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The Witch Who Came from the Sea

  • 1976
  • R
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
The Witch Who Came from the Sea (1976)
The Witch Who Came From The Sea: Don't Worry
Play clip0:46
Watch The Witch Who Came From The Sea: Don't Worry
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DramaHorrorThriller

A disturbed woman is haunted by memories of childhood abuse, which culminates in a murder spree.A disturbed woman is haunted by memories of childhood abuse, which culminates in a murder spree.A disturbed woman is haunted by memories of childhood abuse, which culminates in a murder spree.

  • Director
    • Matt Cimber
  • Writer
    • Robert Thom
  • Stars
    • Millie Perkins
    • Lonny Chapman
    • Vanessa Brown
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    2.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Matt Cimber
    • Writer
      • Robert Thom
    • Stars
      • Millie Perkins
      • Lonny Chapman
      • Vanessa Brown
    • 63User reviews
    • 60Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:04
    Trailer
    The Witch Who Came From The Sea: Don't Worry
    Clip 0:46
    The Witch Who Came From The Sea: Don't Worry
    The Witch Who Came From The Sea: Don't Worry
    Clip 0:46
    The Witch Who Came From The Sea: Don't Worry

    Photos65

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    Top cast20

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    Millie Perkins
    Millie Perkins
    • Molly
    Lonny Chapman
    Lonny Chapman
    • Long John
    Vanessa Brown
    Vanessa Brown
    • Cathy
    Peggy Feury
    • Doris
    Jean Pierre Camps
    • Tadd
    Mark Livingston
    • Tripoli
    Rick Jason
    Rick Jason
    • Billy Batt
    Stafford Morgan
    Stafford Morgan
    • Alexander McPeak
    Richard Kennedy
    Richard Kennedy
    • Detective Beardsley
    George 'Buck' Flower
    George 'Buck' Flower
    • Detective Stone
    Roberta Collins
    Roberta Collins
    • Clarissa
    Stan Ross
    Stan Ross
    • Jack Dracula
    Lynne Guthrie
    • Carol
    Barry Cooper
    • Newcomer
    Gene Rutherford
    Gene Rutherford
    • Sam Walters
    Jim Sims
    • Austin Slade
    Sam Chu Lin
    • Newscaster
    Anita Franklin
    • T.V. Commercial Girl
    • Director
      • Matt Cimber
    • Writer
      • Robert Thom
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews63

    5.72.7K
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    Featured reviews

    6lastliberal-853-253708

    I guess I did kill him.

    Restored classic; one of the infamous video nasties banned in Britain.

    Those looking for the juicy parts that were excised by the censors will be disappointed, as the stuff, even the castration with a razor blade, is tame by today's standards.

    The film will be a little talkie as it is a tale of an abused child's descent into madness.

    In a constant state of inebriation, Molly (Millie Perkins) suffers numerous flashbacks of abuse and pain.

    Director Matt Cimber achieved his greatest status a couple of films later with three Razzie nominations for Butterfly with Pia Zadora.
    6drownsoda90

    Gritty, amateurish character study/psychodrama

    "The Witch Who Came from the Sea" follows Molly, a woman living with her sister in Los Angeles, suffering from severe psychological trauma resulting from her father's incestuous relationship with her. As a result, she snaps and embarks on a killing and castration spree.

    While its title is literally misleading (but metaphorically apt), "The Witch Who Came from the Sea" is an oddball psychological horror film that is not so much scary as it is sad. The film has a downbeat tone that is remarkable from the first scenes, and it chugs along at this languid, downtempo pace for much of its runtime. While some descriptions make it sound like a serial killer film, it's in actuality a character study of someone living with severe PTSD stemming from child sex abuse.

    The content here is disturbing in nature, though the screenplay feels lopsided in the sense that Molly's pathology registers as a bit too on-the-nose. Where the film excels is in its visuals, and the cinematography captures a gothic sort of 1970s California, particularly the trash-ridden, empty streets of Venice Beach. Millie Perkins is decent as the lead, Molly, though none of the performances here are particularly great. There are odd moments of humor brought by the likes of Peggy Feury that are off-center but amusing. The film's conclusion is unsurprisingly dour, but thematically fitting. Though a bit of a shallow character study, "The Witch Who Came from the Sea" has some startling visuals and is reasonably well-made given its obvious budget limitations. Worthwhile for fans of gritty psychological dramas, particularly of this era. 6/10.
    8pearceduncan

    Unique, surreal and disturbing, but exploitative

    This one's a real weirdie. It's unique, surreal and genuinely disturbing, and Millie Perkins gives a memorably intense and bizarre performance as Molly. It goes out of its way to shock the viewer, and largely succeeds. It also features the single most upsetting childhood trauma flashback I've ever seen.

    It's probably too much for most people's tastes, but if you enjoy flawed one-of-a-kind low budget '70s horror, it's worth a look if you can find it. I am a bit dubious about the exploitative way it uses the subject of child abuse device to shock and disturb the viewer, so be warned.
    5merklekranz

    Abnormal psychology 101 ..........

    This is a strange one, that just misses the mark because the script is somewhat scatter shot. If things regarding the delusional and irrational behavior of incest victim Millie Perkins had been more focused, the film would have benefited. As it is, the acting by Ms Perkins is convincing, and for a horror / psychological drama most of the acting is above average. The horror crowd will be disappointed, but those looking for the offbeat, will have found gold, with this twisted tale of hallucinations and mutilations. Special mention must be made of the poster art, which is outstanding. "The Witch Who Came From the Sea" is a bizarre oddity that has a limited, but devoted cult following. - MERK
    FilmFlaneur

    Good low budget oddity, hard to find these days

    A weird and obscure little film from exploitation director Cimber, The Witch Who Came From The Sea gained a degree of notoriety some years ago when it appeared on the UK's controversial 'video nasties' list. With its prominent themes of child abuse and castration that's not surprising, even though in the event much of the objectionable material is fairly low-key. Mollie Perkins plays Millie, whose treatment at the hands of her father when young has left her emotionally scarred, even though she half-idolises his memory. At the time the film opens she is supporting two children, works in an "advice centre" (a bar) and is in an off/on relationship with the owner, Long John (Lonny Chapman). Soon two footballers are castrated and killed, while Millie enters into a obsessive relationship with McPeak (Stafford Morgan), a film star appearing in a frequently run shaving commercial on TV.

    Cimber's film is focussed on what is presumably Millie's downward spiral of mental collapse, and this is its biggest weakness. Haunted by a series of painful flashbacks (in which it becomes more and more clear exactly what was the nature of her traumatic childhood experience), Millie's inner torment is otherwise rarely articulated to the audience, although Perkins does her best to project some sympathy into the character. These days the two castration scenes, fake blood, cutaways (no pun intended) and all, are far less provoking to an audience than those of child abuse. In a modern production, typically issues would be 'dealt with' from a psychological standpoint. She remains curiously mute however, and we miss the catharsis. "Millie's the captain of her own ship," says Long John, who recognises this distant quality of his employee/lover - one who, even in bed with him, cannot confide her sexual history. But while keeping her own confidence may suggest inner strength, this woman who 'looks liberated' is ultimately as much a mystery as when we first see her.

    Without any internal keys to Millie's psychology, apart from her murderous compulsions, the audience is forced to look for answers elsewhere. Fortunately the film is full of enough symbolism, Freudian and otherwise to give ample hints, considerably enriching the narrative and providing its principal interest. 'The witch' in question does not refer to supposed supernatural skills of the heroine. Millie is human and emotionally damaged. Much is suggested when she admires a reproduction hanging on the wall of a lecherous male admirer. Botticelli's well-known Birth of Venus features a female figure standing on a shell, incidentally reminiscent of the mermaid tattooed on her father's chest. (Millie shortly thereafter has a copy done on her belly.) Venus' "father was a god" we learn, and "they cut off his balls, the sea got knocked up, and Venus was the kid." The Botticelli neatly encapsulates the themes of consummation and emasculation running through the film. It's the tension between the two that ultimately wrecks Millie, ruinously torn between admiration of her father and knowledge of what men can do.

    Castration of course is an obvious form of unmanning, as demonstrated by Millie's treatment of the footballers, then McPeak (the second instance achieved, remarkably, through the misuse of a safety razor). Her first lover, the aptly named 'Long John', has a beard. He and it remain thankfully intact at the end of the film. In Cimber's film, shaving is associated explicitly both with sex ("Someday I'd love to shave you.") as well as with explicit genital injury. Like a peculiar Delilah to various Samsons, Millie quickly reduces men by her barbering attentions, destroying their vitality, and thence their threat to her. Her fantasises run along the same lines from the very first. The viewer initially sees Millie on the beach, reassuring her children about their grandfather's heroic status, while absent-mindedly staring at bodybuilders working out - in effect going from groyne to groin. We assume that her fixation on their bulging swim shorts is straightforwardly sexual. Only later do we realise that crotches are targets in more ways than one.

    All of the performances are adequate, though none are outstanding. In the central role Mollie Perkins, despite the aforementioned drawbacks of her part, gives a reasonable impression of a divided and damaged personality, emotionally numbed by her own demons. During one key scene, the murder of the football players that features drug abuse, bondage then castration, she looks remarkably unfazed by the material - assisted by the nightmarish feel created by Cimber's direction. Perkins had come to this film after appearing in some Monte Hellman films, notably his outstanding existential westerns Ride The Whirlwind and The Shooting (both 1965), and perhaps felt that more such off-the-wall material suited her style. Certainly after this period in her career she was unable to find such striking material again. (Cimber's next film was with Orson Welles in the Pia Zadora turkey Butterfly, 1982)

    The Witch Who Came From The Sea has a quiet ending, but one that is nevertheless apt and poetically very effective. Scriptwriter Robert Thom (whose previous two credits were for the classic B-movies Crazy Mama and Death Race 2000, both in the previous year) builds on the seafaring imagery already featured throughout the film to send his heroine on a last voyage of her own. Millie's departure, in the bosom of her family and friends, is far away from the Grand Guignol conclusion common to the genre. It is as if formal justice has no part to play in a sad tale, which revolves almost entirely around the wounding of the psyche, and in line with this, the police investigation during the film is remarkably muted, and un-cynical. Remarkably hard to find these days, presumably because of its downbeat subject matter, this is a film that still holds up well. A stronger supporting cast would have made it into a mini-classic. As it is, it still serves as a reminder of the imagination possible from a low budget film, a novelty from a period rich in bargain basement experiment.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      George "Buck" Flower not only acts in this movie as one of the homicide detectives investigating the murders committed by Millie Perkins, but also served as the film's casting director. In fact, Flower cast his own daughter Verkina to play young Molly in the disturbing flashback sequences featured in the movie.
    • Quotes

      Molly: Why don't you act like a man and go hide in the closet, cowboy?

    • Connections
      Featured in A Maiden's Voyage (2004)
    • Soundtracks
      Sailing, Sailing
      (uncredited)

      Written by Godfrey Marks

      Performed by Millie Perkins

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 1976 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ведьма, явившаяся из моря
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Monica Pier, Santa Monica, California, USA(Location of the 'Boathouse' Restaurant as well as Long John's apartment. Specifically 301 Santa Monica Pier Building 9.)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 23 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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