Thursday, 1 November 2007

Black Narcissus (1947)

The year is 1947 and in an India still months away from Independence, five Catholic Nuns travel to a remote location in the Himalayas to set up a school and dispensary for the locals.
Under the leadership of Sister Clodagh (Deborah Kerr), the nuns begin to face mounting difficulties and insurmountable obstacles. As the surroundings and atmosphere begins to play tricks with the sisters emotions, tensions rise and the Nuns begin to question their faith.
Thrown into this mix, English agent Mr Dean (David Farrar) suddenly finds himself the recipient of unwanted attention.

Erotically charged melodrama that is years ahead of its time, for a 1947 PG certificate movie, ( Original rating A) Black Narcissus pushes the boundaries of sexual tension trumping any movie made in this enlightened age.
Deborah Carr smolders as the Sister Superior, her austere and unyielding manner betraying her conflicting emotions, she is backed up by a stunning tour De force from Kathleen Byron
whose gradual descent into madness coincides with her loss of faith and sexual re-emergence.
Byron is Mister Hyde to Carr's Dr Jekyll.
The rest of the acting is a little stifled, Farrar plays the blunt Englishman with a dash of arrogance and aloofness while Sabu is basically a liability as the Young General.
Considered by many film critics to be one of the finest colour films ever, Narcissus is a challenging landscape of images (astonishing, considering must of the photography was created in a studio and the outdoor locations were shot in England).
The legendary Jack Cardiff's cinematography is simply breathtaking and leaves the viewer in awe.
Many stand-out scenes include the bell ringing, the Christmas concert and the confrontation between Sister Clodagh and a newly de-frocked Sister Ruth.

Unquestionably Micheal Powell and Emeric Pressburger are amongst the most innovative filmmakers of all time and in Black Narcissus they possibly created their masterpiece and arguably one of the best British films of all time.

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