Jump to content

Lightning Over Water

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2003:dd:c72c:3398:8da7:32be:d002:c7c2 (talk) at 15:17, 2 June 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Lightning Over Water
Film poster
Directed by
Written by
  • Nicholas Ray
  • Wim Wenders
Produced by
Starring
Narrated byWim Wenders
Cinematography
Edited by
Music byRonee Blakley
Production
companies
Distributed byBasis-Film-Verleih GmbH (all media)
Release date
  • 11 September 1980 (1980-09-11)
Running time
91 minutes
116 minutes (original)
Countries
  • West Germany
  • Sweden
Languages
  • English
  • German
Budget$700,000 (estimated)

Lightning Over Water, also known as Nick's Film, is a 1980 West German-Swedish documentary-drama film written, directed by and starring Wim Wenders and Nicholas Ray. It centers on the last days of Ray's own life, who was already known worldwide for his 1955 classic film Rebel Without a Cause. It was screened out of competition at the 1980 Cannes Film Festival.[1]

Summary

The film is a collaboration between Wenders and Ray to document Ray's last days due to terminal cancer in 1979. The film is partially an homage to Ray who had a strong influence on Wenders' work, and partially an investigation on life and death. Ray's influence on Wenders includes Ray's "love on the run" subgenre as well as his film noir photography.

The film features excerpts from Ray's movies The Lusty Men and his unfinished final work We Can't Go Home Again. The sequence featuring the former excerpt was shot at Vassar College, at which Ray presented the movie and then gave a lecture, which itself is excerpted.

Nicholas Ray appears in a minor role in Wenders' film The American Friend. Wenders' science fiction film Until the End of the World is named for the last spoken words in Ray's 1961 Biblical epic film King of Kings.

The film crew is extensively featured onscreen. Jim Jarmusch, Ray's personal assistant at the time — and later a notable film director in his own right — can be briefly glimpsed at the 50:28 mark sitting at an editing console.

When Wenders goes to the Vassar campus to attend a lecture, a brief one-man performance is seen on-stage. It is Franz Kafka's story "A Report for an Academy", about an ape who becomes a man.

The American independent film director Jon Jost has recently come out against Wenders' status as the sole co-director, saying that Wenders "used his celebrity" to push Jost and Raúl Ruiz (director) out of the project that they had been the creators of.

References

  1. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Lightning Over Water". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-05-30.