The best children’s fables
operate on the same wavelength as a kids’ imaginations, with such grown-up
considerations as consequence and logic taking a backseat to magic,
possibility, and wonder—plus, of course, love, which children need in such great
abundance that they often invent imaginary providers. Consider the preceding to
be context for remarks about The
Borrowers, a made-for-TV movie that represents the first filmed adaptation
of a beloved novel by Mary Norton, who also wrote the novel that became Disney’s
Bedknobs and Broomsticks. Starring
Eddie Albert of Green Acres fame as
the patriarch of a magical family, The Borrowers is far from perfect. Two
key performances by juvenile actors are vapid, the special effects are
old-fashioned and rickety, and the movie includes unnecessary montages set to
fruity ballads. Nonetheless, the best parts of The Borrowers are so charming—and the underlying message about
imagination and understanding is so worthwhile—that it’s easy to forgive the
picture its faults.
Set in Victorian England, The Borrowers takes place almost entirely in a stately mansion. The
lady of the house is Sophy (Dame Judith Anderson), a bedridden
aristocrat who spends her days self-medicating with wine. Attending to Sophy’s
needs are a crotchety groundskeeper (Barnard Hughes) and a stern
housekeeper (Beatrice Straight). Living beneath their feet is the miniscule
Clock family: Pod (Albert); his wife, Homily (Tammy Grimes); and their
daughter, Arrietty (Karen Pearson). The last in a long line of teeny-tiny “borrowers,”
they get by on household items that Pod purloins during expeditions into the
house. The only full-sized human aware of the Clock family’s existence is
Sophy, but she’s convinced the little people are delusions brought on by her
drunkenness. Accordingly, everything’s copacetic until Sophy becomes the
temporary guardian of a preteen boy (Dennis Larson).
Once the Boy (that’s his character name) spots Pod stealing a miniature cup and
saucer from a dollhouse, the Boy sets in motion events that could spell doom
for the “borrowers.” However, once the Boy befriends Arrietty, he becomes the
Clock family’s champion instead of the family’s tormentor.
Compensating for the
flatness of the performances by Larson and Pearson, Albert is endearing,
Anderson is amusing, and Grimes is warm, while Hughes and Straight
provide gentle villainy. Further, Jay Presson Allen’s teleplay follows a
delightful path as the Clock family wriggles free of trouble, and the values
that Pod represents—as compared to the fearfulness and small-mindedness of the
story’s normal-sized grown-ups—comprise a lovely message for young viewers.
Therefore, it’s no surprise The Borrowers
won an Emmy for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Children’s Programming.
Fitting the proportions of its protagonist, The
Borrowers is a small gem.
The Borrowers: GROOVY
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