Black Rainbow (1989) Poster

(1989)

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7/10
The end of this rainbow is a disappointment.
BA_Harrison5 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Mike Hodges' Black Rainbow is a clever little supernatural thriller, at least up until the final act where things get a little muddled, Hodges failing to wrap things up in a satisfactory manner. The film stars Rosanna Arquette as medium Martha Travis, who travels the religious circuit with her father Walter (Jason Robards), earning money from eager church audiences hoping to hear from their dear departed. During one of these events, Martha has a vision of man called Tom, even though the man's wife Mary-who is in the audience-insists that her husband is alive and well at home. That evening, Tom is killed in cold blood by a hitman hired to prevent him from blowing the whistle on malpractice at the factory where he works.

Intrepid reporter Gary Wallace (Tom Hulce) investigates the story, but is sceptical about Martha's powers, at least until she accurately predicts the deaths of several men in a disaster at a power plant. Convinced that Martha is no longer a fake, Gary believes that Martha knows the identity of Tom's killer, and that she might be his next target.

A strong cast go a long way to making this film as entertaining as it is: Arquette is beguiling as troubled Martha, who has to contend with an alcoholic father who refuses to believe in her supernatural abilities. Robards' does his flawed character justice, making him both likeable yet also pathetic; and Hulce does well with a role that is primarily there to drive the narrative. However, the best comes from Mark Joy as the assassin, who makes for a truly loathsome individual, the horror of what he does for a living compounded by the fact that we see him as husband and father to his unsuspecting wife and kids.

It should come as no surprise that the finalé sees the nasty killer attempting to silence Martha before she can spill the beans, but this is where things go pear-shaped, Martha's powers now including astral projection, the girl appearing in spiritual form to both her father and the killer. The police (led by a cop who I thought was in the pay of the factory owner who hired the hitman in the first place) pump a few rounds into the villain, but only after he's put a few slugs in poor old Walter. Soon after, Martha vanishes without a trace. It really doesn't make much sense, and neither does the very final scene, set ten years later, in which Wallace, having finally tracked down Martha, visits her home to find it deserted, dilapidated and overgrown with weeds. Not a scooby.

6.5/10, rounded up to 7 for Arquette in her sexy black underwear. Hot diggity!
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7/10
Nice low-budget thriller
ric-2921 February 1999
Black Rainbow is a low-budget mystery with supernatural overtones, a rare genre that I'm particularly fond of. The sound and the picture quality on the print I saw was not great but was certainly watchable. I really enjoyed the premise: a fake psychic starts actually prophesizing people's deaths -- both the why and how -- which makes her a target for a hit man. Arquette is pretty good in the role -- kind of a mystical and ethereal nymphomaniac and Robards is great as always. The plot meanders a bit and sometimes gets a little slow, but I still enjoyed it. The ending didn't really make a lot of sense to me -- maybe I missed something earlier in the movie -- but I was surprised by this ending and liked it even if though it didn't seem to be supported by the rest of the movie.
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7/10
Unusual and ambitious mix of genres.
gridoon22 November 2004
"Black Rainbow" is an uncategorizable film: an unusual and ambitious mix of such different genres as metaphysical horror, corruption/conspiracy thriller, family drama, even a backstage look at the way evangelist/medium "shows" are set up. The mix doesn't always work (the ending, for example, is not consistent with some of the previous events), but the movie is still definitely worth seeing. There are at least two or three brilliant scenes (the most notable of which is, arguably, the way Hodges "films" an explosion without actually showing it), and Rosanna Arquette gives an impressive performance. (***)
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There's definitely gold at the end of this rainbow
Cujo10819 May 2010
A traveling medium who "performs" in front of large audiences, Martha Travis relays messages from deceased loved ones to their relatives in attendance. Having pushed her into this way of life, her alcoholic father is more than happy to be making (and blowing) the money her shows bring about. One night, however, Martha receives a message from a man who's wife claims he isn't dead. He soon is though, killed just the way Martha had envisioned. Word spreads, and soon skeptical reporter Gary Wallace is on her trail, as is the hit-man responsible for the killing.

Black Rainbow is a grimy, slow-burning little southern Gothic. Directed by Mike Hodges, the film is equal parts horror yarn, crime thriller and chastising of fake mediums. Before she begins foretelling deaths, we never are clearly sure if Martha's gift is all an act. Whether it is or not, the image she uses to describe her connection to the afterlife, that of a rainbow, is about to become very blackened indeed. Low key and mysterious, the film is laced with atmosphere that, while often dreary, in reality is quite hypnotic.

In a film like this, the characters have to be well-drawn. These are believable, broken people. As Martha, Rosanna Arquette is intensely ethereal. I don't think she's ever looked more stunning, and likewise, I don't think she's ever given a better performance than the one delivered here. She vividly conveys the essence of the character, a woman who turns to sporadic bouts of nymphomania for her only form of gratification. Emotionally worn and hardened by the existence that's been forced on her, Martha lives an empty life giving hope to others while keeping none for herself. Jason Robards plays her father, a louse of a man using his daughter as a cash cow while deriding her every step of the way. Tom Hulce is the cocky reporter, and I recognized the mechanic from The Night Flier as Ted Silas.

At one point in the film, Martha is branded a witch due to one of her predictions. The same woman was more than happy to take part in her showings when they were reassuring, but the moment she foresees something bad, the woman does a 180 and puts her down. Ah, good ol' human nature! This leads to Arquette tearing into her final audience with a speech about the affirmation of their own lives through the afterlife. Terrific stuff.

Hodges peppers his film with many themes, a key one clearly being the human need for assurance. Under his direction, everything comes together beautifully. One scene is a real stunner, as we bear witness to the force of an unseen explosion. I didn't realize what I was seeing at first, but once it became clear, I had to go back and watch the scene again. A lovely example of creativity through subtlety. Really, despite the run down locations, despite the macabre nature of the proceedings, the entire film has an underlying beauty radiating throughout it. It's a delicate balance, but one that's fully achieved.

Wrapping up with an ambiguous ending, the film concludes on a fitting note. This was a great discovery. Never talked about, but utterly satisfying, anyone looking for a real sleeper need look no further. Wonderful film.
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7/10
Intriguing journey into the beyond .......
merklekranz26 June 2013
Rosanna Arquette is Jason Robards daughter who possesses special powers to for tell future events. This leads to difficulties as she identifies the hit-man who carried out one of her predictions. There is a certain quality to this film that relates to the genuineness of Arquettes performance. Her followers come across as true believers, and what starts as a scam spirals into a very intriguing story. Tom Hulce's performance is no more than adequate, with zero sparks flying between him and the super sexy Arquette. Another negative would have to be Hulce's sometimes on, sometimes off Southern dialect, which detracts. Overall though this is a creative and entertaining film. - MERK
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6/10
Interesting
BandSAboutMovies11 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Mike Hodges has had a crazy career. Who else could make both Flash Gordon, Pulp and Get Carter? This film is even stranger, a tale of Martha Travis (Rosanna Arquette), a carny clairvoyant who is traveling the rails with her father (Jason Robards), pulling off that old cold reading trick, letting people feel better about their dead loved ones. One night, however, she predicts a death, which starts spiraling her life - and everyone connected to it like journalist Gary Wallace (Tom Hulce, Amadeus) - out of control.



After predicting the death of a whistleblower, Martha is soon followed by the police, the press and the man who keeps killing anyone to keep the secrets of industry. While she was once content to use her gifts for showmanship, now she feels the need to tell her growing audience that there is nothing left in the great unknown. Worse, she is starting to see how each of them will die.

This is an anachronistic film, because if you asked me when it took place, I'd say the 1930's, but there are references to R2D2 in the dialogue. That kind of incredulity makes me love this movie even more. It's a shame that it was basically dumped on release. No surprise, it was produced by Miramax over here.
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3/10
There's nothing at the end of the rainbow.
dbdumonteil30 June 2002
The movie begins as a rip-off of Richard Brooks' "Elmer Gantry" (1961)(R. Arquette recalling Jean Simmons),then continues as a " the eyes of Laura Mars" (1978)imitation.Then finally David Cronenberg's "dead zone" serves as an inspiration to the director for the finale.The epilogue,whIch tries to "surprise" the audience has already been used one hundred times or more.

Arquette's character's behavior does not make much sense:now a chaste and sweet saint,now a formidable nymphomaniac who rapes poor Tom Hulce .It's a cock and bull story,and as I've already said,the magpie syndrome is rampant.Best avoid.
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7/10
Mike Hodgers arouses a metaphysical subject to audience!!
elo-equipamentos8 October 2023
Mike Hodgers is a reputable British director made great pictures as Get Carter (my favorite ever), Terminal Man, Flash Gordon, A Prayer for the Dying just named a few, according his own words he starts devise a sketch over North Caroline state starting a point concerning a poorest place in America, the large majority people left the fields to works in majors cities letting the smallest cities empty, he focuses in black people heavily exploited by richest white man, they are devoted to Christian faith as foregoing on movie, later Hodgers watching a documentary about a British medium Doris Strokes he brought together on early sketch this metaphysical figure to complete his story, then came up Black Rainbow.

A medium Martha Travis (Rosanna Arquette) managed by his alkie father Walter Travis (Jason Robards) touring every single year on America southeast thru smallest towns where Martha performs at stage upon a crowed place her visions concerning someone on audience, she predicts things that matches with the person pick up from the crowd, it somehow baffled the audience in each accuracy, however one day Martha predicts for a woman that his husband is dead, which the woman denies such thing saying that his husband is at home, puzzling the public, in same night such man is killed by a hitman.

Then enters an agnostic newspaper Gary Wallace (Tom Hulce) delving into the strange happening, he got in touch with Martha to find out the name of the killer dealing with so famous medium that allegedly foresaw the killing scene, although the mastermind sent one more time the same gunman squelch Martha for good, weary and mentally deranged Martha squeeze his father about the saved money in the bank, sadly she discovers that Walter a compulsive gambler lost the money, shuddering the already worn out teaming.

I saw this picture on TV in 1984, a bit disturbing offer about a harsh partnership, actually Walter never believe that Martha has no gift, as her mother as well, in other hand Martha has a lewd behavior, in this poisoned environment unfolding the bleak storyline, the final is too disappointing, utterly running from the metaphysical standard still paved by many years of study and understanding over so stinging subject.

Thanks for reading

Resume:

First watch: 1994 / How many: 3 / Source: TV-DVD / Rating: 7.
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5/10
Yes, it was good, but am I going to remember it?
paulclaassen18 September 2022
Rosanna Arquette stars as the medium, Martha Travis, who connects with deceased people, and give comfort to their loved ones. Her problems start during a clairvoyant show when she connects with factory worker Tom Kuron on the 'other side' while he is still alive (only to be assassinated shortly thereafter).

She now becomes the target of the killer, a man hired by a a factory owner to kill Tom who was about to expose the factory's malpractice. A reporter, Gary Wallace (Tom Hulce) investigates and becomes close with Martha and her father, Walter (Jason Robards).

Martha then connects with more people 'on the other side', while they are still alive, setting in motion a series of events. 'Black Rainbow' is an interesting story with good performances, and there's also a twist ending. I just don't know if I'm going to remember this movie by its title...
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6/10
A Confusing Film.
richard-wheeler11 January 2006
Warning: Spoilers
A man named Gary Wallace (Tom Hulce) looked for a medium named Martha Travis (Rosanna Arquette) who disappeared after her father's death. Gary found her living in the woods and he had been tracking this girl down for 10 years.This was confusing in the beginning because, you see her father alive! Weird. This movie began where it ended. Anyways, here's the rest of the review:

Martha worked at a church as a medium and she lived with her father named Walter Travis (Jason Robards) at a hotel. And that day, she saw a vision of a woman's husband, her name was Mary Kuron (Linda Pierce). And her husband's name was Tom (Olek Krupa) and Martha believed that he was dead! And when Mary returned home, he was okay until she went out of the lounge. Tom got shot while he was watching t.v. BIZARRE!

After the incident, Martha and Walter went to go speak to a guy named Jack Callow (Jon Thompson) to discuss the incident. Fortunately, Jack's wife Eva (Helen Boldwin) refused to say who Mary was with. That guy was the person who shot Mary's Husband! He certainly was looking for TROUBLE!

Again, at the church. Martha said to a woman named Jacky Adams (Marty Terry) that her deceased friend had seen her husband, Bill. And then, she said to a woman that her brother named Louis is with his twin brother Jimmy, when in fact one of them was dead! And soon, Jacky believed that her husband Bill was dead.

And not so soon, Martha was told to go because, everyone thought she was a witch. And when Wallis popped in to the church to see Martha, she had left. And he finally found her and he warned her about Tom Kuron's murderer was going to kill her that evening. And that night, the murderer came after her while she was communicating to another person's deceased love one. Martha shrieked, she told everyone in the church to run , gun shots went off, and everyone ran out like crazy people.

And when Martha came home, her father took off with her the moment she came in! And the killer shot out of Martha's room and he tried to shot Martha down the passage. But strangely, the bullets went through her and they killed her father! And followed by an investigator named Irving Weinberg (Ron Rosenthal) when he was coming out of the elevator. And when the killer came downstairs, he got shot and he went through a wood and glass door.

And before Gary left the church, Martha told him that her father didn't know that all this was not a dream. And she disappeared. And Wallace went back into the wood's , to Martha's house to find her. NOW! This was the strangest moment that I was talking about: A car that was seen stuck in a leaf pile was seen again and Martha's house was totally shambled. And as you all knew....it was in the woods. Weird END!
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1/10
A terrible movie indeed!
leslie_4_999 September 2001
This movie has to be the worst movie I have ever suffered through! The storyline was hopeless, the accent of Hulce's was nothing but a joke and I would not watch this movie again for a million dollars. If this is the only kind of a moive Hulce can make I can see why he has given up acting!
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10/10
Very intelligent film, made by Mike Hodges
ninfilms7 July 2004
Black Rainbow is like most of Mike Hodges films: Get Carter, Croupier and Terminal Man, very intelligent. It is great performance by

Rosanna Arquette best ever. Also Jason Robards and Tom Hulce are also good.

I doesn't rely on special effects to tell a story. It is more or less dealing with whether or not (Martha Travis) Rosanna Arquette is telling the truth. What I found interesting is how Hodges creates a psychological atmosphere on what would happen if someone with that psychic power tells you somebody close to you is dead. That is more disturbing than any special effect.

It is a shame Black Rainbow didn't get a proper cinema release. According to Mike Hodges on the DVD commentary of Black Rainbow, both the distributors Palace Pictures (UK) & Miramax (USA) were both suffering financially. Palace Pictures only released the in minimum cinemas, because they were on the verge of getting bankrupt. Miramax decided to release it straight to television.

My opinion is this is great film and should get a chance, any interested in this film, its out on DVD on Anchor Bay on Region 2
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6/10
didn't stand the time
trashgang11 December 2014
I know that I have seen this years ago on VHS and I watched it again as I am writing this and my only conclusion is that it is a typical flick for the end of the eighties.

We all know that the end of the eighties didn't brought us much in the horror genre except a few and this one is a so-called horror that isn't frightening at all. For todays standards it is even a bit lame. There are no effects to spot or any blood at all and that for a horror. Naturally if you don't add blood (like the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)) you must add suspense or eerie situations but we don't have it here.

The horror lays in the fact that a medium do contact dead people who are in fact still alive. Nobody believes her but once the living are dying like she said things go wrong.

There are a lot of famous names here to see but for me it didn't deliver enough suspense like it did back then. For the Kleenex lovers, Rosanne Arquette do show a few things...

Gore 0/5 Nudity 0,5/5 Effects 0/5 Story 3/5 Comedy 0/5
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This was worth watching.
trupie21 December 2001
The script is filled with a series of chilling twists which Hodges plays with an absolute and certain confidence - the eeriness as Arquette's first vision starts to come, and her agitation and attempts to cover as what she is performing turns to real; the second vision where she reels off a list of names of the dead trying to contact the living and said people still alive in the audience start standing up puzzled. Hodges' depiction of a seedy con-job slowly becoming darker is beautifully written. The imagery as Arquette's vistas of heavenly meadows and tranquil afterlife cliches start to change into impressions of cancers, empty lives and of people suffering is a stunning and powerful one. The final soliloquy Arquette gives, coming out to taunt the audience - how they want there to be an afterlife so they can confirm their own lives, how if there wasn't an afterlife and what they had was all that they were given, then wouldn't that make her a fake ? - is superbly written and utterly rivetting in delivery. Arquette's performance in the film is exceptional.
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6/10
Too preachy
le_chiffre-15 January 2011
This had the potential to be a good movie -- the basic premise, about a phoney medium who starts to experience real premonitions, was interesting, the actors were excellent, and the gloomy atmosphere of an economically-depressed rural South came through loud and clear -- but it just didn't go anywhere.

The movie came off like more of a soapbox for the writer's leftist, secular humanist views than anything. For example, there's a scene in which the psychic starts telling an auditorium of blue-collar workers that if only they were to stop believing in God and the afterlife, they could start to build a better world here on earth.

The problem with such propositions is that they don't square with reality. The further we've moved from religion, the baser we've become. Unlike the churchgoing villain of this film, real-life Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling was a fan of Richard Dawkins, not of the Bible. Becoming more honest with ourselves and each other by dispensing with our ideals (or, as the writer would probably see it, our hypocrisy) doesn't mean that the world will become a better place. Better a Henry Ford than a Gordon Gekko.

Black Rainbow didn't spend enough time developing its characters to justify the frequently grandiose, overwrought, overly-intellectual dialogue. The story, which with a little more work would've resulted in a first-class supernatural thriller, was given a backseat to the incessant moralizing.

Too bad Lee Ving wasn't cast as the hit man. That role would've fit him like a black glove!

6 out of 10 stars.
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6/10
A PSYCHIC CHANNELS THE DEAD & THEN "SOON TO BE DEAD" CAUSING A DISRUPTION OF INTENT FOR THE BENEVOLENT MEDIUM
LeonLouisRicci27 August 2021
Writer/Director Mike Hodges got some Notice with "Get Carter" (1971) and the Cult Movie "Flash Gordon" (1980),

Two Very Different Styles, This One Falls in the Middle with its Outlandish Paranormal Claims and Corporate-Crime Elements.

The Tone of the Movie Struggles with the Combination with the Two Elements Never quite Coalescing into a Coherent Whole.

The Exposition is Weak and Fails to Solidify the Story-Line in any Assemblance of Tracking and Presenting the Picture for Easy Audience Acceptance.

It is an Odd Film with Good Acting from Arquette and Robards but the Montage has Trouble Flowing Coherently and the Film Suffers.

What does Connect is the Credibility of the Major Tropes and its Sincere Display of a Serious and Demonstrably Displayed Benevolent Medium.

She is Now Reluctantly Receiving Messages from the Other Side that are Morphing into Precognitive Prophecies.

She is Not Comfortable Handling the Type and it Disrupts Her Calling as a Calming Messenger for the Bereaved,

It's Best to just let the Movie Play-Out in its Own Universe and just Kick-Back and Enjoy a Decidedly Different "Twilight Zone" Atmosphere.

Definitely Worth a Watch for those that Crave the Unusual.
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6/10
A Beautiful Film That Does Not Make Any Sense
thalassafischer16 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Martha is an adult around the age of 30 who is still somehow cowed by her controlling and alcoholic father into being the star of a traveling show involving displays of her ability to talk to the dead.

This is the first thing that doesn't make much sense. I mean maybe she's an abused child who does not know how to stop what she's been doing since her early teens, primarily due to financial fears (how else will she support herself? Its doubtful she's spent much time learning other skills) BUT ON THE OTHER HAND, her father seems to manage the money poorly and saucy Ms. Martha is more than adept at seducing a grown man spontaneously in her own hotel room, so she's not exactly a shrinking violet. It's almost like she knows she's running the show.

Black Rainbow unfolds somewhat slowly, lingering in beautiful settings and cinematography, which is probably the best part of this little flick. About 3/4 of the way through the film we get confirmation that her gift is real after she predicts the exact people who will die in a tragic accident the following day.

However, this film ends on a strange note that isn't eerie or haunting - it's just nonsensical. It turns out that Martha cannot be killed by mere bullets from a gun (though her father is) and furthermore, kind of like a vampire, she does not appear in photographs. There's simply no proof she ever really existed, and the journalist stalking her story is accused of being a drug addict by his boss when the former produces a series of photos of a run down house covered in kudzu and no Martha is in sight.

Was Martha a ghost? If so, how did she seduce the journalist in the middle of the movie? And how did so many individuals speak to her and watch her perform?

Very frustrating and nonsensical writing, unless we're to view the reporter as an insane unreliable narrator. But that also does not quite gel in the aftermath of the prediction of the explosion at the factory.
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8/10
Worthwhile Viewing!
skallisjr18 May 2005
This is not a film everyone would enjoy. It takes a poke at an old and established con game -- for want of a more precise term, fake mediumship -- and then stands it on its head.

Spoilers follow.

Before an audience in a mining town, Arquette's character tells various audience members of their losses, while the victims are still alive! She's proved to be wrong, and then, later, the persons die in the manner she describes. This happens more than once. Had she been a local lady, she might have been a murder suspect, or possibly hanged as a witch.

The story builds slowly, and each incident just throws another log on the fire, making the atmosphere murkier and more mysterious. The film opens ambiguously and ends the same way.

As noted before, not for every taste. But for those with the appropriate taste buds, the taste of this is rich and flavorful.
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10/10
This is a fine film, don't miss it.
stevepb28 August 2020
I won't waste time repeating all the positive points other reviewers have made about this film.

Rosanna Arquette is absolutely stunning in the lead role. You can see why Martin Scorsese advised her to play the part, she's perfect.

The fact that Arrow have restored this little gem on Blu-Ray is a rare piece of good news in this terrible year of 2020.
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8/10
I'm a believer
kosmasp23 October 2020
Are you? Kidding aside and I have to say the summary line another reviewer used made me chuckle - "too preachy" - which is a nice joke even if not entirely to the point of the movie. Or missing the points of the movie. That doesn't matter though if you can engage in this otherworldly feel the movie gives you and dives into.

Patricia Arquette is quite mesmerizing ... Robard is an amazing actor anyway. But they have certain scene, where some may feel confused. And they are there for a reason. I don't think one time viewing is enough to actually get everything the movie dishes out and serves us. I am sincerely surprised I never had heard about this until a really well restorated Blu Ray was released in the UK. I'm glad they did that, even if the movie may never reach a wide audience. But if you are into movies that are hard to predict (yes the overall outcome is clear from the start, since we then delve into flashback), but there is way more than meets the eye ... or camera lense for that matter! Watch and enjoy ... and maybe even understand! You better believe that ;)
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Eh, it's alright.
horrorgasm14 January 2019
Starts off well, but never seems to be able to make up its mind about its genre and direction. Is it a drama? A thriller? A supernatural mystery? It has its moments, but it's a bit too sporadic overall, much like Arquette's character's wildly fluctuating personality.

P.S. To Mr. Too Preachy Review down there: she never says that people should stop believing in God and the afterlife to focus on the real world, she simply says that they should stop spending so much of their physical lives worrying about the afterlife. Not the same thing at all. You seem to be the only one pushing a religious agenda here. Cut that out.
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8/10
Highly charged medium
tomsview21 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
I love films about fake psychics who suddenly discover they actually do have psychic powers. "Night has a Thousand Eyes" with Edward G Robinson did it brilliantly, but this film written and directed by Mike Hodges is right up there with the best.

This film makes you appreciate Mike Hodge's talent as a storyteller, and there are layers to "Black Rainbow" that make it doubly interesting.

Tom Hulce plays reporter Gary Wallace who stumbles across Martha Travis (Rosanna Arquette), a medium who works with her father doing a spiritualist act in South Carolina. We are in "Elmer Gantry" territory here and although we are led to believe the act is a scam, Martha begins to have visions that come true. However the things she sees put her life in danger.

Wallace feels he is onto a big story and although he doesn't believe in her powers at first, he becomes fascinated with the enigmatic and sensuous Martha. Without spoiling things, the film has a terrific ending that leaves you wondering. Hodges could come up with a punchy ending – remember "Get Carter"?

A perfect cast struts their stuff including a low key Tom Hulce as the disbelieving reporter. Jason Robards goes to town on his alcoholic Walter Travis, the father who doesn't realise his daughter's powers have progressed beyond mere show business.

However Rosanna Arquette steals the show as the ethereal Martha. Rosanna Arquette always brought a sense of detachment and a certain quirkiness to her roles and often surprises you with how sexy she could be – her screen persona is hard to define.

"Black Rainbow" blends together a heady mixture of spiritualism, bent detectives, hit men, corrupt corporate heads and a dash of sex. Mike Hodges captured a slice of life in South Carolina with the same assurance he caught life in the North of England in "Get Carter". It's a penetrating gaze, but not a jaundiced one, he has a feeling for people and the script has touches of wit.

British composer John Scott's moody score adds the final touch of quality to a clever little movie that makes for a nice discovery if you ever come across it.
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Nice thriller
elia_b19 August 2020
Little bit boring, not much of a horror show, but worth watching for Rosanna Arquette. She is wonderful in this picture.
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9/10
One of the crown jewels of the horror genre
myriamlenys22 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
A young woman travels from city to city, as a spirit medium who tells grieving people exactly what they want to hear. ("X is very happy and he asks you not to worry.") She is tightly controlled by her father, who has helped her hone her act and her image to perfection. Things go awry when the medium starts to receive messages from individuals who are not yet dead...

"Black rainbow" is an outstanding horror movie with interestingly layered characters and superb lead performances. (Rosanna Arquette, in particular, is spell-binding.) The movie deals with themes like the ability to see hidden things, which might constitute a curse rather than a blessing. Another theme is the deliberate exploitation of mankind's deepest fears and hopes. In "Black rainbow" the exploitation happens within the spiritist circuit, but it also happens within the confines of traditional Christianity, what with scheming scoundrels draping themselves in the vestments of religion. Indeed, one of the villains preaches from the very pulpit.

Upon closer examination some of the exploiters turn out to be exploited themselves. Here it is hard not to feel a deep pity for the young medium, whose life has been blighted by a strangler fig of a father. Desperately lonely, she seeks refuge in casual sexual encounters with strangers while Daddy drags her across the country as if she were a ventriloquist's dummy or a performing seal. The man is worried that she might have genuine paranormal or mystical powers, but what really terrifies him is the idea that she might stop making money. And then who's going to subsidize his gambling and his drinking ?

As you will have guessed by now, "Black rainbow" is not the happiest movie ever filmed. There's an abiding undercurrent of unease and dread. Even the sex feels joyless and oppressive ; we're talking about consensual relations between adults but some of the images might come straight out of a hard-hitting documentary on vice or rape. But don't let the sombre nature of the work keep you from watching this jewel of "Southern Gothic". It will amply repay your time and attention.

If you like this one, be sure to watch "The dead zone" with Christopher Walken, based on the novel by Stephen King.
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beautifully done and dumb as they come
sommerfambb14 August 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Unfortunately the plot is full of interesting ideas thrown together with no internal logic, so that the story is just dumb.

Just one example - (may contain spoilers if you have not read any of the other reviews.) Towards the end Arquette's character suggests to the audience that they are wrong to try and believe in some other life and that what if there is only this and shouldn't we live for it.

A fine and noble thought - but hardly likely to be voiced by a character that is in herself providing proof that there is something more. Since she has discovered that she is getting true messages from beyond, she would be far more likely to say at this stage that maybe once it was all an act but now she is compelled to believe in a next life ...

And then at the end she sits in a chair and disappears .., so if she was a ghost why the hell was she doing the act for her father and getting upset by it and worried about their money... not to mention screwing around ... Or was she just a regular human vulnerable girl for most of the movie (and this acted brilliantly) and then transformed suddenly into a ghost in that chair, or did she suddenly learn teleportation ...

Fuzzy, insultingly sloppy thinking ruins what could have been a really good movie.
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