Film Review
Gothic horror films featuring vampires, werewolves, Egyptian mummies
and other ghoulish monstrosities, the studio also made a fair number of
respectable thrillers set in the real world, of which
The Nanny is undoubtedly one of the
finest. It is a low-key yet deeply disturbing work that has some
similarities with Roman Polanski's psycho-thriller
Repulsion,
released the same year, both in its subject - a latent mental disorder
- and its chilling expressionistic style.
In stark contrast to his later Hammer offering
Blood from the Mummy's Tomb (which
he made just before his premature death in 1971), Seth Holt directs the
film with great flair and imagination, making the banal sinister and
the unusual absolutely terrifying. Harry Waxman's black and white
cinematography is what perhaps contributes most to the film's
unsettling claustrophobic mood which, with its unusual camera angles
and stark lighting, harks back to the expressionist era of early German
cinema. Equally praiseworthy is Jimmy Sangster's taut screenplay,
an inspired adaptation of a novel by Marryam Modell.
The Nanny stars Hollywood icon
Bette Davis in what is generally regarded one of the better roles of
her declining years. The actress is perfect for the part and
succeeds not only in making her character, the seemingly benign nanny,
utterly frightening but also in rendering her tragically
sympathetic. The later sequences in the film are among the most
disturbing of any Hammer horror film and allow Davis to live up to her
reputation as one of the silver screen's most formidable acting talents.
There are some impressive contributions from Davis's co-stars and the
supporting cast, which includes some very familiar British
actors. Wendy Craig is convincing as the hopeless neurotic
mother, bringing to mind the similar television roles that would later
earn her celebrity in the 1970s - in hit shows such as
And Mother Makes Three and
Butterflies. James Villiers
and Jill Bennett are well-cast as the austere father and eccentric aunt
respectively. However, the only thesp who comes close to matching
Davis's star quality is the young William Dix, who, as the infant brat
Joey, gives the film its focus and dramatic intensity, allowing Bette
Davis to be so effective in her portrayal of the nanny from Hell.
The Nanny is an essential part
of any horror film collection.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Joey Fane is the ten-year old son of a wealthy middle class couple
living in an affluent part of London. For the past two years, he
has been confined to an institution for children with mental
disorders. His parents believe that it was he who caused the
death of his younger sister and interpret his refusal to eat anything
prepared by his nanny as an admission of guilt. When Joey returns
to the family home, he appears not to have improved. He continues
to taunt his nanny and will not eat the meals she gives him. He
makes a new friend in Bobbie Medman, the daughter of a neighbour.
Joey confides in her that it was his nanny, not he, who killed his
sister, and he is just as certain that she intends to kill him
next...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.