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  • For the inscrutable yet precocious personalities of Miles and Flora evident in the 1961 film 'The Innocents'. As well, the ghosts of that movie are fleshed out nicely in this prequel. Quint is a morally repugnant character, sadistic and controlling, but he's also darkly magnetic as the corrupter of the lovely young governess who submits to (and even embraces) his perverted ideas of sexuality. Together they are fated to become the imprisoned souls that haunt the estate. Together they have inflicted unknowable damage to the psyches of the children.

    Brando is very good in the role of Quint. He gives the character a credibility and powerfulness that one would expect from a personality who will ultimately refuse to leave, even after his bizarre death. Few actors would be convincing enough to portray such a reprehensible protagonist and still be vaguely, mysteriously likable. That Brando can deliver this affect with legitimacy is not surprising, genius that he is. Another who might have been very interesting to watch in this role is Dirk Bogarde.

    The director's visual styling of the film is it's most unfavorable aspect and prevents it from being excellent. In any case, this unusual little entry has always been a tad underrated. I suspect that now that Marlon has passed on an overdue re-assessment is likely.
  • A prequel to Henry James's ¨The turn of the screw¨ wherein a worker named Peter Quint (Marlon Brando) trysts with the governess Miss Jessel (Stephanie Beacham)of two malicious children named Miles and his younger sister Flora (Harvey and Chris Ellis) who are in her care and located at Bly manor.

    Yet another special version of the Henry James classic with drama, tension, sexual games and splendid exteriors. Good performance from Marlon Brando as sadist Irish gardener and Stephanie Beacham as the young, too-impressionable governess and submitted to masochist relations with Quint, whom she thinks is corrupting the innocent kids . Furthermore the watchful and voyeurs children possessed by evil who think which lovers unite in death , they are finely played by Ellis and Harvey. And the housekeeper performed by Thora Hird who believes Peter Quint influence on the young children was thought to be malevolent. The film packs evocative photography in a good restoring by Robert Paynter and sensational musical score by Jerry Fielding. The picture is acceptably directed by Michael Winner. He had important commercial success in the mid-70 with his fetish actor, Charles Bronson , achieving various box-office hits, as ¨Deathwish I and II, furthermore ¨The mechanics¨ and ¨The stone killer¨.

    Other adaptations about ¨Henry James' The turn of the screw¨ are the followings : Turn of the Screw (1974) by Dan Curtis with Lynn Redgrave; (1989) by Graeme Clifford with Amy Irving and David Hemmings; (1992) by Rutsy Lemorande with Patsy Kensit, Julian Sands and Stephane Audran; (1999) by Ben Bolt with Jodhi May, Pam Ferris and Colin Firth. And of course the classic and best version ,the incredibly eerie rendition titled ¨The innocents (61)¨ by Jack Clayton with Deborah Kerr, Pamela Franklin and Martin Stephens where the protagonist begins to see the specters of Miss Jessel and Peter Quint .
  • In the Victorian England, the teenagers Flora (Verna Harvey) and her brother Miles (Christopher Ellis) have just lost their parents in a car accident in France. Their tutor (Harry Andrews) decides to leave the children alone in their huge mansion under the care of the old housekeeper Mrs. Grose (Thora Hird), the governess Miss Jessel (Stephanie Beacham) and the gardener Peter Quint (Marlon Brando). Miles and Flore are very connected to Peter, who misleads their education with twisted concepts of love and death, but the orphans believe and are fascinated by his knowledge. Peter is the lover of Jessel, and they use to have sadomasochistic sex. When Peter sees their kink bondage night of sex, he has a corrupted and perverted sexual initiation. When Mrs. Grose writes to the master of the house to fire Miss Jessel and Peter Quint, Flora and Miles plot a dark scheme to keep them together in the property.

    "The Nightcomers" is a very dark tale about finding sexuality and losing innocence in a very twisted way. The performances of the cast are top-notch, but Marlon Brando leads the story with his usual competence. I have never had the chance to read "Turn of the Screw" or see "The Innocents" to make any comparison, but I really liked this unknown and underrated movie. The bondage scenes are very impressive, with Marlon Brando and Stephanie Beacham showing a great chemistry. It is impressive to see that Verna Harvey was twenty-years old in 1972. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "Os Que Chegam Com a Noite" ("The Nightcomers")
  • Conceived as a prequel to The Turn Of The Screw, Winner's film is a curious vehicle for Marlon Brando, as well as a example of a failed attempt to film gothic, period drama satisfactorily. Brando plays Peter Quint, the sexually aggressive former valet, now locum gardener at Bly House, an English county estate. Bly is run jointly by housekeeper, Mrs Grose (Thora Hird), and a governess, the repressed Miss Jessell (Stephanie Beacham). The only other inhabitants of this curious domicile are two children, Miles (Christopher Ellis) and Flora (Verna Harvey), nominally the wards of the absent Master of the House (a splendid Harry Andrews), obliged with their care after the death of their parents in an overseas automobile accident. The children regard Quint as something of a surrogate father, and feel that they can ingratiate themselves by manipulating his private life, notably his intense relationship with Miss Jessell.

    Jack Claytons The Innocents (1962) is the closest point of reference for Winner's effort, as the earlier film is the definitive telling of the Henry James tale, the events of which spring from this. Presumably the appointment, and despatch to Bly of the (unnamed) new governess at the film's end is that of Miss Giddings, the character played by Deborah Kerr. But where Clayton's film was completely successful in transmitting a feeling of supernatural unease and psychological dread, Winner's ham-fisted approach to his material comes across as almost entirely without atmosphere or charm. James' characters may act out their allotted parts in The Nightcomers, but its presentation of situation and personality veers uncertainly between the childhood gormlessness of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and the compulsions of Lady Chatterley's Lover, as much as evoking any genuine atmosphere of psychic foreboding.

    Perhaps such foreboding was the last thing the director had in mind. Brando of course regularly exudes magnetism, even in his less successful films, and the animal sexuality of the gardener towards the governess is one of the most dynamic things about Winner's film. UK TV viewers, used to seeing Beacham as the staple of such programmes as Tenko and Dynasty, will raise eyebrows as she gamely submits her buxom charms to Quint's hands - at one point hogtied and squirming in an impromptu Edwardian bondage session. Jessell despises herself, and yet craves what Quint brings during his nocturnal visits. These scenes, verging on the embarrassing for viewer and participants alike, at least provide vivid entertainment sadly missing elsewhere. Unfortunately such adult titillation also disrupts the progress of a film which required the screw turned of increasing tension and menace and proves a distraction from the growing relationship between Miles and Flora, the children at the centre of the film.

    As rounded dramatic characters, the youngsters have a hard job convincing the audience. Alternating between school children's pranks, nascent sexuality, naïve hero-worship and psychosis, it is difficult to discover an internal consistency in their actions. The gauche imitations by Miles and Flora of Quint's sexual performance, including a 'bondage' session of their own, and Miles' announcement to the shocked interrogation of Mrs Grose afterwards ("I'll tell you exactly what we have been doing. We have been doing sex!") are an amusing diversion. And this imitation of the adult affair they have witnessed serves as an ironic parody of their elders, if it hardly prepares the viewer for their final, violent, actions. Accordingly our interest is reduced, and dramatic curiosity falls readily upon the relationship between Quint and Jessell, rather than the peculiar wards they shepherd.

    Winner clearly thought so too, for his camera dwells too much on those headline adult liaisons for the film's good. This 'false' emphasis (no matter how good sex is for the box office) means that, when the children ultimately take matters into their own hands, events seem rather lame, their motivation too unconvincing and bald. The paramount influence of Quint of course goes some way to explaining the kids' increasingly odd behaviour, notably his announcement, taken on faith, that "if you love someone, sometimes you really want to kill them." But there is a world of difference between his power games with Miss Jessell and the children's attempts to retain them both in their service, as "the dead have nowhere to go." A handful more scenes of the children, talking through their convictions together, would have gone a long way.

    Outside of problems with characterisation, many of the film's faults can be place at the door of Winner. Never the subtlest of directors, he was an odd choice to helm a project of this sort which required emotional tact and physical suggestion. Although the location filming at 'Bly' is effective enough, Winner's weakness for jerky zooms, for exploitation, his stiff direction of actors (only the method-trained Brando seems at ease, even with a faintly ludicrous Irish accent), as well as an over-insistent score, provided by the normally excellent Jerry Fielding, are distracting. Beecham and Hird perhaps saw the film as a stepping-stone to better things and do their best. Fresh from Last Tango In Paris, Brando carries over some of the appetites of Paul, his character in the previous production. The blunt Quint, however, is miles away from the sophisticates who inhabited Bertolucci's classic.

    Perhaps in the hands of a flamboyant Ken Russell, or even a cool Terence Fisher, The Nightcomers would have congealed more into a worthwhile experience. As it is the film remains an uneven oddity: explicitly sexual between consenting adults, and confused and coy when it comes to those far more interesting shadows of psychology.
  • Although the sets and cinematography are scrupulously suggestive of the early 20th century in the United Kingdom and the performances quite good, The Nightcomers never quite gels as a Gothic horror classic. Maybe we see a bit too much of ourselves and don't like to think of the implications of what we're watching.

    The children of a wealthy British family are left orphaned by the deaths of their parents in a motor car crash. A cousin who is the closest relation to the father Harry Andrews is at the estate to tidy up affairs, but has no desire to stay there or act as a parent to these two. Never mind, they are amply provided for with cook and governess who are Thora Hird and Stephanie Beacham. The father had a valet played by Marlon Brando and since there is clearly no need for one now he's relegated to the gardener's duties.

    Brando's delightful Irish gardener Quint bonds with the kids. He's full of blarney and charm, but that cheerful exterior hides a rather complex and sadistic being. The kids catch him and Beacham in some kind of bondage game as Brando initiates Beacham into the finer points sadomasochistic sex. Both children take careful notes. The kids are played by Christopher Ellis and Verna Harvey.

    In the end what happens sets the stage for Henry James's classic Gothic horror tale The Turn Of The Screw. That was brought to the screen ten years earlier as The Innocents which starred Deborah Kerr as the new governess for the kids. According to The Nightcomers, The Innocents would be the last thing anyone would have entitled that film.

    Fine performances, wonderful sets and cinematography, yet the film just lacks a spark to consider it a classic. Marlon Brando's fans will want to see it though.
  • Marlon Brando's THE GODFATHER comeback was more of a legacy accreditation for his entire resume, blending with the years-past STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE and ON THE WATERFRONT types as if all the bad films in-between didn't exist... and perhaps this might be one that he could have avoided...

    Strangely enough, the title NIGHTCOMERS would have befitted the adaptation of Henry James's enigmatic supernatural short story TURN OF THE SCREW ala 1961's THE INNOCENTS as two ghosts (our lovers here, when alive) come at night, appearing before the same children with their caretaker: the latter arriving at the tail-end and, like ROGUE ONE years later, connecting to its famous source... but was the James story (or its adaptation) relevant for an entire prequel/backstory?

    In the director's chair is the (at that time) creatively offbeat Michael Winner, using his usual zoom shots and symbolic set-ups, who may have been envious of former collaborator Oliver Reed's art-films by time-period sex-exploitation director Ken Russell, who'd have fit better since NIGHTCOMERS more comfortably plays with sadistic lust than the kind of psychedelic horror popular during the early seventies, heavy on off-putting violence and short on plot: Which has Henry James's two spoiled, death-obsessed (and not very inspired) literary children residing in a rural gothic English manor of Bly...

    Their parents are dead and an aloof uncle turns them over to Stephanie Beacham, a religious caretaker, deliberately contrasting to Brando's Quint as an Atheist groundskeeper... donning the same unkempt hair and Irish accent he'd use in THE MISSOURI BREAKS, another film in which he seems part of a totally different picture...

    And here his frolicking, childish behavior is both infectious to the adoring kids as well as the movie's entire cadence: But had there been more sympathy and perspective on Beacham's naiveté, Brando's reckless rebellion would have provided more shock value instead of seeming so natural and commonplace: Basically, watching THE NIGHTCOMERS is like electricity being electrocuted.

    The best thing is Jerry Fielding's brooding, haunting music, similar to his STRAW DOGS score. And yet, like the Brando thriller NIGHT OF THE FOLLOWING DAY, another maligned pre-GODFATHER outing, there is a comfortable surrealism that feels as if this particular NIGHT was also intended for a very selective cult-movie audience all along.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It was a good job Marlon Brando was saved from total obscurity after "The Godfather." The year before that film, Brando came to England to make a totally forgettable film called "The Nightcomers." It was meant to be a prequel to the classic, "The Innocents." Unfortunately, the above film can never claim to equalling the overall effectiveness of the 1961 masterpiece. With Michael Winner, we get the usual content: graphic sex and violence. He clearly didn't bother to attempt to imbue the story with some subtle touches and to create the right mood for his production. A few scenes are in questionable taste - Winner clearly thinking that all he has to do, is to shoot some decidedly sleazy material and that this shall automatically ensure the film becoming a success! Brando is OK as the Irish gardener Quint but he is mumbling more than ever (perhaps he was pondering his former glory days?)
  • Warning: Spoilers
    this is truly a one-of-a-kind film. I give it a 6 rating because it lags and Brando really isn't giving it his best. He's somewhat like his character in "The Island of Dr. Moreau," although it seems to work much better in the latter film. (I give that film a 7 -- I think the magic to that film, though most won't agree, is that all the actors hated each other during the making of it, the tension makes it work). Anyway, this film delves into animal cruelty, incest and comes close to child molestation. It could never be made today or, if it did, it would probably sell a lot of tickets. It follows Brando, who is the groundskeeper for a rich estate with two children who idolize him. He "rapes" the nanny repeatedly, and the kids watch without him knowing. They start role-playing with each other the things he does to the nanny. He has this skewed vision of life that he passes along to them, which leads to his demise. The arrow through the head and the frog smoking a cigar are classic movie moments in my view.
  • Prequel to Henry James' "The Turn Of the Screw" attempts to show how the two young British children at the center of that story became so disturbed. It turns out the creepy caretaker at their manor (Marlon Brando) seduced their passive nanny into an S&M relationship. Interesting concept, yet director Michael Winner's ham-fisted execution of the material is surely not inviting for an audience (it plays like an R-rated version of "The Innocents"). Damp, creepy atmospherics and a potentially engrossing narrative are each mitigated by Winner's sledgehammer style, which doesn't allow for anything loftier than shock moments (no psychological overtones here!). Soap buffs will be stunned to see ice queen Stephanie Beacham in such a role (although she does garner points for bravery). As for Brando, this is right in keeping with his repertoire of offbeat roles, and he seems to delight in the vulgarity. There's a streak of nastiness running through this film that isn't provocative--just repellent. *1/2 from ****
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is one film you never really see anywhere. This one takes place before Turn Of The Screw, the novel by Henry James. A huge manor situated on a vast amount of land located in England is the setting. It takes place around early 1900's. The house is occupied by two children whose parents were killed in accident leaving them in the care of the master of the house. A housekeeper takes care of the day to day operations leaving the nanny to tend to the kids. There is a groundskeeper as well played by Marlon Brando and yes he does use his Brand 'O style of acting. The master of the house wants nothing to do with anybody so he leaves to another dwelling telling the housekeeper only to contact him if someone dies basically. The film then shows the relationship of Brando and the nanny which involves sado masochistic things. The kids idolize Brando copying everything he does since he has been the only parent figure they have had, but Brando has several issues.

    This was a good slow burning film as it develops all the characters and then the build up for Turn Of The Screw. Brando's a kinky bastard in this one probably still holding the butter from Last Tango In Paris. You even get to see a frog explode from smoking a cigar. It would have been a perfect stop smoking commercial.

    If you don't mind Brando talking like a wee leprechaun and the odd sex scene with ropes then you'll like this flick. It does have a bitter ending.
  • dbblankenship28 February 2021
    Dark and twisted but not in the good way. Heavy doses of female hysteria and misogyny. Just very mean spirited. Cruel treatment of animals as well. Supposedly about innocence lost. But only at the cost of the viewer.
  • As with many Winner films it is necessary to not make the mistake of expecting his film to be exactly as you expect, or very much like it at all actually. Forget Henry James, forget The Innocents and just enjoy Mr Winner's take on how the children lost their innocence. The SM and bondage scenes were more explicit than I remember on a previous viewing and it may be that the earlier video had been trimmed. Certainly here there is no mistaking the powerful relationship between Brando and Beacham and I for one found the playing out of these scenes by the children fairly powerful. I suppose the pace is a little slow which is perhaps particularly noticeable because of how quickly does the effective ending unfold. Not for purists but if you are looking for that something just a little bit different……UPDATE 7.2.17 Just watched this again, on blu ray this time and enjoyed it even more. Once again I felt the bondage scenes more explicit than I remember from before! Funny thing memory.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Ten years after the masterpiece The Innocents debuted, The Nightcomers arrives as a prequel, exploring the characters of Quint and Jessel, who may or may not be ghosts in The Innocents and its source, The Turn of the Screw. With the original, you had a brilliant puzzle of what may be a ghost story, but which may also be a look at a sexually repressed young governess who imagines ghosts, and in attempting to destroy them, destroys the children she was charged with protecting. In making a prequel, you're bound to lose a layer- if the ghosts aren't real, the prequel can't be a ghost story too.

    Instead, The Nightcomers gradually builds itself up as pure psychological horror, and one that initially seems true to the psychology of Flora and Myles. Quint is the scoundrel we heard he was, a man who doesn't believe in heaven or hell, who practices BDSM with Ms. Jessel and plays with Voodoo dolls with the children, the last of which earns Mrs. Grose's contempt. Flora and Miles gleefully watch and imitate the behaviour of their idols, coming close to incest. They appear to be older than in The Innocents. We learn Ms. Jessel's mother killed herself when she became widowed, which matches what we know is Ms. Jessel's fate.

    So, given the relative faithfulness to the original characters' psychology, it's surprising that the film tinkers with the end, turning Jessel and Quint's deaths into murder by the children. Jessel's death looks like what it was supposed to be, a drowning, but that was supposed to happen after Quint's death. And there's no way Quint with an arrow in his head is going to be mistaken for a broken neck after slipping on ice. We know Flora and Miles were never fully innocents, but turning them into full-fledged murderers before the new governess arrives on the scene seems to be a bit too much, too fast. Still, The Nightcomers, by itself, is an interesting story.
  • The review in London's Time Out Film Guide slags off this horror vehicle from '71-72. In the '60s Brando's career had dipped but his cameo as the earthy sensual Irish valet Peter Quint shows just what flair he had at a fallow time and is worth reappraising in line with his flair performance in the adventure film Burn! (1968-1971) produced prior to this Late-Victorian set prequel to Henry James' Turn of the Screw and his renaissance in The Godfather ('71-72) and Last Tango in Paris ('72-73). In appearance he sports a thick tweed jacket, long silverhair and striped collarless shirt and those handsome aquiline chiselled facial features. He is fascinating to watch whether stumbling home from a country pub whilst drunk, imbibing whiskey from a flask while sporting a dinner jacket and upturned collar, or reciting stories from his past to the entranced child characters. The early-'70s were pioneering years and it is fascinating to see US actor Brando recorded in that time and space in Cambridgeshire. Filmed at Sawston Hall, Sawston, Cambridgeshire and Cherry Hinton Chalk Pits, Cambridge in the winter of '70-71. Good support is given by Lancashire actress Thora Hird as Mrs Grose.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    One of Marlon Brando's least-known films, 'The Nightcomers' is a prequel to 'The Turn of the Screw' and describes the events leading up to Henry James' famous ghost story.

    Brando plays Peter Quint, the valet at the English country estate, Bly House, whose owners have recently died abroad in an automobile accident. Their children, Flora and Miles, see Quint as a fascinating source of knowledge and believe that everything he says to them is true. They are intrigued by his words and actions, often copying them with ultimately disastrous results. These re-enactments include acting out Quint and the governess, Miss Jessel's (Stephanie Beacham) bondage sessions.

    The children all too literally accept Quint's claims that to hate is to love and that the dead remain where they are and meet as though still alive. They then attempt to apply their own logical conclusions to life at Bly House.

    Brando gives a decent performance (with an Irish accent) in a role that, because of the dull script, is difficult to excel in and easy to mess up and he often resembles Richard Harris in 'This Sporting Life'. The success of the film is severely limited as it appears incomplete to those who haven't read the original story and it will disappoint those who have as the previously unexplained mystery that made 'The Turn of the Screw' so chilling has now been solved. This 'solution' is not helped by Michael Winner's rather bland direction and the wretched performance of Christopher Ellis as the young Miles.

    It is difficult to see what attracted Brando to the idea of making a film that is often reminiscent of Hammer horror. Maybe it was the prospect of playing a character who causes a frog to explode by making it smoke a cigar.
  • At the turn of the century in Victorian England, two orphans are raised at a remote manor by a beautiful governess (Stephanie Beacham), but a free-spirited gardener taints their upbringing and the governess' virtue (Marlon Brando). Thora Hird plays the old biddy housekeeper.

    "The Nightcomers" (1971-1972) is a prequel to "The Turn of the Screw," the 1898 novella by Henry James, which was made into the B&W classic movie with Deborah Kerr, "The Innocents" (1961). While James' original story is low-key Gothic horror with ghostly elements, this proposed sequel is a drama about the corruption of youth at an English estate with some edgy parts.

    It combines the setting & situation of "The Secret Garden" (1993) with the disturbing corrupting-of-age elements of "Last Summer" (1969) and "The Sailor who Fell from Grace with the Sea" (1976). This one's not great like those three movies, but it's definitely worth checking out if you're a fan of the classic story, Marlon and Stephanie or the themes trip your trigger. The last act is worth the wait.

    IMHO it's on par with the better known "The Innocents" and is less ambiguous. Of course this is not the official prequel to James' story (since no such prequel exists), but simply a possible interpretation or alternative interpretation by the filmmakers.

    Brando was almost 47 during shooting and just past his physical prime, although he wasn't overweight yet (maybe a few extra pounds, but that's about it). Of course Beacham was one of the loveliest women to grace the Earth at the time. Meanwhile Verna Harvey as the girl Flora was actually 18 during shooting (a couple months shy of 19), but the filmmakers did an excellent job of making her look 13-14. I think they legally required an adult for the role for obvious reasons.

    Marlon's mumbling can be hard to discern so I suggest utilizing the subtitles if they're available.

    The film runs 1 hour, 36 minutes, and was shot at Sawston Hall, Sawston, Cambridgeshire, England, and the Cherry Hinton Chalk Pits north of there, both are located southeast of Cambridge.

    GRADE: B-/B.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is a loose prequel to the classic Henry James ghost story The Turn of the Screw, which itself was successfully filmed in 1961. Of course, with Michael Winner at the helm of this film, it soon changes from a ghost story to something more exploitational, as the director deals with a sado-masochistic relationship between the gardener and the governess that certainly WASN'T on the mind of Henry James when he wrote his story! In today's society where so-called documentaries on everything from sexual perversion to sex changes are ten a penny on every television channel, these sexual scenes have lost their power to shock; the sight of Stephanie Beacham hog-tied in the bedroom isn't perhaps as outrageous as it would have been in the 1970s.

    Elsewhere, the film plods along slowly with a lack of pace and lack of action. Much of the screen time is given to the rather unsavoury character Quint, which is unsurprising considering that he's played by Marlon Brando. Brando gives one of those offbeat, anything-goes type performances that I personally hate; Johnny Depp's turn in PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN is the most recent example of this type of "acting". Adopting a surprisingly good Irish accent, Brando boozes, sleeps, and acts odd throughout the film, most memorable in the opening scenes where he causes a frog to explode after making it smoke a cigarette!

    The film has some good turns from the adult performers, all of whom are to be seen in rather more genteel fare than what's on offer here. Stephanie Beacham, who resolutely refused to disrobe in many of her other films, shows that she's not camera shy here, regularly stripping off for the torrid sex scenes. Harry Andrews pops up in a few scenes to lend some quiet dignity to the proceedings, while the biggest surprise of all comes from the appearance of Thora Hird as the ghastly housekeeper with maggots in her hair. I'm somebody who knows Hird solely from her role in the long-running sitcom LAST OF THE SUMMER WINE, so her appearance here seems quite extraordinary!

    Sadly, the film is let down by some diabolical acting from the 'child' actors – one of whom, Verna Harvey, was actually 20 when this was filmed! Christopher Ellis is particularly bad and his voice really grates on the viewer's nerves. Winner seems to be a somewhat slapdash director, filming bland, boring shots at one moment and overusing the zoom lens at another. He fails to insert any much-needed energy or excitement into the proceedings, even at the shocking climax, which plays out as staidly as the rest of the film. Still, the Cambridgeshire locations are nice to look at – almost as nice as Beacham's ample charms – which is something, I suppose.
  • Originally I would have given this film a 3 out of 10 but I read the reviews and I disagree with all of them so I gave it a one. First of all, Marlon Brando has no range. If he is not mumbling, he is overextending himself. Brando is the most overrated actor in history. After Mutiny on the Bounty, he lost his status in Hollywood. He regained it with the Godfather. This was made before the Godfather.

    If you only saw On the Waterfront, A Streetcar Named Desire or the Godfather, you would think that he was a great actor. I saw those films first and wanted to see more of his movies. However, each movie of his reveals more flaws than any perceived greatness.

    In this film, the Nightcomers, Brando is either overacting or not acting at all. He stands around and broods as the camera pans. I don't care about Quint, who is a bum but stays employed because the new guardian of the children doesn't care. Guess what? Neither do I. The children and the rest of the supporting cast are plastic toys used poorly by Michael Winner, the director. A great actor could have made something of this script and a great director could have made something of this pathetic actor. Neither showed up for the shoot. There is good material for a film but everyone handles their roles so poorly that the film rambles on without a point. It is extremely boring.

    Whether or not it was a prequel or not does not matter at all. Brando is saying, "I'm Brando doing Brando acting and you're going to like it because I'm Brando, d***it." I keep thinking of Eddie Murphy as Gumby when I watch Brando.

    My advice: Watch a Bogart film. Bogart is enjoyable to watch even if the film is awful. Or watch the Godfather, On the Waterfront or A Streetcar Named Desire. Every other film of Brando's irritated me to no end.
  • I've never read The Turn of the Screw, but supposedly The Nightcomers is a prequel to that classic story. It explains the backstory of the two adolescent children as they welcome in a new governess - but you'll be very surprised as to what kind of trouble they got up to. I was pretty shocked that the two children's parents allowed them to act in this film. Making young kids act in sexually damaging situations before an audience, with the explanation of "it's just pretend," is child abuse, in my book. Children can never get over abuse of that nature, and a "career" is never a good price to pay for a sexually abused childhood.

    Why am I censuring this movie so harshly? Because the two kids, Christopher Ellis and Verna Harvey, spy on the courtship of their governess and the groundskeeper. They think they'll see a cute romance, but instead they witness kinky sex and violence. Since they're too young to understand what's going on, they think it's a funny game and decide to imitate what they saw during afternoon playtime.

    I get the point of the story: adults don't realize the effect they have on children, and harmless idolatry can end up disastrous. If this were a novel, it would have been easier for me to take, but seeing two kids getting permanently damaged was pretty upsetting. However, if you like the idea of crossing The Bad Seed with Last Tango in Paris, you'll be in a better position to like this 1970s flick.

    Kiddy Warning: Obviously, you have control over your own children. However, due to sex scenes and upsetting scenes involving children, I wouldn't let my kids watch it.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Easily the best movie ever directed by Michael Winner...due in large part to the stunning performance he coaxes out of Marlon Brando. He plays Peter Quint, the surly British handyman-cum-deviant who destroys the children of Henry James' THE TURN OF THE SCREW while violently deflowering the children's tutor (a decidedly foxy Stephanie Beacham). Brando and Beacham have real electricity. Beacham manages to hold her own against the acting giant so it's a surprise that she never really made it as a film actress.

    It's an audacious, one of a kind film that's a must see for Brando fans. He gives a truly great performance at a time when most of Hollywood had written him off. He would rebound a year later with THE GODFATHER. Director Winner never did make anything nearly as good as this and was soon back to making the likes of DEATH WISH (various volumes) and of course the woefully ill-advised remake of THE BIG SLEEP.
  • Made just before "The Godfather" saved his career and changed his life, "The Nightcommers" shows just what a desperate state Brando's career was in. This deeply terrible film is awful in a lot of fairly interesting ways, however, and a curious movie hound will want to endure it's wretched 96 minutes.

    It should be noted that this prequil violates both James's "The Turn Of The Screw" and "The Innocents" the great film of that novel. It comes off like many cheap brit or Italian horror films, with a clumsy and offensive sex scene thrown in. Michael Winner's reputation as a terrible director was well earned. Scene after awful scene is handled clumsily and the ending is really terrible.

    Oddly, the film foreshadows both "Last Tango" and "The Missouri Breaks" where Brando once again used his Irish accent. If you, like me, respect the still controversial "Last Tango" as a classic, the movie will be even more painful. Brando, handsome but already gaining girth, was forced by Bertoluchi to drop twenty pounds, we can see why.

    The whole point of The Novel is that we cannot be sure WHAT happened at Bly, and this film provides a most unwelcome explanation.
  • Made at a time when Brando was doing very little on film (and when he did, could do no right, if one examines the reviews and box office returns of his films during this period), this prequel to "The Innocents" (which was based on Henry James' "The Turn of the Screw") has little going for it, but may still provide some interest to fans of his. Brando plays a valet whose employer and wife have died in India. The couple's two children come to live at their parents' estate and Brando stays on as a gardener/handyman. Also in residence is a persnickety maid (Hyrd) and a refined nanny/schoolteacher (Beacham.) These five form an uneasy existence with each other as the children hang on the earthy and repugnant Brando's every word and Brando repeatedly seduces Beacham with increasing sadomasochism. Hyrd tries to keep everyone in check to no avail. Finally, the machinations and misunderstandings culminate in a burst of violence, just in time for the story to peter out and set up for the beginning of the original. Brando is an acquired taste here. It's one of his performances in which it's the audience's duty (burden?) to figure out what he is doing and what he is saying. He's messy, flabby, often unintelligible and, naturally, self-indulgent. Nonetheless, fans of his may lap it up with relish. Beacham does a nice enough job, but can't hope to win any scenes up against the ACTING of Brando. The children (scarcely heard of again after this) are the typical bratty, snotty, unattractive, impossible kids that have been seen in countless British movies. The most interesting performance in the film is actually that of Hyrd. She brings a lot of variety and detail to her role of the housekeeper. Andrews pops up briefly and effectively as the children's' disinterested uncle. The film is stacked with unappetizing and repulsive scenes such as a frog being killed, a turtle being mistreated, chicken feathers being ripped out by hand and then, of course, the "arty" S&M sex scenes between Brando and Beacham. These tasteless (and rather boring) sequences don't illuminate the characters or entertain the audience and so are pretty pointless. There's a grain of interest in the material, but the sloppy direction and awkward script don't help keep it going. Stay awake for Beacham's hilarious final screen moment and for Brando's as well. Fortunately, for him, "The Godfather" was just around the corner.
  • Before "Last Tango in Paris" and "The Godfather" and after "Candy", his best three films, Brando came to England and, under the guidance of the great gourmand who was Michael Winner, made this "The Nightcomers". Brando is the best of the whole film, not only for the way he speaks with English peasant accent, but for his entire performance. He is in love with the character of Stephanie Beacham, Miss Jessel, but he has a strange way of showing his love, brutal, binds her to the ropes to make her feel pain. She loves him sincerely. Both of them will end up somehow a la Romeo and Juliet, but in a different way. Stephanie Beacham also does a very good role, and the extraordinary Harry Andrews shows once again the mastery demonstrated in many other memorable movies. But still, the film is weak.
  • A lot of people like to bash Michael Winner as a director, but I've enjoyed all of his films that I have seen - until now. The Nightcomers is indefensible.

    The film acts as a prequel to The Innocents (1961), which was inspired by Henry James' The Turn of the Screw. Verna Harvey and Christopher Ellis play Flora and Miles, impressionable children whose already dubious moral compass is further corrupted by roguish valet Peter Quint (Marlon Brando) and gorgeous governess Miss Jessel (Stephanie Beacham), who are having a torrid sado-masochistic affair. The children act out what they have seen and heard, dabbling in bondage before turning to murder.

    Depicting youngsters performing such acts is in extremely poor taste, but that isn't this film's only crime: Brando mumbles his way through the film with a laughably cartoonish 'Oirish accent, Harvey and Ellis are terrible actors, Winner's direction is torpid, and the whole thing comes across as a pointless exercise in deliberately courting controversy. One can imagine that Ken Russell could have done it all so much better - but probably wouldn't have bothered.

    2/10. Narrowly avoids getting a 1/10 rating because Beacham is such a babe.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The equivalent of what Ken Russell's version of "The Rainbow" was to his earlier "Women in Love", this prequel to "The Innocents" is unpleasant and hideously dull. It features an overweight Marlon Brando seducing the svelte Stephanie Beacham in perhaps one of the most repulsive sex scenes of all times, not because of any gratuitous nudity or even the difference in their ages, but simply because of how his handyman character treats the innocent nanny that Beacham plays. It's like a game of how much physical and emotional abuse that Beacham can take, either from her two charges (Verna Harvey and Christopher Ellis) or the humorless housekeeper (Thora Hird), but the sadomasochism he enjoys tormenting her with while entertaining the two children with his stories of Irish blarney.

    I was expecting a light Gothic horror film from this because of its ties with the Henry James novel, and I was completely disappointed that it is basically a character study with little plot and even less to recommend of it. There are amusing scenes where the children play various pranks (particularly when they strand Hird in their gorgeous treehouse), and Brando's cartoon Irish accent is a hoot, but the writing and directing makes it very disappointing, especially in the hands of a veteran like Michael Winner. The elements of horror do not show up officially until the last 10 minutes of the film, and one moment is pretty hideous. Scenes involving wild animals (a toad and a dead bird) are a bit disturbing but not gruesome, although the popping sound involving the toad has an obvious outcome.

    There is quality in the pretty musical score as well as the country sets and did nice photography, but that doesn't change the fact that this is very difficult to get through, and that when it does hint of any elements of ghost, in this all spoken about and not represented visually. Ultimately, this is the type of film that tries hard but does not know what it wants to be, and the audience is left more befuddled because of that. The last scene ends pretty much begins where "The Innocents" began, and it is interesting to note that Anna Palk does highly resemble Deborah Kerr who played that role in the 1961 film. If you consider horror to be a man of Brando's size laying on top of a woman Beacham's size, then this is indeed horror.
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