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From one of the roughest, most uncompromising horror novels ever comes a
profoundly graphic and disturbing film. No,
it doesn’t entirely do the novel (which on the whole is probably unfilmable)
justice, but what the filmmakers have accomplished is still fairly remarkable.
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THE
GIRL NEXT DOOR by Jack Ketchum was initially published as a paperback original
back in 1989. It was loosely based
on the torture-murder of 16-year-old Sylvia Lykens, who in Indiana of 1961 was
abused over a period of several months by her guardian Gertrude Stein and the
latter’s sons. Ketchum’s
genius was in relating his story from the point of view of a fictional
character who witnesses but doesn’t take part in the abuse, and in the way
the author imbued the case with his own late fifties childhood memories, giving
it both a nostalgic overlay and a slyly subversive political angle.
Yet despite its brilliance the book appeared with little-to-no fanfare,
and only really took off upon its 1996 hardback reissue by Overlook Press
(which came complete with a lengthy introduction by Stephen King).
Since then it’s gone through several printings, including a new mass
market paperback edition, and been adapted for the movies.
The
screenplay for THE GIRL NEXT DOOR, written by Daniel Farrands and Philip Nutman,
spent over seven years bouncing around Hollywood; Ketchum liked the script so
much he made it a requirement that any potential filmmakers use it.
As it happened, the indie outfit Moderncine brought this project to the
screen and managed to (mostly) do it justice.
Even more impressive is the mind-boggling fact that the film somehow got
an R rating from the MPAA without any recutting.
Yet
the film, in common with book, was given scant reception.
Anchor Bay Entertainment secured distribution rights, and gave it a
straight-to-DVD release in December of 2007.
Much of its thunder appears to have been stolen by the upcoming release
of AN AMERICAN CRIME, a more straightforward recounting of the Sylvia Lykens
case starring JUNO’S Ellen Page. But
keep an eye out for THE GIRL NEXT DOOR. It
may not have received the attention (or controversy) it deserves, but I predict
the film, like the novel that inspired it, will grow in popularity, and be with
us for a long time to come.
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David
is a fiftyish man haunted by horrific memories about what occurred during the
summer of 1958. 12 years old at
the time, David was smitten with Meg, a pretty girl who moved in next door
together with her younger sister Susan.
Meg
and Susan’s parents were killed in a car accident, leaving them in the hands
of their only viable guardian Ruth. A recent divorcee with three rambunctious sons, Ruth is
viewed as “one of the guys” by the neighborhood kids, being a fun gal with
no compunctions about letting the boys smoke and drink beer.
But Ruth is also a bitter woman whose already-tenuous mental state is
beginning to deteriorate.
One
day at the town fairground Meg reveals to David that Ruth is abusing her.
Beatings and starvation are the order of the day at Ruth’s place, and
before long David gets a firsthand glimpse of both.
He does his best to pretend things are proceeding normally, but that
becomes impossible when Meg tells a policeman about the abuse...and Ruth
responds by confining her to the cellar.
From
there the torture steadily escalates, with Ruth’s boys meting out
increasingly depraved punishments that Ruth believes are for Meg’s “own
good”. David for his part is
horrified, but does nothing to stop the madness. He eventually makes a concerted effort to help Meg, but the
attempt fails and David ends up locked in the cellar with her, leading to an
apocalyptic final showdown with Ruth and her demented brood.
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What
distinguishes this film from most other horror movies is the simple fact that
it doesn’t play like one. From
the start director Gregory M. Wilson establishes a quiet, languid atmosphere
that seems entirely appropriate to the time and setting: late-fifties suburbia. The period details are quite convincing given the low budget,
and the New Jersey locations extremely well chosen.
A
straight transcription of the novel would be inadvisable, to say the
least--such an approach might very likely land the moviemakers in prison--but
Jack Ketchum’s twisted narrative has made it to the screen virtually intact.
This includes the book’s trickiest element, the almost imperceptible
shift from charming (if dark-hued) nostalgia to out-and-out horror, which
Wilson pulls off with real skill.
The
film is also impeccably cast. While the performance of young Daniel Manche in lead role is
a bit one note, the rest of the actors are top-notch. This is particularly true of the leading ladies, led by the
amazing Blanche Baker, who delivers a virtual case study in pure evil as the
psychotic Ruth (a far cry from Baker’s best-known role as Molly Ringwald’s
older sister in SIXTEEN CANDLES). The
doe-eyed Blythe Auffarth is also quite memorable as Meg, both the victim and
hero of the piece, and first-time actress Madeline Taylor, as Meg’s younger
sister, communicates volumes in a largely non-verbal role.
If
only the film overall were as fine as its performers.
Wilson and his collaborators command attention and build suspense
expertly, but loose their footing in the climax, which collapses the novel’s
nail-biting final third into an overly abrupt wrap-up.
In just about any other movie such a conclusion might be acceptable, but
I think material this fine deserves better.
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THE
GIRL NEXT DOOR
Moderncine
Director: Gregory M. Wilson
Producers: William M. Miller, Andrew Van Den Houten
Screenplay: Daniel Farrands, Philip Nutman
(Based on a novel by Jack Ketchum)
Cinematography: William M. Miller
Editing: M.J. Fiore
Cast: Blanche Baker, Daniel Manche, Blythe Auffarth, William Atherton, Grant
Show, Catherine Mary Stewart, Madeline Taylor, Graham Patrick Martin, Benjamin
Ross Kaplan, Austin Williams, Kevin Chamberlin, Dean Faulkenberry, Gabrielle
Howarth
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