Orca (film)

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Orca

US theatrical one-sheet for Orca
Directed by Michael Anderson
Produced by Luciano Vincenzoni
Written by Luciano Vincenzoni
Sergio Donati
Starring Richard Harris
Charlotte Rampling
Will Sampson
Bo Derek
Keenan Wynn
Robert Carradine
Music by Ennio Morricone
Cinematography J. Barry Herron
Ted Moore
Editing by John Bloom
Marion Rothman
Ralph E. Winters
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) July 22, 1977 (USA)
Running time 92 min.
Language English
Budget Unknown
IMDb profile

Orca is a 1977 horror film directed by Michael Anderson and produced by Dino De Laurentiis and starring Richard Harris and Charlotte Rampling. The film was one of a long line of marine-related horror-disaster films that followed the success of 1975's Jaws. In this film, the antagonist is an Orca "killer" whale.

Taglines:

  • The killer whale is one of the most intelligent creatures in the universe. Incredibly, he is the only animal other than man who kills for revenge. He has one mate, and if she is harmed by man, he will hunt down that person with a relentless, terrible vengeance - across seas, across time, across all obstacles.
  • Terror just beneath the surface.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Nolan (Richard Harris) is a crusty sea captain who is offered a large payment by a local aquarium if he can capture a killer whale. He and his crew capture a killer whale, which he strings up vertically aboard his ship on the way back to port. The whale dies on its way back to port. The whale happens to be pregnant and she miscarries. Her mate seeks vengeance for her death and the death of their child, killing one of Nolan's shipmates. The situation deteriorates as Nolan and the whale fight a deadly battle. A local professor, Rachel Bedford (Charlotte Rampling), tries to bring Nolan to his senses before everything goes awry.

[edit] Production

A combination of stock footage and animatronics was used to portray the killer whale. The stock was taken at Marine World in Redwood City, California (using their two orcas, Yaka and Vigga), at Marineland of the Pacific (using Corky II and Orky II), and the animatronic whale was filmed off of Malta and Newfoundland in the small fishing community of Petty Harbour.

[edit] Reception

Orca was poorly received by critics who panned the film as a Jaws "rip-off", and for its poorly conceived special effects work. Many scientists also panned the film for many of the same reasons they criticized Jaws. Scientifically, the film was very flawed, as whales, even orcas, very rarely attack humans. The film was also criticized for a gory sequence in which a whale in its death throes aborts a fetus. When released in July 1977, the film found only minor success, but has achieved a cult following among fans of the eco-horror sub genre. It is often seen as superior to Jaws: The Revenge, another film about personal revenge against a vicious sea creature.

Despite being gruesome in parts, the film also contains what may be considered beautiful imagery, accompanied by the haunting score by Ennio Morricone.

[edit] Trivia

There are many comparisons between Orca and the Jaws series. Orca was the name of Quint's ship in Jaws and was found wrecked in Jaws 2. Orca contained a scene where the killer whale mauled a great white shark to death; in response, Jaws 2 contained a scene where an orca was found dead on the beach, possibly the victim of a shark attack. In the game Jaws: Unleashed an orca inside an attraction at a sea-themed park is one of the game's bosses.

[edit] Cast

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