A father is forced to question everything he thought he knew about his daughter when he believes that she might have played a role in the tragic death of one of her classmates.A father is forced to question everything he thought he knew about his daughter when he believes that she might have played a role in the tragic death of one of her classmates.A father is forced to question everything he thought he knew about his daughter when he believes that she might have played a role in the tragic death of one of her classmates.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Kate Craven
- Leslie
- (as Kate Isaac)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPatty McCormack, who originated the role of "The Bad Seed" on Broadway and played her in the original film, portrays Dr. March, the psychiatrist who is treating young Emma. When Emma and her father are leaving, Dr. March says, "I told Emma she reminds me of me", a reference to the character she played.
- GoofsEmma turns on the gas, then lights all the burners on a stove with coil burners, which don't run on gas.
- Alternate versionsAn "extended cut" billed as "The Bad Seed: Special Edition".
- ConnectionsFeatures Glad Rags to Riches (1933)
Featured review
After a strange series of accidents, a single father comes to believe that the incidents centered around his young daughter have more truth to them than expected and begins to suspect that she's far more dangerous to the others around her than he thinks.
This was a decent enough if wholly unnecessary entry. One of the few positive aspects here is the incredibly enjoyable manner in which this one sets up the evil child routine. With the film resting nicely on the idea of her being so coy about her true intentions, the overall idea that emerges here is the creepy, ice-cold demeanor and focused mentality that comes from her complete detachment with her feelings. This is a fine setup later as her manipulative behavior from the start is taken to new heights with her behavior, lying about the various accidents and injuries that she either suffers to engender sympathy or causes to others, including the opening scenes on the school grounds or the strange series of incidents that pile up around her and those around the family that are related to everyone while she continually pulls the wool over everyone in the cause of keeping her secret alive. These here are what hold this up over its main flaws here. The main issue here is the fact that the film plays itself out far more like a thriller than a genuine genre effort, keeping it so focused on whether or not she'll get away with the lies that it never really develops any kind of macabre atmosphere with the way it presents itself. The manipulation attempts and cold, icy demeanor may make her quite a calculating figure but it does nothing to help turn this into a genre feature as that holds the film down to such a bare minimum of sequences that focus on outright terror due to that. The focus on the thriller aspects also causes this to feel way too overlong with the overbearing clinging to him that doesn't do much beyond enhancing what we already knew about her personality so the focus on her being that psychotic doesn't register as scary or creepy in that case. As well, the entire subplot about the nanny who has something to prove by letting her get away with everything is quite problematic and doesn't really serve the film well with her being on the kids' side from the beginning. With a limp finale hamstrung by the inability to do much because of the channel restrictions, this one comes up rather lame in the end.
Rated Unrated/PG-13: Violence, Language and themes of children in danger.
This was a decent enough if wholly unnecessary entry. One of the few positive aspects here is the incredibly enjoyable manner in which this one sets up the evil child routine. With the film resting nicely on the idea of her being so coy about her true intentions, the overall idea that emerges here is the creepy, ice-cold demeanor and focused mentality that comes from her complete detachment with her feelings. This is a fine setup later as her manipulative behavior from the start is taken to new heights with her behavior, lying about the various accidents and injuries that she either suffers to engender sympathy or causes to others, including the opening scenes on the school grounds or the strange series of incidents that pile up around her and those around the family that are related to everyone while she continually pulls the wool over everyone in the cause of keeping her secret alive. These here are what hold this up over its main flaws here. The main issue here is the fact that the film plays itself out far more like a thriller than a genuine genre effort, keeping it so focused on whether or not she'll get away with the lies that it never really develops any kind of macabre atmosphere with the way it presents itself. The manipulation attempts and cold, icy demeanor may make her quite a calculating figure but it does nothing to help turn this into a genre feature as that holds the film down to such a bare minimum of sequences that focus on outright terror due to that. The focus on the thriller aspects also causes this to feel way too overlong with the overbearing clinging to him that doesn't do much beyond enhancing what we already knew about her personality so the focus on her being that psychotic doesn't register as scary or creepy in that case. As well, the entire subplot about the nanny who has something to prove by letting her get away with everything is quite problematic and doesn't really serve the film well with her being on the kids' side from the beginning. With a limp finale hamstrung by the inability to do much because of the channel restrictions, this one comes up rather lame in the end.
Rated Unrated/PG-13: Violence, Language and themes of children in danger.
- kannibalcorpsegrinder
- Oct 4, 2018
- Permalink
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