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MAGIC IN THE WATER
Rating: 
Canada. 1995.
Director Rick Stevenson, Screenplay Rick Stevenson & Icel Dobell Massey, Story Icel Dobell Massey, Rick Stevenson & Ninian Dunnett, Producers Matthew OConnor & William Stevenson, Photography Thomas Burstyn, Underwater Photography Pauline H. Heaton, Music David Schwartz, Visual Effects Fantasy II (Supervisor Gene Warren Jr), Special Effects Supervisors Rory Cutler & Randy Shymklw, Orky Created by Make-Up Effects Unlimited (Supervisor Bart J. Mixon), Creature Design Errol Clyde Klotz & Rick Stevenson, Production Design Klotz. Production Company Oxford Film Co/Pacific Motion Pictures.
Cast:
Sarah Wayne (Ashley Black), Mark Harmon (Dr Jack Black), Joshua Jackson (Joshua Black), Harley Jane Kozak (Dr Wanda Bell), Frank Sotonoma Salsedo (Uncle Kipper), Willie Nark-Orn (Hiro), Morris Panych (Mack Miller)
Plot: Ashley and Joshua Black leave Seattle and head on holiday up to Lake Glenorky in Canada with their father. But their father is too wrapped up in his job as a radio psychologist to spend time with them. Ashley finds that icing on biscuits that she leaves out is being eaten by Orky, the mythical monster that is supposed to live in the lake. Their father falls into the lake and comes out changed much more playful, making sandcastles with them and demonstrating the ability to make clouds move in the sky with his mind. The children realizes that Orky is a shapeshifter and has possessed their father to warn them that its life is in danger from toxic waste dumping.
This is an amiable and unpretentious Canadian-made childrens film. Despite being rather flat visually, many scenes, in particular those with Mark Harmon being transformed following contact with Orky are conducted with a certain subtlety. There is at least one quite magical scene with the children lying on their backs on the beach while Mark Harmon makes clouds dance overhead. The sea monster effects are only so-so and it is at this point that Magic in the Water becomes a more traditional and more routine Loch Ness Monster styled drama.
As with many modern childrens films Magic in the Water pushes an underlying eco-conscious message about the monster as protected species, the dangers of toxic waste dumping etc. This does tend to give rise to odd clunkily obvious liners such as when Harley Jane Kozak tells the children: Why dont you come down to the kitchen? Ill make you some grapefruit and free-range eggs?
Copyright Richard Scheib 1999-2012
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