A young girl with a special gift comes of age during one of the most desolate periods in American history in this dark Dust Bowl fantasy inspired by Hans Christian Andersen's "The Little Mer... Read allA young girl with a special gift comes of age during one of the most desolate periods in American history in this dark Dust Bowl fantasy inspired by Hans Christian Andersen's "The Little Mermaid."A young girl with a special gift comes of age during one of the most desolate periods in American history in this dark Dust Bowl fantasy inspired by Hans Christian Andersen's "The Little Mermaid."
- Awards
- 5 wins & 2 nominations total
Allison Brunet
- Knockout Vision Girl
- (as Allison del Cid)
4.5413
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Featured reviews
Stylish but uninvolving.
A pinch of Del Torro, and a spot of David Lynch, some very competent actors, some nice stylish direction - and the result is inexplicably dull. The fault must lie with the script, which is inconsequential and uninvolving. This - like the occasional sound issues - could be an artistic decision, to elevate the weirdness of the piece, but either way the results are a bit of a chore to watch. In fact - and I don't often use this sentence - the musical numbers are often highpoints.
A lot of effort seems to have gone into this, and budget doesn't appear to be lacking, so I feel I should like it more than I do. Even so, I found it a challenge to stick around until the end. We don't really get to know the characters, or learn what relationship they have with each other, and therefore don't care what happens to most of them.
The plot is hard to fathom, frequently incomprehensible. Again, this could be deliberate, but either way, it alienates the viewer. I couldn't get into this, and didn't know what kind of film it wanted to be. My score is 4 out of 10, which an additional point for the frequently excellent musical score and a finale which goes some way to living up to the promise of the title.
A lot of effort seems to have gone into this, and budget doesn't appear to be lacking, so I feel I should like it more than I do. Even so, I found it a challenge to stick around until the end. We don't really get to know the characters, or learn what relationship they have with each other, and therefore don't care what happens to most of them.
The plot is hard to fathom, frequently incomprehensible. Again, this could be deliberate, but either way, it alienates the viewer. I couldn't get into this, and didn't know what kind of film it wanted to be. My score is 4 out of 10, which an additional point for the frequently excellent musical score and a finale which goes some way to living up to the promise of the title.
My Review Of "Mermaid's Song"
Nicholas Humphries' fairytale is a dark dabble into a troubled life during a harsher period of American life. The 1930'second was the last great decade of some truly depressing and dark times, a stark reality of the decadent and the derilect- no real rights save for the wealthy, and not much compassion beyond a mother's love (and based on the cap I watched based on the times, even that was a 1 in 5 chance - if you were lucky.) Anyway, "Mermaid's Song" encompasses a slice of that existence, wrapped in a coming of age tale, garnished with a flare of dark fantasy.
The settings and period trappings are nice, well conceived elements that help to really frame what becomes an almost Gothic story. The characters are traditional souls similar to the characters in 'Damnation', a series set in a time just before Nicholas Humphries' story. Most are two-dimensional but the main character, Charlotte and the antagonist, played by Rheon really stand out.
The special effects, although mostly CGI, are quality works that achieve the necessary effect that Humphries is going for. The creature design and transition sequences are cool, entertaining moments. The sound effects and music score are mixed bagged notes that, at times, seem out of place, but for the most part blend nicely with the pace of the story and creates a nice slow stride.
"Mermaid's Song" is marketed toward the horror fan, but it is more of a period drama with dark fantasy edges. The horror elements are mild, however there are moments in the film that explores some elements of sex trafficking, exploitation of women, and child molestation. Still those are mostly insinuated, and never pushed beyond respectability. Just keep in mind that this is no kiddie flick.
The settings and period trappings are nice, well conceived elements that help to really frame what becomes an almost Gothic story. The characters are traditional souls similar to the characters in 'Damnation', a series set in a time just before Nicholas Humphries' story. Most are two-dimensional but the main character, Charlotte and the antagonist, played by Rheon really stand out.
The special effects, although mostly CGI, are quality works that achieve the necessary effect that Humphries is going for. The creature design and transition sequences are cool, entertaining moments. The sound effects and music score are mixed bagged notes that, at times, seem out of place, but for the most part blend nicely with the pace of the story and creates a nice slow stride.
"Mermaid's Song" is marketed toward the horror fan, but it is more of a period drama with dark fantasy edges. The horror elements are mild, however there are moments in the film that explores some elements of sex trafficking, exploitation of women, and child molestation. Still those are mostly insinuated, and never pushed beyond respectability. Just keep in mind that this is no kiddie flick.
The audio might give you a headache.
Sound editing is extremely bad. Not sure what was being said too often so not really sure what was going on beyond the obvious. Not sure how a movie gets released in such a state? I'm also at a loss as to what they spent 2 million dollars on?
What Did They Say?
The movie itself was a little draggy but intriguing enough. I liked it for the most part. Where it loses majorly is how they managed, I mean mismanaged the sound. Shouldn't singing voices be heard and not drowned out by the music and sound effects? Hard to make out a lot of what was said because voices were constantly drowned out.
Moral turpitude with song and dance.
This movie was filmed in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
This is an interesting story of a child Charlotte (Katelyn Mager) is coming of age in the dust bowl of the '30s. She grows up to discover that she is a land-locked mermaid that has the destiny to fulfill. There are good guys and bad buys and maybe a few surprises.
One of the main drawbacks of this production is that the "song and dance" scenes are ten times louder than the dialog. You have to choose to keep using the volume button or just turn it off and watch the subtitles.
The graphics/CGI is of a decent par.
It looks like a pilot movie to a pending series.
This is an interesting story of a child Charlotte (Katelyn Mager) is coming of age in the dust bowl of the '30s. She grows up to discover that she is a land-locked mermaid that has the destiny to fulfill. There are good guys and bad buys and maybe a few surprises.
One of the main drawbacks of this production is that the "song and dance" scenes are ten times louder than the dialog. You have to choose to keep using the volume button or just turn it off and watch the subtitles.
The graphics/CGI is of a decent par.
It looks like a pilot movie to a pending series.
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- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Mermaid's Curse
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- CA$2,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 28m(88 min)
- Color
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