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| The Nightcomers | 
enlarge | Director: Michael Winner Actors: Marlon Brando, Stephanie Beacham, Thora Hird, Harry Andrews, Verna Harvey Studio: Lions Gate Category: DVD
List Price: $14.98 Buy New: $8.13 You Save: $6.85 (46%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 43972
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: R (Restricted) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 97 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: 21170 UPC: 012236211709 EAN: 0012236211709 ASIN: B000OU03BW
Theatrical Release Date: 1971 Release Date: June 19, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Five Star Seller!!! New, factory sealed US Region 1 DVD. Item is 100% guaranteed not to be a bootleg or import. Item is shipped directly from our warehouse. Easy exchange if item defective or damaged in shipped.
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Product Description Isolated in a traditional English country manor two rich orphans--Miles (Christopher Ellis) and Flora (Verna Harvey)--have only their nurse their housekeeper and a strange gardener named Quint (Marlon Brando) to provide them with company and care. The youngsters are particularly intrigued by Quint's mannerisms intuition and omniscience. Witnessing Quint and his prurient relationship with their nurse Miss Jessel (Stephanie Beacham) profoundly influences their budding sexual desires and soon the children begin to mimic their caretakers. Things take a drastic turn however when the odd parental figures seem as if they're going to split up and the children take violent measures to secure an eternal union.Teetering somewhere between psychodrama and psychedelia NIGHTCOMERS is an aesthetically captivating film. Michael Winner breathes life into a whimsical story unveiling the origin of the children from the Henry James novel TURN OF THE SCREW. Brando s performance as the seemingly wholesome gardener is eerie and the shocking ending of NIGHTCOMERS is truly haunting.Runtime: 96 minsFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rating: R UPC: 012236211709 Manufacturer No: 21170
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| Customer Reviews: Read 4 more reviews...
Brando Blows Blarney and Pre Turns The Screw August 16, 2001 14 out of 14 found this review helpful
Touted as the prequel to "The Turn of the Screw", Brando plays Quint, a sexually charged gardener overseeing the grounds (and soon the players) at a remote English Manor. Two young orphans with only their nurse and housekeeper to tend to them become intrigued and obsessed by the strange Irish man who spends more time spinning tales than cutting the lawn. The children, who are completely closed off from the rest of the world, become willing voyeurs in Quint's creepy tender-violent dance with the nurse and soon find themselves aping the actions of the adults. Their loyalty and fixation with Quint drive them to unspeakable acts when it appears the "parents" may end their own relationship. Brando's Irish brogue is always a treat to hear (as in "The Missouri Breaks") and one always wonders of the horrific tales he spins in character have something to do with his own painful childhood. This film is engrossing and savage and walks the miniscule line between pleasure and pain. It's definitely not a flick for the kiddies.
Brando Makes This Work June 24, 2007 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
Chilling, tense, compelling take on The Turn of the Screw. Brando plays a ruffian gardener/caretaker who has some of his very own ideas about life, love, and nature. He has totally under his spell the two newly-orphaned children living in the house, as well as their buxom nanny. The story is fascinating from the first scene and never lets up. Danger is ever-present, yet when it strikes you are shocked and surprised. Some of the sex scenes between Brando and a lovely young Stepahnie Beacham push the envelope, to the point where you would almost call this softcore, because of the exposed personal parts and the S&M nature of some of these scenes. Some also might be disturbed by the two adolescent children playing at some of these scenarios, they having spied on the couple at night. But none of that is gratuituous, it is all part of the story, and if that doesn't bother you you will love the film.
A curiosity June 29, 2007 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
The famous prequel to "The Innocents" is finally available on DVD, but sadly it could never come close to the subtle perfection of that classic. Still, it's still an interesting film. Starring Marlon Brando and Stephanie Beacham, it imagines a possible scenario that may have been played out between Quint and Miss Jessell (who are already dead at the start of the action in the original novel, "The Turn Of The Screw"), and the two children who interact with them. A new governess is left with the psychological mess they left behind in the minds of these children, and that is the role played by Deborah Kerr in the 1960 classic, but it forms just the tail end of the film we have here. First of all, Marlon Brando does a good job as the gardener/handyman. He portrays just the right amount of latent brutality and sex appeal to convince you that a prim governess could fall under his spell. I'm no Brando expert, and it may be that he is just playing himself, but it works...my only quibble is his rather thickly laid-on Irish accent which sounds a bit too forced to totally convince. Stephanie Beacham also fares well as the governess, although her character is sketched in far less detail. The two children are played rather woodenly, but to be fair they (and the rest of the cast) are hampered by a pretty hideous script which thinks it is approximating the style of talking in England in Victorian times, with lots of "pray tell me" and "you scoundrel" type of dialogue, and nobody ever uses contractions, which sounds extremely affected. Another main problem with the movie is that it is... well, just a bit low on events. Winner goes a bit overboard on the symbolism with shots of dolls without eyes, small animals dead or dying, or childhood toys found covered in maggots (gasp!). It's almost like he's copied his ideas from "The Innocents", (recalling a great scene when a cockroach crawls out of the mouth of a cherub statue), but he doesn't really need to do this as there is no mystery about how and why the children are acting in the way that they do, whereas in "The Innocents" we are trying to ascertain what is true and what is imagined. Here, it's all quite obvious.
Obviously filmed on location in Britain in the early 1970's (I know it's a period setting, but that golden age of British horror movies - the time of the famous Hammer Horror style - is unmistakeable!), the film is certainly beautiful to look at. The action is set in lush forests and gardens, as well as the impressively period looking country mansion. Highlights are of course based around much corset ripping and a certain amount of sado-masochistic goings on between the two adults, all of which is spied upon by the two charges, ultimately corrupting them with a twisted view of the relationship between love and death, as much as an interest in kinky thrills. Interestingly, the two children seem an awful lot older in this film than they actually turned out to be in "The Innocents", but I suppose having them as pre-teens would have made too much of the material un-filmable.
There's no supernatural element at all (as the cast are all still alive in this movie!), so it's just a dark romp through sordid and sexy goings on at a country estate, culminating in two deaths, and two very messed-up children. And of course, because of "The Innocents", everybody knows that there can only be one ending, so there's no surprises there. It tries to be shocking (children copying the perversions of adults-gasp!) but it really plays that aspect pretty safe. But again, it does look lovely - there's no substitute for filming in location on a gorgeous British country estate. And the sight of Stephanie Beacham when the dead body of Miss Jessell is discovered is one of the more bizarre images in period horror cinema - you won't forget that shot!
Sadly, due to the coarseness in handling the overall idea, it is mostly a rather uninvolving story, but director Michael Winner goes into it all with gusto, so it's an interesting one none the less.
'MINUETS IN THE MANSION' February 13, 2002 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Or, "Minute Man?" This is director Michael Winner's spin on Henry James "Turn of the Screw" - the early years! Filmed originally as "The Innocents" [unsurpassed original] this is the so-called prequel, famous for starring Brando as the depraved Quint and Stephanie Beacham as the somewhat ..deviant Governess [but old Quint does teach her a thing or two]. AND it does go on and on and on - especially the "bedroom" scenes! Not really memorable, it was, I believe, made after the far superior "Last Tango in Paris" - and Mr. Brando, with all respect, still has a waist-line in this one! [Just kidding, we adore him in all guises!] It's supposed to be a movie/script about the [downfall] of innocence - in this case the two minors [the children]. AND it does somewhat solve the mystery surrounding the strange death of Quint and the Governess...... Of interest? The Operatic version - Benjamin Britten's "The Turn of the Screw" - quite adult, an excellent version available on video.
I would like to buy this movie if posible February 1, 1999 1 out of 5 found this review helpful
The Nightcomer
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