Ein junges weibliches Medium auf Tour sieht einen Killer, der einen Informanten in ihrer Vision tötet. Der Mörder erfährt davon und plant, sie ebenfalls zu töten. Die skeptische Polizei, ihr... Alles lesenEin junges weibliches Medium auf Tour sieht einen Killer, der einen Informanten in ihrer Vision tötet. Der Mörder erfährt davon und plant, sie ebenfalls zu töten. Die skeptische Polizei, ihr Manager-Vater und ein neugieriger Journalist versuchen, sie zu schützen.Ein junges weibliches Medium auf Tour sieht einen Killer, der einen Informanten in ihrer Vision tötet. Der Mörder erfährt davon und plant, sie ebenfalls zu töten. Die skeptische Polizei, ihr Manager-Vater und ein neugieriger Journalist versuchen, sie zu schützen.
- Auszeichnungen
- 5 Gewinne & 4 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Editor, Geoff McBain
- (as Ed L. Grady)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Black Rainbow is a grimy, slow-burning little southern Gothic. Directed by Mike Hodges, the film is equal parts horror yarn, crime thriller and chastising of fake mediums. Before she begins foretelling deaths, we never are clearly sure if Martha's gift is all an act. Whether it is or not, the image she uses to describe her connection to the afterlife, that of a rainbow, is about to become very blackened indeed. Low key and mysterious, the film is laced with atmosphere that, while often dreary, in reality is quite hypnotic.
In a film like this, the characters have to be well-drawn. These are believable, broken people. As Martha, Rosanna Arquette is intensely ethereal. I don't think she's ever looked more stunning, and likewise, I don't think she's ever given a better performance than the one delivered here. She vividly conveys the essence of the character, a woman who turns to sporadic bouts of nymphomania for her only form of gratification. Emotionally worn and hardened by the existence that's been forced on her, Martha lives an empty life giving hope to others while keeping none for herself. Jason Robards plays her father, a louse of a man using his daughter as a cash cow while deriding her every step of the way. Tom Hulce is the cocky reporter, and I recognized the mechanic from The Night Flier as Ted Silas.
At one point in the film, Martha is branded a witch due to one of her predictions. The same woman was more than happy to take part in her showings when they were reassuring, but the moment she foresees something bad, the woman does a 180 and puts her down. Ah, good ol' human nature! This leads to Arquette tearing into her final audience with a speech about the affirmation of their own lives through the afterlife. Terrific stuff.
Hodges peppers his film with many themes, a key one clearly being the human need for assurance. Under his direction, everything comes together beautifully. One scene is a real stunner, as we bear witness to the force of an unseen explosion. I didn't realize what I was seeing at first, but once it became clear, I had to go back and watch the scene again. A lovely example of creativity through subtlety. Really, despite the run down locations, despite the macabre nature of the proceedings, the entire film has an underlying beauty radiating throughout it. It's a delicate balance, but one that's fully achieved.
Wrapping up with an ambiguous ending, the film concludes on a fitting note. This was a great discovery. Never talked about, but utterly satisfying, anyone looking for a real sleeper need look no further. Wonderful film.
I found this movie purely on accident while i was looking for Black Rain. But it cought my eye, even as i had low expectations for it. Boy, i was i wrong. It's a B-movie that can challenge many of the "top horror classics".
The movie has decent script. Not overly complex, but not flat and dumb. Leaning more towards typical thriller script. While it's kinda predictable, the movie manages to actually deliver very good suspense that escalates and intensifies towards the end. Which is something i actually see very rarely in the genre (and i've seen almost 1400 horror/thriller movies so far).
Cinematography was good at times even more than that. Acting was to my pure delight - spectacular for such movie. The main actress in particular delivers great sene near the end, with one of the best scream/screeches i've heard in the old horror movies. Easily stealing the scream title from much more popular actresses' performance. Her character is well written, has good arch, and it even has interesting twist that kinda caught me off guard. Nothing mindblowing, but nice touch.
Overall , highly recommended. It exceeded my low expectations , so it's between 6 and 7 in my books.
Rosanna Arquette is absolutely stunning in the lead role. You can see why Martin Scorsese advised her to play the part, she's perfect.
The fact that Arrow have restored this little gem on Blu-Ray is a rare piece of good news in this terrible year of 2020.
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- WissenswertesWriter and director Mike Hodges' couldn't find an actress willing to play the lead until Martin Scorsese convinced Rosanna Arquette to take it.
- Zitate
Gary Wallace: [in passionate clinch] Is this your idea of a deep and lasting relationship?
Martha Travis: That's right. This way men lie with me, not to me.
- VerbindungenFeatures Maschinenpistolen (1949)
Top-Auswahl
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Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 7.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 43 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1