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The Bad Seed was adapted from a highly successful 1954 Broadway play by the celebrated dramatist Maxwell Anderson, the screenwriter of All Quiet on the Western Front (1930) and Death Takes a Holiday (1934) and plays such as The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex/Elizabeth the Queen (1939) and Anne of a Thousand Days (1947). (Maxwell Anderson had himself taken the play from a popular novel). What could easily have turned into a Grand Guignol melodrama unfolds in a series of nicely chill plays of dialogue. On the minus side, the script never entirely hurdles clear of the inherent staginess of the original production and much of the middle is directorially static, only carried by the sharp twists and laced cruelty that one can see going on as Rhoda starts manipulating adults. The story does jump on an even-by-then dated heredity-vs-upbringing debate and, when introduced, this is a weighty and rather dull issue that drags the films middle down. The biggest sin that The Bad Seed conducts is its ending, which has Rhoda walk out to a pier in search of the medal only to be crisped by a seemingly divine lightning bolt an appallingly tacky ending that was added to yield to the righteous morality demanded by the Hays Code that said that evildoers must be seen to be punished. If the film could have ended on the very bleak note just before that as Christine commits suicide after attempting to poison Rhoda, and where Rhoda, inadvertently saved, asks Monica, who promises her her lovebird if she dies, if they can go out on the roof tomorrow, The Bad Seed would have been truly great. Even as it is, the film created a considerable stir amid the otherwise placid conservatism of the 1950s with its image of a psychopathic child. The film was remade as The Bad Seed (1985), an okay-to-fair tv movie starring Carrie Wells as Rhoda, Blair Brown as Christine and David Carradine as Leroy the gardener. In the 00s, there have been rumours of a cinematic remake to at one point have been directed by Eli Roth, although this has yet to emerge. Also of interest is Mommy (1995), a low-budget film featuring Patty McCormack as a psychopathic mother who could easily be Rhoda grown up. That film draws on conscious association of McCormack and her role in The Bad Seed.
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