Nightmare in the Sun (1965) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
9 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
A very watchable and suspenseful film.
Wetbones25 June 2004
This was Marc Lawrence's first movie, made seven years before his second (and last to date) effort, Daddy's Deadly Darling aka The Pigs. Lawrence is mostly an actor, seeing as he's had small roles in almost 200 films. He's a fine director, though, and might have had a career in that field as well.

Nightmare in the Sun is the story of a drifter who comes into a small town and gets caught up in a rather messy affair. He has a fling with the local beauty (Ursula Andress), who is regularly cheating on her increasingly paranoid husband. Just after he leaves her to travel on her angry hubby blows a casket and shoots her with a rifle. Enter the town's sheriff who decides he'll frame our protagonist in exchange of some of the real murderers significant wealth. Soon a handful of cops, a local mob and two apparently gay bikers (one played by a very young Robert Duvall) are hunting the innocent man ...

It's a pretty basic story but Lawrence makes it work. He puts the barren desert locations to great use and gets some good performances out of his actors, most notably John Derek as the nameless drifter/hitchhiker. The score is a bit overbearing at first and takes some time to get used to but in the end it's pretty effective.

All in all a very watchable and suspenseful film that deserves better than to sink further and further into obscurity. I got it on a used VHS for a couple bucks but someone really needs to resurrect this for the DVD age!
15 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Mistakes Happen
richardchatten25 July 2018
The appearance of a subdued Sammy Davis Jr. in a cameo as a truck driver establishes early on the quirky unpredictability that informs much of the rest of this raw little independent production superbly shot in colour in 15 days by veteran cameraman Stanley Cortez that sure lives up to its title. (I could, however, have done with less of Paul Glass's noisy score, which is still pounding away in my head as I write this.)

John Marley has one of the larger supporting roles, and is notably good as one of the relatively few 'normal' characters. After a rather meandering middle section involving bikers Robert Duvall and Richard Jaeckel it picks up pace again with a trio of eccentrics played by Laurene Tuttle, George Tobias and Keenan Wynn and a conclusion that improbably but satisfyingly settles the question that increasingly preys on your mind as it approaches the end of its 80 minute running time: how on earth is this all going to be resolved in the time left?
7 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
with Ursula Andress in the cast, I would've expected a little more
lee_eisenberg7 August 2018
Warning: Spoilers
In the past year or two, I've been trying to a see a number of older movies, and I even made a list of ones to see if I can find them (including some obscure ones). I happened to include Marc Lawrence's "Nightmare in the Sun", although I don't remember how I first heard of it. Upon seeing that Ursula Andress stars in it, I immediately assumed that I was in for something steamy.

It turns out that it's a pretty routine story of a wrongfully accused man on the run from the law. It was a pity that we didn't get to see more of Andress than we did (and I mean more than just her presence). I guess that the difference in this story from the usual man-on-the-run stories is that in this case, the sheriff strong-armed the jealous husband into blaming the hitchhiker for his wife's murder.

Along with Andress, John Derek and Aldo Ray (whose name inspired the name of Brad Pitt's character in "Inglourious Basterds"), the cast includes Sammy Davis Jr, Robert Duvall, Richard Jaeckel and George Tobias (Abner Kravitz on "Bewitched").
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A bit like "The Postman Always Rings Twice"...but where the husband is REALLY jealous and evil.
planktonrules3 May 2023
The plot to "Nightmare in the Sun" is a bit hard to believe. After all, we are expected to accept that a lovely young lady (Ursula Andress) is married to an old man (Arthur O'Connell) who moves her to the desert to live. Not surprisingly, she's bored....very bored. As for the husband, he's insanely jealous...so much so that it will end with disaster for his wife as well as an innocent stranger (John Derek) who just wanders into their lives. I could say more, but I don't want to spoil the suspense.

I mentioned above that the film reminded me of "The Postman Always Rings Twice". Both films featured a gorgeous young blonde who inexplicably marries an old coot who moves them to the desert. But apart from this, there are many differences...enough that "Nightmare in the Sun" is still worth seeing.

The most interesting character in the movie is the crooked sheriff played by Aldo Ray. He's a conniving brute and dominates the scenes in which he appears. What also is interesting is how the film features some amazingly talented actors who are barely in the film at all...such as Sammy Davis, Robert Duvall, Keenan Wynn and Richard Jaeckel.

Overall, this is a surprisingly effective thriller. While I never thought John Derek was an especially good actor, here he is just fine as a man on the run from an evil Sheriff. My only complaint is a minor one...the music is often annoying and detracted from the story.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Definitely Worth Watching
pmtelefon28 January 2024
Writer/director/producer Marc Lawrence does a very solid job when it comes to "NIghtmare in the Sun". Lawrence delivers a nice, tight thriller. He also gets nice performances from a strong cast. The only weak link is John Derek. Derek is a pretty face but he's out of his league with this bunch. The copy I watched was not very good. It looked like the kind of copy Good Times video used to release back in the '80s. I won't fault "Nightmare in the Sun" for that. I will fault it, however, for its music. The music in this movie stinks. It's probably the movie's biggest demerit. Otherwise, this is a movie that is worth seeing. Honorable mention: a dreamy Ursula Andress.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Weird but Watchable
richpowers10 August 2002
An odd kind of film, but entertaining, a few brutal scenes to it but relatively a tame movie by today's standards. This film was not some all time great by any means, but it did hold my interest. - Oh, but to start with, contrary to the summery of this film, the hitchhiker and the woman never actually have a sexual affair.. it was really no more than a brief chance encounter.

Here is a more accurate overview of the movie.. An older man with a young sexy wife, who, in a fit of misguided jealousy, comes home and kills her with a shotgun - one blast to her, then about 4 shots to her teddy bear.. weird. The crooked cop enters the scene and bullies the killer husband into a deal.. they are going to pin the wrap on the hitchhiker who is passing through town. So now the hitchhiker is on the run for a crime he did not commit. - Sounds familiar don't it?..

It's interesting that Sammy Davis Jr. had a short part as a truck driver in this film. Robert Duval plays a more substantial role as one of a pair of trouble makers on a motorcycles (and there are definite undertones that he and his sidekick are.. well.. sweet) Anyway.. everyone is trying to capture the hitchhiker and rake in a reward.. So what happens next?.. hey, I ain't going to tell you the whole damn story!
16 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Just a movie with John Derek!
RodrigAndrisan29 August 2020
This guy, John Derek, had 3 of the most beautiful women ever: Ursula Andress, Linda Evans, Bo Derek, probably because he was long (1.85 m)... Well, as an actor, he's not bad in the lead role in this movie. And as a director he is even better, this being his first film as director (along with Marc "gangster face" Lawrence). The movie is not great, but not bad either. We have some acting recitals here: the beautiful and very young Ursula Andress has also the shortest part, because she is killed after the beginning of the film, anyway, she has a lot of charm in her small role; the best and most convincing, having the most difficult role, is Arthur O'Connell, seen by me in many movies, among the best being "Fantastic Voyage" and "Cimarron"; then Aldo Ray, seen by me in a very good role in "Nightfall"; a very young and not very great Robert Duvall, John Marley, good as usual, Keenan Wynn, good, the same as in all his movies, Sammy Davis Jr. and Richard Jaeckel in two very small roles.
1 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
He ran for his life
bkoganbing30 November 2020
Nightmare In The Sun is the first of many vanity projects for his wives. This one was for Ursula Andress and why she gets killed a third if the wat into doesn't make for a good spotlight.

But it was also ursula needed. She's the nymphomaniac wife of Arthur O'Connell and she's constantly itching and the older O'Connell can't scratch enough. One of those scratching the most is Sheriff Aldo Ray in this small Arizona community.

Andress picks up Derek who is hitchhiking his way to the Pacific coast. She makes him one irresistible offer and as he's leaving Arthur O'Connell is arriving. He shoots his cheating wife and calls the sheriff. Both Ray and O'Connell who is overwhelmed with guilt decide to throw the blame on the stranger they saw leave.

After that Derek is running for his life and meets all kinds of folks who let him down, each and every adult.

Compared to some of his later projects Nightmare In The Sun was like Citizen Kane. A whole lot of familiar faces make appearances, long enough to collect a paycheck.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Not Particularly Good, But...
boblipton14 March 2024
Ursula Andress picks up hitch hiker John Derek and has a tryst with him. Her husband, Arthur O'Connell catches them. It's not the first time she has betrayed him. O'Connell kills her, and with the help of corrupt sheriff Aldo Ray, frames Derek, who escapes, although still handcuffed.

It's directed by Marc Lawrence with uncredited help by Derek, and while the meandering and eventually pointless story isn't particularly compelling -- Derek was one of those bland leading men of the 1950s, which doesn't help -- there is a wealth of storied performers, probably drawn in by having played innumerable times with Lawrence. Old performers like Sammy Davis, Jr., Allyn Joslyn, Keenan Wynn, George Tobias, Chick Chandler, and Douglas Fowley take small roles, and new performers like Robert Duvall and Richard Jaeckel also appear. Perhaps it's a metaphor for the collapse of order and tradition in Hollywood.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed