, several people connected to Vic and Melinda’s romantic entanglements die, with the final act cementing the twisted dynamic between the main couple.

What Happens In Deep Water’s Ending

Deep Water ends with Vic and Melinda feeling more passionate about their marriage, albeit after he has killed two of her lovers in cold blood. Although Melinda is sure that Vic killed her lover, Charlie, she becomes more attracted to him and doesn’t immediately accuse him of involvement when she hasn’t heard from her latest paramour, Tony. After a picnic with Melinda and Trixie, Vic returns to the river to better hide Tony's body, only for Melinda to simultaneously find Tony’s wallet inside a box of Vic’s snails. Melinda calls up Don, a neighbor who suspects Vic of killing Charlie. Don finally confronts Vic at the gorge.

After seeing Vic moving Tony’s body, Don drives his car to tell the police, with Vic hopping on his bike to stop him. When Vic rides his bike in the direct path of Don’s car, Don swerves off the road, falling to his death as he drives off a cliff. At home, Trixie sees Melinda has packed a suitcase, so she throws it into the pool and tells Melinda that they’re not leaving. When Vic returns home, he finds Melinda sitting on the stairs with a slight smile on her face, only for the movie to cut to her burning all of Tony’s licenses she found with Vic’s snails. By the end of Deep Water, all is well for their marriage.

Why Vic Lies To Joel About Killing Martin McCrae

Ben Affleck in Deep Water

Deep Water's true drama begins when Vic confronts Melinda’s lover, Joel, at a party. Vic tells him he killed Martin McCrae, Melinda’s last lover who went missing, to scare Joel off. Most people take Vic’s statement as a joke, though it successfully scares off Joel and leaves screenwriter Don increasingly suspicious. Vic tells Melinda it is an innocent joke after she becomes angry, but Deep Water hints that malignance lies beneath Vic's seemingly indifferent demeanor. Later in Deep Water, it’s revealed Vic didn’t kill McCrae. He told Joel he killed him with a hammer when he was actually murdered with a gun, and the real killer was apprehended.

While Vic and his friends maintain that his lie about killing Martin McCrae is just a joke, it is really the beginning of Vic’s anger and jealousy boiling over the surface. Since Vic went on to kill two of Melinda’s lovers, telling this lie seems to be a mistake, as he becomes the first suspect when Charlie and Tony turn up dead or missing. In reality, it appears Vic is bored with his indifference to Melinda’s affairs, but the rush from finally standing up to one of Melinda’s lovers fires a passion in their marriage he hadn’t felt in a long time. Vic knows he can get away with it, since no one feels he is capable of such a thing.

How Trixie Knows That Vic Killed Charlie

Ben Affleck with Trixie Van Allen in Deep Water.

One of the most mysterious Deep Water characters is Trixie Van Allen, Vic and Melinda’s 6-year-old daughter. It’s established she’s more intelligent and mature than her age suggests, with Deep Water’s scene with Trixie and Vic discussing Charlie’s death hinting she knows much more about her parents’ marriage than they’ll let on. After Charlie dies and Vic is the main suspect, Trixie tells her dad she thinks it was him who killed Melinda's lover. Vic says he didn’t, but Trixie maintains she thinks he killed Charlie, though she’s simply upset that he won’t tell her how he killed him.

At the end of Deep Water, Trixie throws Melinda’s packed suitcase into the pool and says they’re not leaving, suggesting Trixie really knows everything that’s going on but still wants her family to stay together. Since Trixie and Vic are much closer than Trixie and Melinda, it seems Deep Water’s young character supports what Vic does, as she is just as fed up with Melinda’s affairs as Vic is.

Why Melinda Helped Cover Up Tony’s Murder

Melinda burns Tony's licenses in Deep Water.

Although Melinda tips off Don about Vic having something to do with the disappearance of Tony, Deep Water’s ending sees Melinda burn his licenses just moments later. This occurs after Trixie throws Melinda’s suitcase in the pool and tells her they’re not leaving, suggesting Melinda now sees that keeping her family together is more important. Melinda spent Deep Water maintaining that Vic had no passion nor did he even love her, but his violent urges towards her two lovers restore the spark in their marriage.

Melinda repeatedly tells Vic she loves him, though his inability to convincingly return the sentiment sends her astray – until she realizes that killing and threatening these men is his sick way of showing love. Melinda had been utterly bored with their marriage, but Vic’s unhinged behavior proved that he was no longer boring to her. At the same time, Melinda had only just asked Vic why he was the only one who stayed with her, suggesting that even though his passion was demonstrated by murder, he’d do anything to stay with her, so she returned the gesture by helping cover up Tony’s death.

What’s Next For Melinda And Vic After Deep Water

Ben Affleck and Ana de Armas in Deep Water.

Melinda and Vic’s toxic marriage sees the deaths of at least three people in their town, but Deep Water ends with their relationship stronger than ever. Since Don wasn’t able to send his text to Kelly about being right about Vic before he died, there’s nobody aside from Vic, Melinda, and Trixie who could provide evidence that Vic murdered anyone. With Melinda choosing to keep their family together, the couple returns to their masks as a typical suburban couple. It’s unclear whether their marriage continues to see more lovers or murders, but Melinda and Vic’s returning passion hints they’ll keep playing twisted mind games as long as it keeps their family together.

What Deep Water’s Ending Really Means

Vin and Melinda in Deep Water.

Deep Water’s roller-coaster ride of a story is about the facades that suburban couples put on after becoming bored in their marriages, and the lengths they may go to stay together and maintain their “picture-perfect” charade. It is an extreme example of this phenomenon but takes from many real-life marital struggles around infidelity, maintaining a family, and reduced passion over time. The uncertainty of Vic's kill count and the larger story portrays the idea that every relationship looks different to those inside them, as the projection of Vic’s mild-mannered, indifferent persona is truly a mask he puts on when, in reality, he’s a ticking time-bomb of anger and violence.

In the end, Deep Water is a twisted tale of a toxic marriage in which they finally demonstrate their love, renew their passion, and reach a climactic, unifying agreement wherein the core couple is complicit in each other's immorality: Vic by Melinda’s infidelity, and Melinda by Vic’s murders. While the majority of Adrian Lyne’s erotic thrillers end in madness, concluding once the pair are brought closer together or resolve their conflicts, Deep Water’s ending provides a different explanation. The Deep Water end suggests Vic and Melinda's back-and-forth turmoil will continue, and it makes them a stronger couple through their complicity.

What The Deep Water Ending Song Means

Ben Affleck and Ana de Armas look at each other on a couch in Deep Water.

Deep Water's soundtrack takes a sinister turn in its conclusion. At the very end of the movie, Trixie is shown to be singing the song "You Make Me Feel Like Dancing" by Leo Sayer. While it may seem like a sweet moment as a six-year-old is singing the tune, it's actually a rather sinister way to wrap up the film. Throughout the movie, both Vic and Melinda continue to make increasingly dangerous choices at each other's expense. What's worse is that their young daughter is privy to everything that's going on in their relationship, including Melinda's affairs and Vic's murders.

Trixie sees what's going on between her parents, as they hardly try to hide their abysmal choices. Rather than being repulsed by her parents, what makes Deep Water's ending disturbing is that she loves them nonetheless, identifies with the family, and even chooses understanding when singing "You Make Me Feel Like Dancing." The song is about total romantic devotion. The tune not only represents Trixie's relationship with her parents but also Melinda and Vic's relationship. In actuality, the song is representative of the family as a whole.

Vic is driven to kill for the sake of jealousy as Melinda continues her mounting list of affairs. When Melinda finds out about Vic's actions, rather than being horrified or fearful, she claims she's not afraid of him because he did the killing "for her." In the end, Melinda helps Vic cover up his crimes, and she does this out of total devotion. Trixie and Vic have a more meaningful relationship than she does with her mother, which could play a part in how she has a similar reaction to Melinda upon the revelation of Vic's murders. The only thing she's mad about is that he wouldn't say how he did it. The family chooses to stay together out of the sick codependent love that they share for one another.

Deep Water Book To Movie Changes

Ana de Armas as Melinda sitting on a stairwell staring in Deep Water.

The Deep Water ending explains that this toxic relationship grew stronger the more depraved the couple became. However, this was just about the movie, and the book had a very different ending. In the novel, the murders and dishonesty don't result in a better relationship between Vic and Melinda. That is because the two work to keep their family intact in both, but in the movie, they seem to actually somewhat like each other and Vic loves Melinda. However, in the book, they actively despise each other. While Melinda often makes sexual advances on Vic, often in a dominatrix fashion, that is nonexistent in the book.

Vic considers his wife to be selfish and spoiled, and who only seeks attention in any way possible. This leads to a very different ending in the Deep Water book. Vic doesn't love Melinda, and he isn't killing these men "for her." Vic lives his life in emasculation, and after he realizes Melinda knows what he has done, he takes one last drastic measure. She isn't going to cover for him like she does in the movie. This causes Vic to commit one more murder as he strangles Melinda to death at the end. He also doesn't kill Don, who arrives with the police to arrest Vic. In the movie, no one is punished, but in the Deep Water book, Melinda pays with her life and Vic goes to prison.

Deep Water
R

Based on the celebrated novel by popular mystery writer Patricia Highsmith (The Talented Mr. Ripley), Deep Water takes us inside the marriage of a seemingly perfect couple, Vic and Melinda Van Allen, to discover the dangerous mind games they play and what happens to the people that get caught up in them. Revealing to various lovers that they have an open relationship, their neighbors begin to talk, and bodies begin to appear in perceived acts of passion.

Release Date
March 18, 2022
Director
Adrian Lyne
Cast
Ana De Armas , Lil Rel Howery , Michael Braun , Dash Mihok , Brendan C. Miller , Kristen Connolly , Jeff Pope , Rachel Blanchard , Finn Wittrock , Devyn Tyler , Grace Jenkins , Tracy Letts , Jacob Elordi , Ben Affleck , Jade Fernandez
Runtime
153 minutes

  • deep water
    Deep Water
    Release Date:
    2022-03-18
    Budget:
    $48.9 million
    Cast:
    Ana De Armas, Lil Rel Howery, Michael Braun, Dash Mihok, Brendan C. Miller, Kristen Connolly, Jeff Pope, Rachel Blanchard, Finn Wittrock, Devyn Tyler, Grace Jenkins, Tracy Letts, Jacob Elordi, Ben Affleck, Jade Fernandez
    Director:
    Adrian Lyne
    Genres:
    Thriller
    Rating:
    R
    Runtime:
    153 minutes
    Writers:
    Zach Helm, Sam Levinson
    Studio(s):
    Amazon Studios
    Distributor(s):
    Hulu, Amazon Studios