The other day I sat down
and watched:
The Innocents (1961).
This classic movie, based
on Gothic horror novella The Turn of the Screw (1898) By Henry
James, was directed and produced by Jack Clayton with the screenplay
written by Truman Capote.
We meet Miss Giddens
(Deborah Kerr) as she is being interviewed for the job of governess.
Her prospective employer known only as The Uncle (Michael Redgrave)
is an incredibly rich man who has had his niece Flora, and nephew
Miles, dumped on him due to the death of the children's parents. He
is however completely uninterested in them, preferring to travel and
do business. He does however have a sense of responsibility, and so
houses the kids in his enormous country estate, Bly. He hired a
governess to take care of them, but she died a year ago, and now he
needs a new one. Enter Miss Giddens, who is told that she is
completely in charge of children and household. The Uncle wishes to
remain completely undisturbed. No contact whatsoever.
Miss Giddens travels to
Bly and meets the niece, Flora, a charming but slightly weird young
girl. There is also the kind and caring housekeeper Mrs. Grose as
well as a few other staff members, but we rarely ever see them.
Flora seems to have a way
of knowing things she couldn't possibly know, including the fact that
her brother Miles who is away at boarding school will soon be
returning home, and she is correct. Miles is equally charming, but
has a strangely intense and adult way about him.
Miss Giddens soon sees two
dark figures, a woman in black and mysterious handsome man. No one
else seems to be able to see them, and the reason is, they are dead.
The woman is Miss Jessel (Clytie Jessop), the previous governess and
the man is the Uncle's former valet, Peter Quint (Peter Wyngarde).
Quint used to be in charge of the household, until he was found dead
one winter evening.
Miss Giddens learns that
not only did Miss Jessel have a very unhealthy relationship with
Quint, the children were devoted to them and may have witnessed
things children really shouldn't see. Miss Giddens sets out to save
the children from the wicked ghosts however she can. If they are
real...
The Innocents is filmed in
black and white, and fun fact, in order to deepen the shadows and get
the necessary atmosphere, the set was lit so brightly at times that
Kerr sometimes wore sunglasses between scenes. This also happened
during the shooting of The Lighthouse (2019) for exactly the same
reason.
The central theme of the
movie is the ambiguity of the ghosts. Either they are real and
influencing the children, or they aren't and it is all in Miss
Gidden's head. That at least was the intent, but I think they leaned
too hard on the ghosts being real, and the mystery fails a little
bit. Granted this was 1961 and the filmmakers were constrained in
what they could do and show, but apparently Miss Gidden's own
repressed sexuality should be the cause of her own potential
delusions, and to be honest I saw none of that. The Innocent's comes
across as a straight ghost story.
So, do I recommend this
movie? Absolutely. Despite the lack of intended ambiguity it is a
great movie. Creepy more than scary, particularly today, it is a
really good Gothic story. All the actors are great, with a special
shout-out to the child actors, who did their job extremely well.
Deborah Kerr is great, juggling caring kindness with desperate
paranoia in a truly professional manner. All in all a good film, even
if it isn't all that scary anymore. Well worth watching.
That's that and all that.
Join me again next time and until then, have a great week!