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Black Narcissus (Powell, Pressburger, 1947)

Bil's rating (out of 5)

BBBBB

One of the best British films ever made is this pioneering effort by independent filmmakers Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger.  Shot entirely at Pinewood with painted matte backgrounds to recreate the Himalayas (and astonishingly well at that), the film is superbly textured and mature, thematically ahead of any movie made in its period.  Deborah Kerr heads a superb group of performers as the Mother Superior of a group of Anglican nuns who move to a convent in a remote mountain village in India, only to find that their confidence and strength in their religion is no match for the mystic powers of the East. Sexual frustration over local white man David Farrar, weakening faith, harsh climate and the growing fondness for their homeland soon get to the sisters and they are forced to leave or die. Interestingly enough, Kerr's flashback scenes of her youth and teenage sweetheart were cut by American censors upon first release, even though they were completely without sexual content, explicit or implicit; perhaps it was too taboo to show a nun who has taken her vows to escape a failed love affair (the scenes have since been restored and are now available on home video). Funny how the nun who throws herself off a mountain because she goes bug-eyed every time she sees Farrar in his shorts didn't even make the Prude Alert blink.

Powell/Pressburger Previous: A Matter Of Life And Death (Stairway To Heaven)
Powell/Pressburger Next: Red Shoes, The

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< The Criterion Collection #93 >
Bil's 100 Favourites:  #9
Bil's Best Of, Best Actress, Best Director 1947
Academy Awards: 1947
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