Dark Waters (1944 film) explained

Dark Waters
Director:Andre de Toth
Producer:Benedict Bogeaus
Screenplay:Marian B. Cockrell
Joan Harrison
Arthur Horman
Starring:Merle Oberon
Franchot Tone
Thomas Mitchell
Fay Bainter
Elisha Cook, Jr.
Music:Miklós Rózsa
Cinematography:John J. Mescall
Archie Stout
Editing:James Smith
Studio:Benedict Bogeaus Productions
Distributor:United Artists
Runtime:90 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Budget:$800,000[1]

Dark Waters is a 1944 American Gothic film noir based on the novel of the same name by Francis and Marian Cockrell. It was directed by Andre de Toth and starred Merle Oberon, Franchot Tone, and Thomas Mitchell.[2]

Plot

Leslie Calvin, the shaken survivor of a ship sunk by a submarine, travels to her aunt and uncle's Louisiana plantation to recuperate, but her relatives, whom she has never met, have other ideas. She is befriended by a young local doctor, George Grover.

Thomas Mitchell, who played the congenial Gerald O'Hara in Gone With the Wind, is a mysterious and fussy guest at the plantation. In a subtle nod to Gone With the Wind, the aunt tells Leslie that "Tomorrow is another day."

Reception

The film was generally well received as accomplishing what it intended, with the New York Times stating it was "neatly produced and directed – and well played by an excellent cast."[3]

Critical response

Slant Magazine's film critic, Glenn Heath Jr., liked the film writing, "Mood dictates narrative in Andre de Toth's Dark Waters, a hallucinatory jigsaw puzzle set in the deep swamps of 1940s Louisiana that becomes a perfect breeding ground for noirish shadows and deceptive wordplay ... Dark Waters ends with multiple dead bodies sinking into the bayou and Leslie directly confronting what one character calls her "persuasion complex." The bravura finale through the oozing locale is a stunner, and despite some surface romance that feels a bit forced, the film stays true to its mystically dark mood, a slithering distant cousin to Tourneur's I Walked with a Zombie.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. November 3, 1944. Indies $70,000,000 Pix Output . Variety. 3. July 26, 2016.
  2. .
  3. Jancovich . Mark . Bluebeard's Wives: Horror, Quality and the Paranoid Woman's Film of the 1940s . Irish Journal of Gothic and Horror Studies . 12 . 20, 28 . . Summer 2013 . 2009-0374 . 22 May 2021.
  4. http://www.slantmagazine.com/house/2011/01/b-role-1-dark-waters/ Heath Jr., Glenn