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Night Tide

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox film

| name = Night Tide

| image_size =

| image = Night Tide FilmPoster.jpeg

| caption = Theatrical poster

| director = Curtis Harrington

| producer = Aram Katarian

| writer = Curtis Harrington

| starring =

| cinematography = Vilis Lapenieks

| editing = Jodie Copelan

| music = David Raksin

| studio = Virgo Productions

| distributor = The Filmgroup
American International Pictures

| released =

| runtime = 84 minutes

| country = United States

| language = English

| budget = $75,000

}}

'Night Tide' is a 1961 American fantasy film sometimes considered to be a horror film, written and directed by Curtis Harrington and featuring Dennis Hopper in his first starring role.[https://vimeo.com/285743124 NIGHT TIDE (Curtis Harrington, 1961) on Vimeo] It was filmed in 1960, premiered in 1961, but was held up from general release until 1963. The film's title was inspired by some lines from Edgar Allan Poe's poem "Annabel Lee"Spencer Kansa. 'Wormwood Star: The Magickal Life of Marjorie Cameron.' p. 164 The film was released by American International Pictures as a double feature with 'The Raven'.

Plot



Johnny Drake (Dennis Hopper), a sailor on shore leave in Santa Monica, meets a young woman named Mora (Linda Lawson) in a local jazz club where flautist Paul Horn and his band are playing. Mora tells him that she makes her living on the pier appearing as a mermaid in a sideshow attraction under the name 'Mora the Mermaid' - a 'half-woman, half-fish' on the boardwalk, operated by Captain Murdock (Gavin Muir). She lives in an apartment above the amusement park that houses the merry-go-round. He goes to see her in her mermaid costume at the pier. Mora later tells Johnny that Captain Murdock is her godfather and that he has been like a father to her since he found her as an orphan living on an island, Mykonos. Captain Murdock refers to her as his 'ward'. Johnny becomes acquainted with the merry-go-round operator and his daughter, who warns Johnny that Mora may be dangerous, as her two previous boyfriends both drowned under mysterious circumstances.

As Mora and Johnny become closer, Mora tells him that she believes she is a Siren, one of the legendary creatures who lure sailors to their deaths under the influence of the moon. Johnny witnesses Mora being followed by a mysterious black-clad woman, the 'Sea Witch' (Marjorie Cameron) whom she believes is one of the Sirens, calling her to return to the sea to fulfill her destiny. However, Johnny doesn't believe that Mora is capable of killing anyone, and thinks she must be suffering from a delusion. During a scuba dive on the day of the full moon, Mora cuts Johnny's air hose, apparently attempting to drown him. He is forced to the surface. She swims out to sea and disappears.

Johnny is devastated, but returns to the boardwalk the following evening and goes to the sideshow, where he finds Captain Murdock at the entrance as usual. Peering into the mermaid tank, he sees Mora's corpse on display. Captain Murdock appears brandishing a gun, admitting to Johnny that he killed Mora's boyfriends because he couldn't bear the thought of her leaving him. Murdock fires at Johnny, but misses. The gunshots attract the attention of two policemen on the boardwalk, and Murdock and Johnny are taken into custody.

At the police station, Murdock confesses, saying he found and adopted Mora when she was a young orphan on a Greek island. He planted the idea that she was a mermaid, incapable of living the life of a normal woman, as a way of binding her to him forever. When she matured and began to attract the attention of young men, Murdock murdered them and let Mora think that she had caused their deaths. However, Captain Murdock denies any knowledge of the strange figure Mora believed to be a Siren.

As Johnny's shore leave ends, the merry-go-round operator's daughter, who has taken an interest in him, visits the police station to bid him goodbye. He tells her that he will try to return in the future.

Production



Development

Harrington sold his original script, called 'The Girl from Beneath the Sea', to Roger Corman in 1956. According to Spencer Kansa, Harrington based his script on a self-penned story titled "The Secrets of the Sea."Spencer Kansa, 'Wormwood Star: The Magickal Life of Marjorie Cameron', p. 164. Kansa states that prior to filming the director had turned down an offer from the Mickey Cohen gang to finance the picture. "They were very charming men but I had visions that if the film didn't do well I'd end up at the bottom of the LA river in a block of cement!"

The mermaid mural for the sideshow attraction in which Mora stars was painted for the film by Paul Mathison. Mathison was an associate of Cameron's, who had been part of her magical circle with Jack Parsons, starred as Pan in Kenneth Anger's film 'Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome' and also costumed Cameron and dressed the set for Harrington's 1956 short documentary on Cameron, 'The Wormwood Star'. According to Spencer Kansa, the mural "if you look closely hides a clue to the finale of the picture."Spencer Kansa. 'Wormwood Star: The Magickal Life of Marjorie Cameron', p. 166. Mathison can be seen in the opening Jazz club scene, sporting a blonde buzz cut.

Another patron of the Jazz club where jazz flautist Paul Horn and his band play is Barbette, the famous trapeze artist and star of Jean Cocteau's seminal surrealist short film 'Blood of a Poet'.

Cast



* Dennis Hopper as Johnny Drake

* Linda Lawson as Mora

* Gavin Muir as Capt. Samuel Murdock

* Luana Anders as Ellen Sands

* Marjorie Eaton as Madame Romanovitch

* Tom Dillon as Merry-Go-Round Operator - Ellen's Grandfather

* H.E. West as Lt. Henderson

* Ben Roseman as Bruno

* Marjorie Cameron as the Water Witch (credited as Cameron)

*Paul Horn as jazz saxophonist (uncredited)

*Joe Gordon as jazz trumpeter (uncredited)

*Jimmy Bond as jazz bassist (uncredited)

*Kenny Dennis as jazz drummer (uncredited)

The role of Mora the Mermaid (played by Lawson) was originally to be played by Susan Harrison, who had been the lead in 'Sweet Smell of Success' (1957). Harrison, at the time a friend of director Harrington, initially agreed to take the role, but then reneged due to a personal relationship.

Harrington had previously worked with actress Cameron; his 1956 short (10-minute) documentary 'The Wormwood Star' (viewable on YouTube) is about Cameron and her artwork.

Filming

In order to film some of the underwater sequences in 'Night Tide', director Curtis Harrington gave detailed instructions to a cameraman who then shot the scenes underwater at the director's request.

The film was produced by Aram Kantarian. The cinematographers were Vilis Lapenieks and Floyd Crosby.

Release and reception



'Night Tide' premiered at the Spoleto Film Festival in Spoleto, Italy in July 1961, where it was named the top American film that year. The film's production company, Virgo, defaulted on their Path Lab loan of $33,793 and Path was preparing to foreclose on the picture. Roger Corman asked the lab to hold off on their legal actions to allow Filmgroup to distribute the film, guaranteeing Path $15,000 within 12 months of the film's release. Path agreed, and Filmgroup released it through American International Pictures.Fred Olen Ray, 'The New Poverty Row: Independent Filmmakers as Distributors', McFarland, 1991, p 45-47 It was given a general theatrical release in the United States two years after its initial premiere, opening in Detroit on February 13, 1963. It later screened in New York City on May 25, 1964.

Dennis Hopper stated in an interview that the film was made for $28,000 and...

The entry for the film in 'Horror: The Aurum Film Encyclopedia' states "Clearly inspired by 'Cat People' (1942), following Val Lewton's principles by having a vividly realistic setting (the tawdry pier and funfairs) and providing a rational explanation for most of the mystery (the girl's adoptive father planted the siren story in her mind), it is both clumsy and tentative and strikingly atmospheric. More of a fantasy than a horror movie perhaps, the film does make darkly minatory use of its dream sequences (the mermaid nightmarishly metamorphosing into an octopus) and the recurrent motif of the mysterious woman in black whose appearances frighten the girl."Phil Hardy, ed. 'Horror: The Aurum Film Encyclopedia'. London: Aurum Press, 1985, p. 145

Legacy



The film was restored by the Academy Film Archive in 2007.

Nicholas Winding Refn is a fan of the film to the point of restoring it as well.[https://mubi.com/specials/bynwr MUBI Special: Restored By Nicholas Winding Refn|MUBI]

Musical

A musical theater adaptation with music by Nathania Wibowo and book and lyrics by Taylor Tash was featured in the 2017 New York Musical Theatre Festival and premiered at the Towle Theater in Hammond, Indiana during its 2021 season.

References



Sources



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