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The Bad Seed
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Directed by Mervyn LeRoy
Can evil be inherited? That's the question posed by Maxwell Anderson in his stage play The Bad Seed. This 1956 film adaptation stars many actors from the Broadway version, including Nancy Kelly, Patty McCormack, Henry Jones and Eileen Heckart. Young McCormack plays Rhoda, a too-good-to-be-true grade schooler who occasionally exhibits a vicious streak whenever things don't turn out her way. During a picnic, one of Rhoda's schoolmates is drowned; the victim is a boy who'd won a penmanship medal that Rhoda had coveted. Nancy Kelly, the girl's mother, slowly comes to the horrible conclusion that Rhoda was responsible for the boy's death--a suspicion fueled by the discovery that Kelly, who was adopted as an infant, is the daughter of a convicted murderess. Meanwhile, a moronic handyman (Henry Jones) accidentally tumbles to Rhoda's secret, whereupon he is "accidentally" burned to death. Realizing that Rhoda must be stopped before she can kill again, and reasoning that the authorities would never believe the truth, Kelly tries to put the girl to sleep permanently with barbituates, then shoots herself. The play's ironic ending--the mother dies, while the unsuspected Rhoda lives on--is sacrificed for a "divine retribution" finale in the film, with Rhoda being punished by a convenient bolt of lightning. This alteration is acceptable, but director Mervin LeRoy further gilds the lily with an asinine closing-credits sequence wherein Nancy Kelly throws Patty McCormack over her knee and administers a spanking! The 1985 TV movie remake of The Bad Seed retains the play's original ending, but all in all is not half as entertaining as the 1956 version (its hokey denouement notwithstanding). McCormack later starred in Max Allan Collins' unofficial 1995 sequel Mommy. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Dr_GorDr_Gor The Child
by Dr_Gor in Dr_Gor Blog
liked it.
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"As for Hell Of The Living Dead being the worst zombie movie ever made I was sure I could top that one... The first one that leapt to mind was one I saw several years ago called The Child  " [More]
dibotdibot The Bad Seed Princess Messenger ...
by dibot in dibot Blog
liked it.
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"Talk about behind The Bad Seed focuses on a seemingly perfect little girl, blond braids, sweet smile. But when a schoolmate has a tragic accident on a picnic, her mother starts to suspect evil beneath the little girl's sweetness. This is an old school suspense movie. The characters are introduced and given plenty of time to impress us (sometimes the wrong " [More]
cindlcindl Yikes!
by cindl in cindl Blog
loved it.
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"I think this is when I decided not to have kids........ " [More]
mercurialmercurial Bad Seeds and the Children of t ...
by mercurial in Serialicious
"Some of the most disturbing serial killer films have to be those in which children and teens are the eventual murde " [More]
divinemsjunebugdivinemsjunebug Re:So Bad They're Good
by divinemsjunebug in HORROR MOVIES 101
"I just saw Hell of the Living Dead a couple of months ago and yes, it was another so bad it's good movie. I did have to laugh when she took off her top and painted herself so she could "fit in" with the natives and you could totally tell a few times that she was just fake walking while the scenery moved behind her. That was pretty classic. They tried to make the little kid eating his parents scary but it just made me laugh... I will have to check out a Fiend without " [More]
Dr_GorDr_Gor Re:So Bad They're Good
by Dr_Gor in HORROR MOVIES 101
"Thank you for that, Aaron! Fiend Without a Face is truly a great 1950's sci-fier... one of the best! But I would not consider it to be a true gore film in the least. The exploding brains of which you speak are actually 'alien' creatures and there is really no on screen human gore at all. GREAT movi " [More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
The Bad Seed, the film version of Maxwell Anderson's Broadway play, was especially topical in the 1950s, when Americans were dealing with a rising tide of juvenile delinquency. While Seed can't really be taken seriously as sociology, it's tremendous fun as film. Director Mervyn LeRoy keeps things moving at a steady clip, stressing the thriller aspects of the story. Although he has only a few opportunities to physically "open up" the play from its one-set origins, this doesn't harm the film -- and sometimes helps it, by emphasizing the Mother's feeling that she is trapped (by both her situation and her true heritage). Nancy Kelly's performance is rather odd at times and overly stagy, but overall is quite effective. Her vocal delivery, bizarre at first, somehow seems organic and eventually grows on the viewer. Patty McCormack gives one of the better children's performances in film and really makes one's blood run cold, and Henry Jones is appropriately disturbing as the peculiar handyman. The best performance, however, is Eileen Heckart's turn as the mother of the little boy killed by Rhoda. Her two scenes are a tour de force, and she creates a character that is at one time pathetic, repulsive, embarrassing, sympathetic, and pitiable. While the tacked-on "justice must be served" ending is unnecessary, it fortunately doesn't actively detract from one's enjoyment of this film. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
 

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