Most critics
compare, unfavourable I must say, Karel Reisz’s 1964 version of the
psychological thriller Night Must Fall with the 1937
version directed by Richard Thorpe which starred Robert Montgomery, Rosalind
Russell and Dame May Whitty in her film debut at the age of 72! But the truth
is although Thorpe’s US version was critically acclaimed the MGM’s British Unit
attempt did much better at the box office than the original. I have never seen
this earlier adaptation therefore I can’t compare the two. Both, I understand, were based on Emlyn
Williams play first performed in 1935.
It was the
Czech born British filmmaker Reisz and play write Clive Exton who updated the
story to the 1960’s and like Reisz previous movie, Saturday
Night and Sunday Morning (1960), it stars Albert Finney. Finney plays
Danny who when the film opens we observe murdering a woman in some woodland by
removing her head with an axe! Juxtaposed with this we see a young lady having
an early morning stroll around a rather sizeable English style garden of a
large isolated house on the edge of the same woodland. Olivia (Susan Hampshire)
is the daughter of the proprietor of the house, the elderly infirmed Mrs
Bramson (Mona Washbourne). Arriving for her morning duties is Mrs Bramson’s
maid Dora (Sheila Hancock). Dora has
been made pregnant by her ‘boyfriend’ Danny, yes the same Danny who we have
just seen murdering a poor women with an axe and dumping her body in a lake. He
has been summoned to explain his intentions towards Dora to Mrs Bramson and before
long he has won over the old lady, aroused Olivia’s repressed sexuality and
moved into the house along with a leather hatbox!
....having already won over Mrs Bramson (Mona Washbourne) |
This
melodramatic interpretation was produced by Reisz and Albert Finney, its DOP
was the Academy Award winning Freddie Francis and the musical score was in the
capable hands of Ron Grainer. Don’t be
put off by what you have heard, I was impressed with Finney’s role as Danny, a
demanding one in which he injects dread into ever scene he appears. His scenes
with Mona Washbourne are especially good and Susan Hampshire, who was born to
play the repressed Englishwoman, does so with her normal competence.
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