Director: Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
Stars: Deborah Kerr, David Farrar, Flora Robson, Jenny Laird
British filmmakers Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger once again
deliberately courted controversy and censorship with their 1947
adaptation of Rumer Godden's novel. Deborah Kerr and Kathleen Byron play
the head nuns at an Anglican hospital/school high in the Himalayas.
The
nuns' well-ordered existence is disturbed by the presence of a handsome
British government agent (David Farrar), whose attractiveness gives
certain sisters the wrong ideas. Meanwhile, an Indian girl (Jean
Simmons) is lured
down the road to
perdition by a sensuous general (Sabu). While Kerr would seem most
susceptible to fall from grace --we are given hints of her earlier love
life in a long flashback--she proves to have more stamina than Byron,
who delivers one of moviedom's classic interpretations of all-stops-out,
sex-starved insanity. The aforementioned flashback was removed from the
US release version of Black Narcissus so as not to offend the Catholic
Legion of Decency. While the dramatic content of the film hasn't stood
the test of time all that well, the individual performances, production
values, and especially the Oscar-winning Technicolor photography of Jack
Cardiff are still as impressive as ever. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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