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Dark Waters

Was love or madness to be her fate?
1944 | 90m | English

(1183 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

Leslie Calvin, the sole survivor of a submarine accident, goes to her relatives in order to recover emotionally. Unfortunately, she encounters various scam artists led by Mr. Sydney who intend to kill her and steal the family assets. Dr. George Grover helps Leslie to defeat Sydney.
Release Date: Nov 21, 1944
Director: André de Toth
Writer: Francis M. Cockrell, Joan Harrison, Marian B. Cockrell
Genres: Mystery, Thriller
Keywords insanity, film noir, mental illness
Production Companies United Artists, Benedict Bogeaus Production
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Apr 20, 2024
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Merle Oberon Leslie Calvin
Franchot Tone Dr. George Grover
Thomas Mitchell Mr. Sydney
Fay Bainter Aunt Emily
Elisha Cook Jr. Cleeve
John Qualen Uncle Norbert
Rex Ingram Pearson Jackson
Nina Mae McKinney Florella
Odette Myrtil Mama Boudreaux
Eugene Borden Papa Boudreaux
Name Job
Miklós Rózsa Original Music Composer
James Smith Editor
André de Toth Director
Arthur T. Horman Additional Dialogue
Francis M. Cockrell Original Story
Ted Larsen Makeup Artist
Joan Harrison Screenplay
Marian B. Cockrell Original Story, Screenplay
René Hubert Costume Design
Harry Redmond Jr. Special Effects
Frank Webster Sound Engineer
Charles Odds Art Direction
Joseph Depew Assistant Director
Maurice Yates Set Decoration
Scotty Rackin Hairstylist
Archie Stout Director of Photography
John J. Mescall Director of Photography
Name Title
Benedict Bogeaus Producer
James Nasser Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 5 13 2
2024 5 6 14 3
2024 6 5 11 2
2024 7 3 6 2
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2025 9 1 2 0
2025 10 2 3 2

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Reviews

John Chard
7.0

Belleville Bedlam. Dark Waters is directed by André De Toth and collectively written by Marian B. Cockrell, Joan Harrison, Arthur Horman, John Huston and Francis M. Cockrell. It stars Merle Oberon, Franchot Tone, Thomas Mitchell, Fay Bainter, Elisha Cook Jr., John Qualen and Rex Ingram. Music is ... by Miklós Rózsa and cinematography by John J. Mescall and Archie Stout. After recovering from a traumatic boat incident that saw her parents killed, Leslie Calvin (Oberon) travels to the bayous of Louisiana to stay with her next of kin. But upon arrival it quickly becomes evident that nothing is as it seems... In 1944 Merle Oberon made two horror movies that very much relied on atmosphere and film noir visuality over any great semblance of psychological evaluation. With the far superior The Lodger rightly moving into classic territory as it boasted Laird Cregar, John Brahm and Lucien Ballard operating out of the top draw, Dark Waters, with its modest production values and second tier work force, feels like a B movie appetiser to Brahm's movie. Yet in spite of some overkill in the screenplay, there is much to enjoy here for the Gothic noir horror fan. Dark Waters is a fascinating thriller movie, it may play its hand far too early, and it really does, but the reverse plot device of having the lady protagonist be mentally troubled at the outset - only to have her grow in mental stability as the narrative unfolds - adds a non conformist kink to the picture. De Toth and his cinematographers fill the production with a feverish like dream state that picks away at the conscious, where although the woman in peril angle is slowly drawn out, the rewards are there to be had for those who like to see the visual surroundings mirror the mental health of the central character. The resolution, as was so often the case in olde classic movies trying to make mental health a viable issue, is cheap in the context of medicinal recovery. To that end it's a little frustrating viewing it these days to know that all we needed was some handsome/pretty cohort to get us through trauma! Yet in 1944 film makers were still trying to get to grips with a horror that didn't involve some monstrous creature moving through the landscape. There are many things wrong with Dark Waters when viewing it now, but if you can accept it as a 1944 movie and embrace it for its visual touches (and the makers do not disappoint with shadowy and spooky atmospherics), then it's a movie well worth taking an interest in. Besides which! Elisha Cook is in there being a shifty weasel, what more do you want in some Louisiana swamp based Gothic noir picture... 7/10

May 16, 2024