Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea (film) explained

Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
Director:Marion Hänsel
Producer:Marion Hänsel
Jessinta Liu
Starring:Stephen Rea
Music:Wim Mertens
Cinematography:Bernard Lutic
Editing:Susana Rossberg
Runtime:92 minutes
Country:Belgium
France
Language:Dutch
English

Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea is a 1995 Belgian-French drama film directed by Marion Hänsel. It was entered into the 1995 Cannes Film Festival.[1] The plot is based on the short story titled "Li", by the Greek poet and sailor Nikos Kavvadias.

Plot

Nikos (Stephen Rea), a sailor, learns that the company that runs his ship has gone bankrupt. For the few weeks it will take to sell the ship he is on, the ship remains off the coast of Hong Kong. It is boarded by a young beggar girl Li, (Ling Chu) who offers to take care of him in exchange for food for her and her baby brother. Though he claims to have no use for her, Nikos reluctantly agrees to the deal.

Nikos struggles with an opium addiction and regret over abandoning his girlfriend and their child. He warms to Li and her brother, treating them as surrogate children. When his final paycheck comes through he decides to return to Europe but not before bringing Li ashore for a day where he meets both her mother and father.

Before they part Li and Nikos talk about luck and good fortune and she tells him that his luck has changed. As he boards a new ship to return home he sees that Li has given him a gold dragon embroidered on Shantung silk, the symbol Li had previously told Nikos represented luck.

Cast

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Festival de Cannes: Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea . 2 September 2009 . festival-cannes.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110820073852/http://www.festival-cannes.com/en/archives/ficheFilm/id/3364/year/1995.html . 20 August 2011.