Film Review
The success of Hitchcock's
Psycho in 1960 resulted in a
spate of similar psycho-thrillers, most involving attractive young
women in danger from a psychotic fiend who appears determined to go one
better than Norman Bates. Although it was initially
ill-received by the critics and virtually disowned by its director,
Otto Preminger,
Bunny Lake Is Missing
is one of the best example of this popular sub-genre to be made in
Britain. Set in London, the film evokes something of the
swinging sixties and Noel Coward's cameo appearance as a whip-loving
sadomasochist with a Pinteresque leer is enough to earn it its
enduring status as a cult classic.
What makes the film so effective is Preminger's skilful appropriation
of some of the techniques he employed on his earlier film noir
thrillers - unusual camera angles, harsh lighting, disorientating
camera movements, etc. These, together with the discordant
soundtrack, all convey a hauntingly expressionistic dreamlike feel, as
if what we are seeing is not reality but a child's distorted
interpretation of reality. The result is deeply unsettling and,
at times, genuinely terrifying. Few films of this period suggest
extreme mental aberration and the terror of the victim as convincingly
as this one, even if the plot strains credulity to breaking point.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Otto Preminger film:
Laura (1944)
Film Synopsis
A few days after arriving in London, American Ann Lake leaves her
four-year old daughter Bunny at a school for toddlers before rushing
off to meet the removal men at her new apartment. That afternoon,
Ann is unable to find Bunny at the school and discovers that not one
teacher has seen her all day. Convinced that her daughter has
been abducted, Ann immediately contacts the police, but her brother
Stephen assures her that Bunny has come to no harm.
Superintendent Newhouse begins his investigation and is surprised to find
that Bunny Lake was not even registered at the school.
When he learns that all of the child's possessions have disappeared he
begins to wonder whether she ever existed...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.