Night Tide
World Premiere Restoration Premiere

Night Tide

| USA | 85 MINUTES | English

A Tribute to Curtis Harrington (1926-2007)  Prior editions of this festival have paid tribute in memoriam to experimental artists Stan Brakhage (TFF 2004), Alexander Hammid (TFF 2005), and Nam June Paik (TFF 2006). This program celebrates Curtis Harrington (1926-2007), a versatile director whose career ranged from making experimental films in the 1940s and 1950s to horror films in the 1960s and 1970s. He directed episodes of popular television series (including Dynasty) in the 1980s and completed his final short film, Usher (based on the Edgar Allan Poe classic), in 2004. Picnic (1948, 22 min.), his rarely screened short that opens this program, was a cinematic exercise in psychodrama and surrealism, highly influenced by Maya Deren's Meshes of the Afternoon (1943). Harrington's debut feature, Night Tide (1963), stars a youthful Dennis Hopper in his first leading role, as a sailor who falls in love. (Harrington had met Hopper years earlier in a Los Angeles coffee shop that was showing his short experimental films.) In Night Tide, set in a seaside amusement park in Venice, Harrington blends a romantic mystery story with elements of film noir and the horror genre. The characters, locations, motifs, and themes present in Harrington's Picnic-an amorous couple, parental authority, the seaside locale, the presence of sea monsters, and death-are transformed by Harrington in Night Tide from an experimental vision into a suspenseful narrative. The location photography by Vilis Lapenieks, the studio cinematography by Floyd Crosby (High Noon), and the jazzy, melodic score by David Raksin (Laura) all enrich the brooding atmosphere of the film.
 
– Jon Gartenberg

Restored by the Academy Film Archive with funding provided by The Film Foundation.

Courtesy of Milestone Film & Video


Cast & Credits

Curtis Harrington (b. 1928, Los Angeles) made his first film, a 16mm version of "The Fall of the House of Usher," when he was 14. After making Night Tide, with no money to get it out of the lab, he went to Roger Corman, who not only distributed it but hired Harrington to make Queen of Blood (1966), which combined found footage with a horror narrative. Two years later, Universal hired him for Games, which was to be his only "A" picture. Despite a cast headed by Simone Signoret, James Caan, and Katharine Ross, it wasn't a commercial success. A few years later he had two successive hits with the independent films Who Slew Auntie Roo? (1971), starring Shelley Winters and Ralph Richardson, and What's the Matter with Helen? (1972), which paired Winters with Debbie Reynolds. Harrington died in LA in May 2007.

Screenwriter
Curtis Harrington
Principal Cast
Dennis Hopper, Linda Lawson, Gavin Muir, Luana Anders

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