Mermaids (2003 film)
Encyclopedia
Mermaids is a 2003 television film directed by Ian Barry and starring Sarah Laine, Nikita Ager and Australian model Erika Heynatz
Erika Heynatz
Erika Heynatz is an Australian model, actress, singer and television personality.-Career:...

 as a trio of mermaid sisters who band together to avenge their father's death.

Plot

The story begins with Mallick, an unscrupulous fisherman, using fishing bombs in open water. Mallick and his assistant Carlo are gathering spoils when they notice a something with a large tail still flopping in the water, tangled in their nets. Mallick shoots the unknown object. As they are attempting to pull the body in, they are hit by a powerful force that threatens to capsize the boat. Mallick looks into the water and sees a vague humanoid figure pointing a trident at him. Meanwhile, Mallick falls into the sea. Mallick manages to get back in the boat, and he and Carlo escape.

The person with the trident turns out to be Diana, a beautiful mermaid with superhuman strength and the eldest daughter of the dead merman. Although she loathes human beings, she travels on land to seek out her two sisters, Venus and June, to help her find Mallick and seek justice for their father's murder.

Venus, the middle sister, is working in a cafe where she swims in a tank with a fake mermaid's tail for the amusement of the customers. When Diana finds her she is appalled to see Venus performing for humans, and suspects that there's another reason for her working there. As for June, the youngest sister, she is working at a sea park where she can remain close to Randy, the man she's in love with but cannot find the courage to confess to.

Although the three sisters do not get along because of their differing life choices, they agree to band together to find Mallick and avenge their father's death. Over the course of the film, it is revealed that Venus has been working at the cafe because its owner, a man named Earl, has been holding Venus' object of power hostage, and is forcing her to work for him. It is also revealed that Earl's middle-aged wife Betty was once a mermaid, though she has forgotten her mermaid heritage after living on land for so long. Diana interferes with this arrangement and frees Venus from Earl. Venus in turn frees Betty, and urges her to return to the sea. Betty declines, however, because of her human daughter Tessa. She also asks Venus to keep her object of power safe.

Another subplot of the film involves June and Randy, who spend time together as they try to track down and trap Mallick. At one point June, in her mermaid form, rescues Randy from drowning. Randy soon falls in love with June, who reveals her secret to him.

The three sisters eventually confront Mallick, and are shocked when he is ready for them. Mallick has researched mermaids and knows that they have to grant him a wish. He tells them to find him a chest full of treasure. Mallick also wants to use the three sisters as the main attractions in a theme park. Though they protest, he uses their father's body, which he is keeping in a freezer, as leverage.

The sisters manage to stop Mallick when the police arrive at his warehouse, following Randy's tip-off. When the police check the freezer, the merman's tail has transformed back into legs as the freezer is dry. They arrest Mallick on suspicion of murder, despite his protests that the three women are mermaids and the body is a merman.

At the end of the film, Venus and Diana argue whether they should keep the treasure. June ignores them, as she is happy that she finally has Randy. However, Venus confesses that she used her hypnosis ability to make Randy forget all events of the previous few days in order to keep the sisters' mermaid heritage a secret. June is crushed, especially when she learns that Randy has proposed to his fiance, Cynthia.

Despite this setback, June tells her sisters that she wants to continue staying on land, so to try to win Randy again. Venus wants to stay with her, as all her previous time on land has been as a prisoner, and she wants to explore it on her own terms. To the surprise of her sisters, Diana says that she will stay on land as well, so that she can watch over her younger sisters as their father would have wanted. The film ends on the implication that the three sisters will have many other adventures together.

Cast

  • Sarah Laine
    Sarah Laine
    Sarah Laine is an American actress.She has played in several films, including starring in Wild Things: Diamonds in the Rough and Mermaids.- External links :...

     as June
  • Nikita Ager as Venus
  • Erika Heynatz
    Erika Heynatz
    Erika Heynatz is an Australian model, actress, singer and television personality.-Career:...

     as Diana
  • Daniel Frederiksen as Randy
  • Sean Taylor as Mallick
  • Jason Chong as Carlo
  • Geneviève Lemon
    Genevieve Lemon
    Genevieve Lemon is an Australian actress who has appeared in a number of soap operas – as Zelda Baker in The Young Doctors, Marlene "Rabbit" Warren in Prisoner and Brenda Riley in Neighbours...

     as Betty
  • Brittany Byrnes
    Brittany Byrnes
    Brittany Byrnes is an Australian actress. Her most notable acting role was Natasha Green in the 2005 TV film Little Oberon.- Personal life :...

     as Tessa
  • Holly Brisley
    Holly Brisley
    Holly Brisley is an Australian actress and television presenter. She began her career at the age of 15 on Agro's Cartoon Connection and more recently portrayed Amanda Vale-Baker on Home And Away...

     as Young Betty
  • Kim Knuckey as Earl

Influences

The film borrows elements from Hans Christian Andersen
Hans Christian Andersen
Hans Christian Andersen was a Danish author, fairy tale writer, and poet noted for his children's stories. These include "The Steadfast Tin Soldier," "The Snow Queen," "The Little Mermaid," "Thumbelina," "The Little Match Girl," and "The Ugly Duckling."...

's The Little Mermaid
The Little Mermaid
"The Little Mermaid" is a popular fairy tale by the Danish poet and author Hans Christian Andersen about a young mermaid willing to give up her life in the sea and her identity as a mermaid to gain a human soul and the love of a human prince...

. As part of the film's mythology, merpeople are said to live for hundreds of years, but do not have an immortal soul. There is also a legend that states that if a human loves a merperson, they will share half of their soul.

June's subplot in the film is also derived from the Hans Christian Andersen
Hans Christian Andersen
Hans Christian Andersen was a Danish author, fairy tale writer, and poet noted for his children's stories. These include "The Steadfast Tin Soldier," "The Snow Queen," "The Little Mermaid," "Thumbelina," "The Little Match Girl," and "The Ugly Duckling."...

 story. June saves the life of her beloved when he is about to drown. When June drags him to shore, he is half-conscious, but only manages to see a vague shadow of her. Later, at the end of the film, Randy decides to marry his dark-haired fiancée, Cynthia, as he does not know that June was the one who saved his life.

In this version of mermaid mythology, merpeople are magical creatures who gain legs when dry and a tail when wet, an idea that was made famous by the film Splash
Splash (film)
Splash is a 1984 American fantasy romantic comedy film directed by Ron Howard and written by Lowell Ganz and Babaloo Mandel. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. The original music score was composed by Lee Holdridge...

. All merpeople are said to have an "object of power" which they are bound to, i.e. if someone else possesses their object of the power, the merperson has to obey them unconditionally. They are also bound to grant one wish of anyone who asks it of them, no matter if it literal or metaphorical. The three sisters in the film also have other magical abilities: Diana has super strength and Venus can hypnotize men to obey her. June is shown talking to sea creatures (a seal at the sea park), and Venus is seen lifting a heavy treasure chest telekinetically underwater, but it is unknown if these abilities are exclusive to each.

External links

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