The Nightcomers (1971)
Facts
| Directed by | Michael Winner |
| Cast | Marlon Brando, Stephanie Beacham, Thora Hird, Harry Andrews and Verna Harvey |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1970 |
| DVD Release | June 19, 2007 |
| Running Time | 97 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 012236211709 |
| Buy this item | $12.49 at Amazon.com As of Aug 8 18:04 EDT (details) 1 DVD, LION'S GATE ENTERTAINMENT, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 22 new from $12.49, 11 used from $12.26 |
About The Nightcomers
Isolated in a traditional English country manor two rich orphans--Miles (Christopher Ellis) and Flora (Verna Harvey)--have only their nurse their housekeeper and a strange gardener named Quint (Marlon Brando) to provide them with company and care. The youngsters are particularly intrigued by Quint's mannerisms intuition and omniscience. Witnessing Quint and his prurient relationship with their nurse Miss Jessel (Stephanie Beacham) profoundly influences their budding sexual desires and soon the children begin to mimic their caretakers. Things take a drastic turn however when the odd parental figures seem as if they're going to split up and the children take violent measures to secure an eternal union.Teetering somewhere between psychodrama and psychedelia NIGHTCOMERS is an aesthetically captivating film. Michael Winner breathes life into a whimsical story unveiling the origin of the children from the Henry James novel TURN OF THE SCREW. Brando s performance as the seemingly wholesome gardener is eerie and the shocking ending of NIGHTCOMERS is truly haunting.Runtime: 96 minsFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rating: R UPC: 012236211709 Manufacturer No: 21170 Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| The Night Comers |
| Interesting Prequel To Henry James' "Turn Of The Screw" |
Naturally, Marlon Brando ("The Island of Dr. Moreau") is excellent as the perverse Quint who has a sadomasochistic relationship with the beautiful Miss Jessel, (buxom Stephanie Beacham of "Schizo" and "And Now the Screaming Starts). Orphans Miles and Flora are left to their own devises because their wealthy uncle is away on business. Therefore, they spend too much time spying on Quint and Ms. Jessel. The children develop perverse, amoral beliefs about love, life, and the hereafter. They learn that pain is good and hating someone means that you love them.
Beautifully shot and well directed, "The Nightcomers" is an interesting example of gothic horror. Unfortunately, it is very slow paced. The modern viewer will become too bored. It doesn't pick up any steam until the final ten minutes. The finale is horrifying and shocking, but it is not worth the wait.
It is recommended that you rent "The Nightcomers" before purchasing.
June 23, 2008
| brando overlooked again! |
| A curiosity |
First of all, Marlon Brando does a good job as the gardener/handyman. He portrays just the right amount of latent brutality and sex appeal to convince you that a prim governess could fall under his spell. I'm no Brando expert, and it may be that he is just playing himself, but it works...my only quibble is his rather thickly laid-on Irish accent which sounds a bit too forced to totally convince. Stephanie Beacham also fares well as the governess, although her character is sketched in far less detail. The two children are played rather woodenly, but to be fair they (and the rest of the cast) are hampered by a pretty hideous script which thinks it is approximating the style of talking in England in Victorian times, with lots of "pray tell me" and "you scoundrel" type of dialogue, and nobody ever uses contractions, which sounds extremely affected. Another main problem with the movie is that it is... well, just a bit low on events. Winner goes a bit overboard on the symbolism with shots of dolls without eyes, small animals dead or dying, or childhood toys found covered in maggots (gasp!). It's almost like he's copied his ideas from "The Innocents", (recalling a great scene when a cockroach crawls out of the mouth of a cherub statue), but he doesn't really need to do this as there is no mystery about how and why the children are acting in the way that they do, whereas in "The Innocents" we are trying to ascertain what is true and what is imagined. Here, it's all quite obvious.
Obviously filmed on location in Britain in the early 1970's (I know it's a period setting, but that golden age of British horror movies - the time of the famous Hammer Horror style - is unmistakeable!), the film is certainly beautiful to look at. The action is set in lush forests and gardens, as well as the impressively period looking country mansion. Highlights are of course based around much corset ripping and a certain amount of sado-masochistic goings on between the two adults, all of which is spied upon by the two charges, ultimately corrupting them with a twisted view of the relationship between love and death, as much as an interest in kinky thrills. Interestingly, the two children seem an awful lot older in this film than they actually turned out to be in "The Innocents", but I suppose having them as pre-teens would have made too much of the material un-filmable.
There's no supernatural element at all (as the cast are all still alive in this movie!), so it's just a dark romp through sordid and sexy goings on at a country estate, culminating in two deaths, and two very messed-up children. And of course, because of "The Innocents", everybody knows that there can only be one ending, so there's no surprises there. It tries to be shocking (children copying the perversions of adults-gasp!) but it really plays that aspect pretty safe. But again, it does look lovely - there's no substitute for filming in location on a gorgeous British country estate. And the sight of Stephanie Beacham when the dead body of Miss Jessell is discovered is one of the more bizarre images in period horror cinema - you won't forget that shot!
Sadly, due to the coarseness in handling the overall idea, it is mostly a rather uninvolving story, but director Michael Winner goes into it all with gusto, so it's an interesting one none the less.
June 29, 2007
| Brando Makes This Work |
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