Dir: Michael
Anderson
1977
****
Orca pretty much flopped when it was released due to it being a
shameless Jaws rip-off and not being as good a film as Jaws. However, I would
argue that all these years later, with so many shameless Jaws copies and
‘Sharksploitation’ now a sub-genre, Orca is the second best film of its ilk
after Steven Spielberg's classic. It is better than Jaws 2 for
sure. Producer Luciano Vincenzoni was first assigned
to give the film a head start after being called by Dino de
Laurentiis in the middle of the night in 1975.
Upon admitting that he had watched Jaws, Vincenzoni was instructed by de Laurentiis to
"find a fish tougher and more terrible than the great white". de
Laurentiis was famous for taking over franchises later on in his career such as
King Kong, Amityville and Halloween, and while not all of them were great, some
of them are now bona fide cult classics. During his career he
produced La Strada, Barbarella, Serpico, Blue Velvet and Army of Darkness so credit is very much
due. His King Kong remakes are amazing. The film is about Captain Nolan (
played by the brilliant Richard Harris), an Irish
Canadian who catches marine animals in order
to pay off the mortgage of his
boat and eventually return to Ireland. Nolan's crew is currently looking for
a great white shark for a local
aquarium, but a scientist named Ken (Robert Carradine) is targeted by the shark. In a thrilling sequence,
an orca intervenes just in time
and kills the shark, saving Ken's life. This switches Nolan's target to orca.
Later while hunting with his crew, Nolan tries to capture what he believes to
be a bull orca, but mistakenly harpoons a pregnant female. Nolan and his crew
get the orca on board, where she subsequently miscarries. The captain hoses the dead fetus overboard as the male
orca looks on screaming in anguish. Seeking release for his near-dead mate, the
male orca tries to sink the ship. One of Nolan's crew members, Novak (the
wonderful Keenan Wynn), cuts the female
off the ship, but the male leaps up and drags him into the sea too. The
following day, the orca pushes his now dead mate onto shore. Al Swain (Scott
Walker) berates Nolan on his actions after finding
the dead whale. Nolan denies responsibility, but Swain and the villagers
eventually find out his involvement. The villagers insist that he kill the
orca, as the latter's presence is causing the fish vital to the village's
economy to migrate. The orca then terrorises the village by sinking fishing
boats in broad daylight and then breaking fuel lines, thus destroying the
village's fuel reserves. Dr. Rachel Bedford (Charlotte Rampling), a colleague of Ken and a whale expert, shows him how
similar whales are to humans and tells Nolan that, "If he (the orca) is
like a human, what he wants isn't necessarily what he should have." Nolan
confesses to Bedford that he empathises with the whale, as his own wife and
unborn child had previously been killed in a car crash caused by a drunk
driver. Nolan promises Bedford not to fight the whale, but the orca attacks his
sea-front house, containing an injured crew member of Nolan's, Annie (Bo
Derek) within it. The house starts slipping into
the sea and the whale bites Annie's left leg off. Nolan decides to fight the
orca, although with Novak dead and Annie maimed and unable to help, Nolan and
Paul (Peter Hooten) are now the only crew
members left. Bedford and Ken join the pursuit, along with a Native American
man, Jacob Umilak (Will Sampson), enlisted
for his orca knowledge. The crew begins to follow the whale after he signals
Nolan to follow him. Ken is leaning over the side when the whale surfaces and
grabs him, killing him in the process. They follow the whale until they reach
the Strait of Belle Isle, though when
Paul starts to get into a lifeboat, the orca knocks Paul out of the boat and
drowns him. The next day, the whale shoves an iceberg into the boat and starts
to sink it. Nolan manages to harpoon the whale just before he and Bedford
escape from the boat, while Umilak is crushed beneath an avalanche of ice just
after sending out an SOS. Nolan and Bedford hide in an iceberg, although Nolan slips
onto another. The orca separates the icebergs, trapping Nolan. The whale jumps
onto the ice, causing it to tilt and sending Nolan into the water. The whale
lifts Nolan up with his tail and throws him onto another iceberg, killing him.
Bedford looks on as Nolan slips into the water in a cross shape. With his
revenge complete, the whale swims southward under the ice, while a helicopter
is seen which presumably will rescue Bedford. As the credits begin to roll, the
orca is shown swimming beneath the thick arctic ice and butting his head
against it, attempting unsuccessfully to surface for air. Though his fate is
ultimately uncertain, it is suggested that the orca will likely drown beneath
the ice, his revenge having cost his own life as well. Having had little
interest in sea life beforehand, Vincenzoni was directed to killer whales by
his brother Adriano, who had a personal interest in zoology, who I can’t help
but think encouraged him to make something of a more
well-balanced story. If you’re going to make a nonsense story of revenge,
then you might as well give it some poignancy. Filming took place largely
in Newfoundland during the fishing
season. The main orcas used for filming were trained animals from Marineland
of the Pacific and Marine World Africa, though
artificial whales made of rubber were used also. These models were so lifelike
that several animal rights activists blocked the trucks transporting them,
confusing them for real orcas. They looked a hell of a lot better than ‘Bruce’
– the fake shark used in Jaws. The then 46-year-old Richard Harris
insisted on performing his own stunts in the polar sequences, and was nearly
killed on several occasions. Harris was said to have really enjoyed his
experiences during filming, and took great offence at any comparison
between Orca and Jaws and for good reason. They really
are totally different films. Jaws attacked for no reason and only sought
revenge (or at least her kids did) in the sequels. Orca’s revenge was far
more understandable, man is the real bad-guy here but in the end revenge didn’t
prevail for anyone. The sequence that saw the baby Orca die is heart-breaking
and, as much as I love Richard Harris, I was kind of on the Orca’s side. That
is the beauty of Orca, it was like a modern day Moby Dick. Jaws was scary, it
had everyone on the edge of their seats and made them jump more than once but
Orca haunts you long after you finish watching it. Orca is the ultimate ‘Man vs
nature’ horror, it’s eerie and disturbing and made me feel quite uneasy. It’s a
crime that it is still mistaken for a cheap Jaws knock-off when it is actually
rather poetic and beautifully written/directed. The Ennio
Morricone score is also superb.
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