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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Themes  





4 Production  



4.1  Filming locations  







5 Cultural references  





6 See also  





7 References  





8 External links  














The Medusa Touch (film)






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The Medusa Touch
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJack Gold
Screenplay byJohn Briley
Based onThe Medusa Touch
byPeter Van Greenaway
Produced byAnne V. Coates
Jack Gold
Arnon Milchan
StarringRichard Burton
Lino Ventura
Lee Remick
Harry Andrews
CinematographyArthur Ibbetson
Edited byAnne V. Coates
Ian Crafford
Music byMichael J. Lewis

Production
companies

Coatesgold
ITC Entertainment
Bulldog
Citeca Productions

Distributed byITC Entertainment (UK)
Warner Bros. (USA/International)

Release dates

  • 7 April 1978 (1978-04-07) (UK)
  • 14 April 1978 (1978-04-14) (New York City)
  • Running time

    109 minutes
    CountriesUnited Kingdom
    France
    LanguageEnglish

    The Medusa Touch is a 1978 supernatural horror thriller film directed by Jack Gold. It stars Richard Burton, Lino Ventura, Lee Remick and Harry Andrews, and features Alan Badel, Derek Jacobi, Gordon Jackson, Jeremy Brett and Michael Hordern. The screenplay was by John Briley, based on the 1973 novel The Medusa TouchbyPeter Van Greenaway.[1] The film is a co-production between the United Kingdom and France.

    Plot[edit]

    Monsieur Brunel, a French detective on an exchange scheme in London, is assigned to investigate the apparent murder of novelist John Morlar. As they examine the crime scene, Brunel discovers the victim is still alive in spite of his severe head injuries and has him rushed to hospital.

    With the help of Morlar's journals and Dr. Zonfeld, a psychiatrist Morlar was consulting, Brunel reconstructs Morlar's life. Seen in flashback, it is filled with seemingly inexplicable catastrophes and the sudden deaths of people he disliked or who grievously offended him. Morlar has become convinced that, consciously or unconsciously, he himself willed the things to happen. He had become even more convinced when a supposed psychic examined his hands, became greatly unsettled at what he foresaw, and refunded Morlar's fee. Dr. Zonfeld scoffs at this explanation, asking Morlar if he seriously believes in palmistry as a means of predicting the future.

    As flashbacks continue, it becomes shown that Morlar has powerful psychokinetic abilities. Morlar's earlier legal career is seen to have halted in a courtroom defence speech that reveals his disgust at the world and offends the judge resulting in a lengthy imprisonment for his client. He inadvertently curses the judge, who soon after dies of a heart attack with a look of unaccountable terror. Later, he proves to Dr. Zonfeld that he is the instrument of disaster when, with her watching, he forces a jumbo airliner to crash into a London office tower, killing everyone on board.

    Brunel eventually concludes that Zonfeld has attempted to kill Morlar in order to stop him causing more disasters, the most recent, at the time that he was attacked, involving American astronauts on a space mission to the moon that is being widely broadcast in the media. Failing to get him to stop, she had bashed in Morlar's skull with a blunt object and left him for dead. Brunel confronts her and she admits trying to kill Morlar. Brunel does not arrest her right away, partly because he is also becoming convinced of Morlar's telekinetic powers. Later, Brunel returns to Dr. Zonfeld's office, but he discovers she has committed suicide, having left a note apologizing to him for leaving such a mess to deal with. From his hospital bed Morlar manages to bring down a cathedral on the "unworthy heads" of a VIP congregation attending a fundraising event for the crumbling building's restoration. Brunel races to the hospital and tries to kill Morlar to end the destruction, just as Zonfeld had, but he, too, is unsuccessful. Morlar, who is inexplicably still alive, writes on a pad the name of his next target: Windscale nuclear power station. It will be Morlar's most destructive disaster yet.

    Cast[edit]

  • Lino Ventura as Brunel
  • Lee Remick as Zonfeld
  • Harry Andrews as Assistant Commissioner
  • Alan Badel as Barrister
  • Marie-Christine Barrault as Patricia
  • Jeremy Brett as Edward Parrish
  • Michael Hordern as Fortune Teller
  • Gordon Jackson as Dr. Johnson
  • Derek Jacobi as Publisher
  • Robert Lang as Pennington
  • Michael Byrne as Duff
  • John Normington as Schoolmaster
  • Robert Flemyng as Judge McKinley
  • Philip Stone as Dean
  • Malcolm Tierney as Deacon
  • Norman Bird as Father
  • Jennifer Jayne as Mother
  • Avril Elgar as Mrs. Pennington
  • James Hazeldine as Lovelass
  • Wendy Gifford as Receptionist
  • David de Keyser (uncredited) as Brunel (voice dub) [2]
  • In addition, Gordon Honeycombe, long-time newscaster on the ITN national news broadcast, appears as the TV Newscaster on televisions being watched by various characters. During coverage of the space mission the voice of James Burke can briefly be heard, apparently in an audio recording from his coverage of the real Apollo 13 mission.

    Themes[edit]

    That Morlar is disgusted with the world is cited in Kim Newman's 1988 book Nightmare Movies, wherein Newman describes Morlar's dialogue as "incredibly misanthropic."[3]

    Production[edit]

    Filming locations[edit]

    Bristol Cathedral was used as the location for the fictional London place of worship, called Minster Cathedral in the film.[4]

    The St Mary's Church Towers near Reculver were used for the scene where young John and his parents are having a picnic whilst on holiday. John wills the car to move towards his parents, which causes them and the car to fall over the cliff. Herne Bay, also Kent, was used for the scene where a young John Morlar (Adam Bridges) stays with his parents and is out on the seafront. The hotel is now residential properties.[5]

    Cultural references[edit]

    A sample from the film (Richard Burton's line "I will bring the whole edifice down on their unworthy heads") was used in the Manic Street Preachers' 1998 song "Ready for Drowning". The 2005 Manic Street Preachers song "Leviathan" includes the lyric "Baader Meinhof and Medusa Touch".

    Footage from the film appears in the music video "The Madness Was Mine" by the artist Sailing Blind.

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Variety film review; 8 February 1978; page 18.
  • ^ "The Medusa Touch". www.imdb.com. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
  • ^ Newman, Kim (1988). Nightmare Movies: Critical History of the Horror Film, 1968-88. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7475-0295-1.
  • ^ "The Medusa Touch". www.imdb.com. Retrieved 5 September 2011.
  • ^ Kent Film Office. "Kent Film Office The Medusa Touch Film Focus".
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Medusa_Touch_(film)&oldid=1231515950"

    Categories: 
    1978 films
    1978 horror films
    1970s psychological thriller films
    1970s mystery films
    1970s science fiction horror films
    British science fiction films
    British science fiction horror films
    British thriller films
    French science fiction films
    French science fiction horror films
    French thriller films
    English-language French films
    Films based on British novels
    Films based on mystery novels
    Films about writers
    Films based on horror novels
    Police detective films
    ITC Entertainment films
    Films directed by Jack Gold
    Films shot at Pinewood Studios
    Warner Bros. films
    Films about telekinesis
    Films with screenplays by John Briley
    1970s English-language films
    1970s British films
    1970s French films
    Films scored by Michael J. Lewis (composer)
    1978 science fiction films
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles to be expanded from April 2024
    Use dmy dates from March 2016
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