Review of Night Tide

Night Tide (1961)
7/10
Interesting movie
1 March 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Well for whatever reason the first time I saw this movie I was extremely impressed with it, but this time around it seemed quite a bit rough around the edges. Still, I have to give this movie a lot of credit for originality in bringing a sort of fantasy sensibility into a "noir" kind of story. Also I think in some of the moments here when Dennis Hopper hits his stride, we're seeing basically "A Star is Born" situation going on and that makes the film precious in a whole other way.

The plot owes quite a lot to Jacques Tourneur's "The Cat People" -- this is the aquatic version of that film. There's even a mysterious woman who confronts the heroine in a restaurant in a scene lifted from Tourneur's film directly. What I enjoyed here that wasn't in Tourneur's film is the seedy carnival atmosphere. But in so many areas, particularly Luana Anders performance as the "good girl", the film fails to take advantage of interesting possibilities and instead presents clichés as if they were fully formed ideas.

The nightmare sequences are awkward but intriguing, the mood and tone of the film is pleasingly dark and empty. This film may have in turn influenced other films, particularly Herk Harvey's famous "Carnival of Souls" which features a similar scene underneath an amusement boardwalk and a similar quiet mood.
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