Marketed as a horror
movie, presumably because of the involvement of Hammer Films veterans Peter
Cushing and Christopher Lee, Nothing But
the Night is really more of a whodunit with a supernatural angle. It’s also
not particularly coherent or interesting, although the picture includes some
atmospheric location photography during an extended chase scene that takes
place in Scotland.
The disjointed story begins with vignettes
featuring violent deaths, culminating in the crash of a tour bus carrying
dozens of children and adults. One of the survivors is young Mary Valley
(Gwyneth Strong), ward of a charitable trust that runs a home for girls from
troubled families. Following the crash, Mary ends up in a hospital under the
care of physicians including Sir Mark Ashley (Cushing), who, at the urging of a
colleague, investigates Mary’s background. Concurrently, police detective
Charles Bingham (Lee) examines whether the earlier deaths are connected
to the crash. Charles believes that Mary might be capable of providing
key information. Making the already-murky story unnecessarily convoluted is the
presence of Mary’s biological mother, a deranged ex-prostitute named Anna Harb
(Diana Dors). After being contacted by a representative from the hospital, Anna
becomes obsessed with seeing Mary, who was taken away from her by authorities
three years previous. Observing a fraught mother/daughter encounter causes Sir
Mark to embrace the odd notion that Anna and Mary share some sort of psychic
link, and that the psychic link relates to the mysterious deaths. Whatever.
Following the
plot of Nothing But the Night is an
arduous and ultimately pointless endeavor, because the movie slowly spirals
from an intricate conspiracy story to a trite race-against-time melodrama. That
said, Nothing but the Night has
strong production values, occasional thrills, and lively acting. Cushing is
terrific, likely savoring the opportunity to play a normal human being instead
of someone extreme, and Dors is a holy terror as Anna, all mile-high hair and
whorish makeup. Lee is less impressive, his character’s inner machinations
hidden too deeply behind a stiff-upper-lip façade, and costar Georgia Brown,
who plays a pushy journalist, is merely adequate. (Future Harry Potter star Michael Gambon shows up in a small role, as
well.) The violent ending of Nothing But
the Night—which vaguely resembles the climax of another 1973 British
release, The Wicker Man—is something
of a cheat, but at least the finale has energy, which is more than can be said
for much of this middling effort.
Nothing But the Night: FUNKY
Nothing But the Night: FUNKY
5 comments:
I remember this! The story behind this is probably more interesting than the actual movie. Lee co-produced this and was evidently looking for a new horror angle, and went with this story about a cult trying to extend their lives into new bodies. It's a shame this movie did not turn out better, since the key gimmick is certainly a sinister one.
Peter, you're on fire lately, I can't believe some of these titles you're posting, Right on!!
But is the movie better or worse than the cover art of the novel it was based on?
http://www.isfdb.org/wiki/images/7/77/NTHNGBTTHN1968.jpg
Diana Dors must be one of the biggest 'red herrings' ever!!!
The wild ending revelations would seem to posit this film as the perfect conceptual bridge between "Seconds" and "Never Let Me Go" (both of which I'd say are much more successful, as I agree this one is pretty flawed) ... Makes one wonder if Ishiguro may have viewed this as a young man!
Post a Comment