Night Magic | |
---|---|
Directed by | Lewis Furey |
Written by | Lewis Furey Leonard Cohen |
Produced by | Stephen Roth Robert Lantos |
Starring | Nick Mancuso Carole Laure |
Cinematography | Philippe Rousselot |
Edited by | Michel Arcand Sophie Cornu |
Music by | Lewis Furey Leonard Cohen Richard Grégoire |
Production companies | Fildebroc Moviecorp IX TF1 Films Production |
Distributed by | Spectrafilm |
Release date |
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Running time | 95 minutes |
Countries | Canada France |
Languages | English French |
Budget | $2.64 million |
Night Magic is a 1985 Canadian-Frenchmusical film written byLeonard Cohen andLewis Furey and directed by Furey. The film starsNick Mancuso as Michael, a down on his luck musician whose fantasies begin to come true after he meets an angel (Judy, played byCarole Laure).[1] The film's supporting cast includesStéphane Audran,Jean Carmet,Frank Augustyn,Louis Robitaille,Anik Bissonnette,Nanette Workman andBarbara Eve Harris.[2]
The film was originally slated for release asAngel Eyes,[1] but reverted to its original working titleNight Magic by the time of its premiere at theCannes Film Festival on May 17, 1985.[2]
Most of the score is inSpenserian stanzas.[3]
Michael is an unsuccessful musician and playwright, leading a troupe. One night he is visited by three "angels" who offer him three wishes. He chooses as his first wish the ability to express himself perfectly in his art, and as his second, to choose a lover, draw her to him, send her away, and bring her back again.
His first wish brings him great success as an artist, but for his second wish he chooses one of the angels (Judy). She gives up her angelic form to become human and join him. They have a child together, but as in his wish, he rejects her, and their house is burned by the other two angels.
As his final wish, he asks to be assassinated. Judy refuses to participate, and goes to find him, but just as she reaches him, the other two angels assassinate him. Time stops while, in the only daylight scene of the film, the couple walk through the city together, but then return to his dying body.
Some of Cohen's lyrics recur in his later work, for example,Hunter's Lullaby appeared with almost identical lyrics on the albumVarious Positions, and the lyrics of the songThe Bells form a large part of the song "Anthem" fromThe Future.
The film garnered fourGenie Award nominations at the7th Genie Awards:[4]
It won the Best Original Song award for "Angel Eyes".[5]