Splash (1984) is one of those movies that perfectly embodies the charm of ‘80s romantic comedies—equal parts sweet, goofy, and just weird enough to stick in your brain for decades. Directed by Ron Howard, it’s the film that asked the question: “What if Tom Hanks fell in love with a mermaid in New York City?” and then leaned all the way in.
Tom Hanks plays Allen, a lovably neurotic guy who thinks he’s unlucky in love until he meets Madison (played by Daryl Hannah), a mysterious blonde who just happens to be… well, half fish. Their romance is absurdly earnest, made funnier by the fact that Madison can’t exactly blend in—she wanders around Manhattan naked, learns English from watching TV, and has to hide her tail from scientists hellbent on turning her into a lab project.
The cast is stacked: John Candy brings his signature sleazy charm as Allen’s brother, delivering one-liners that steal whole scenes, and Eugene Levy plays the obsessive scientist trying (and failing) to expose Madison. Between Candy’s comedic chaos and Levy’s bumbling attempts to prove mermaids are real, the movie balances romance with slapstick in a way only the ‘80s could.
What makes Splash work isn’t just the fantasy—it’s the sincerity. Hanks and Hannah actually sell the love story, giving heart to a premise that could’ve been pure cheese. It’s whimsical, funny, and surprisingly moving, the kind of movie that cemented Hanks as a rising star and made Daryl Hannah an icon.
Is it silly? Absolutely. But it’s also a perfect slice of ‘80s magic—a fairy tale set in New York, with Tom Hanks awkwardly flailing his way into true love.
ScientificallyStupidJess
2025-09-04 03:03:36 +0000 UTC