First things first: Ignore
the advertising materials and the title of this film, which is not in any way fantastic
or supernatural. Quite to the contrary, The
Witch Who Came from the Sea is the dark and sad story of a woman pushed to
violence by a lifetime of mental illness and sexual abuse. While writer Robert
Thom and director Matt Cimber deliver so many exploitation elements that their
movie is more than a little bit sleazy, they also supply a grim character study
based on a rational bit of cause-and-effect psychological theorizing. It’s not
as if they break new ground, since every movie of this type lives in the shadow
of Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960),
and it’s not as if they delve so deeply and thoughtfully into the nature of
killing and sexual dysfunction that The
Witch Who Came from the Sea overcomes its grindhouse nature. Topless shots
and gory murder scenes abound. Nonetheless, the movie has more substance than
one might expect.
Set at various spots along the Los Angeles coast, primarily a
sketchy neighborhood in Venice Beach, the picture stars lanky Millie Perkins as
Molly, a twisted young woman preoccupied with her long-lost father. According
to her, he was a bold sea captain and he might someday return. According to
Molly’s older sister, however, Daddy was an abusive, drunken louse who did the
world a favor by disappearing and presumably dying. When she’s not babysitting
her nephews or working in a bar, Molly picks up men. Once she’s alone with
them, she engages in S&M while drifting in and out of hallucinations/memories
of being molested by her father when she was younger. Molly acts out her
repressed rage by killing her lovers. As the body count rises, cops discover
clues leading them to Molly.
The film’s storytelling is highly problematic on
two levels. Firstly, Cimber’s B-movie excesses are so distracting as to be
unintentionally campy, as when he trains his camera on the bulging crotches of
bodybuilders while Molly watches dudes exercise on Venice’s famous Muscle
Beach. Secondly, the way that Cimber weaves in and out of hallucinations makes
it difficult to track what’s really happening. Putting the audience inside the
leading character’s head is one thing, but creating unhelpful narrative
confusion is another. Yet every so often, the filmmakers lock into something interestingly
weird, like the supporting character of a tattoo artist named “Jack Dracula.”
Plus, the murder vignettes and sexual-abuse flashbacks are genuinely unpleasant
to watch. In sum, it’s fair to say there’s a real movie hiding under the
grotesque surface of The Witch Who Came
from the Sea, but that real movie is so mediocre that most viewers won’t
find it worth the trouble of working their way past the tacky stuff.
The Witch Who Came from the Sea: FUNKY
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