WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Drama >

Daughter of Darkness

Watch Daughter of Darkness For Free

Daughter of Darkness

In Ballyconnen, Emmy Baudine is a beautiful but disturbed young woman who works for the local priest. When the carnival comes to town, she encounters a handsome young boxer called Dan and lays his face open with her fingernails when he expects sexual favors from her. Hurriedly packed off by Father Corcoran to Yorkshire, Emmy is taken in by a farming family and manages to suppress the strange feelings of fascination and repulsion that she experiences in the presence of the opposite sex. Until, that is, the carnival comes to town and brings with it the vengeful Dan...

... more
Release : 1956
Rating : 6.6
Studio : Alliance Productions,  Victor Hanbury Productions, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Supervising Art Director, 
Cast : Siobhán McKenna Anne Crawford Maxwell Reed Barry Morse Liam Redmond
Genre : Drama Thriller

Cast List

Related Movies

The Man Between
The Man Between

The Man Between   1953

Release Date: 
1953

Rating: 7

genres: 
Thriller
Stars: 
Claire Bloom  /  James Mason  /  Hildegard Knef
Chase a Crooked Shadow
Chase a Crooked Shadow

Chase a Crooked Shadow   1958

Release Date: 
1958

Rating: 7

genres: 
Drama  /  Mystery
Stars: 
Richard Todd  /  Anne Baxter  /  Herbert Lom
Yield to the Night
Yield to the Night

Yield to the Night   1956

Release Date: 
1956

Rating: 7.1

genres: 
Drama  /  Crime
Stars: 
Diana Dors  /  Yvonne Mitchell  /  Michael Craig
They Drive by Night
They Drive by Night

They Drive by Night   1938

Release Date: 
1938

Rating: 7

genres: 
Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Emlyn Williams  /  Ernest Thesiger  /  Anna Konstam
Corridor of Mirrors
Corridor of Mirrors

Corridor of Mirrors   1948

Release Date: 
1948

Rating: 6.5

genres: 
Fantasy  /  Drama  /  Horror
Stars: 
Eric Portman  /  Edana Romney  /  Barbara Mullen
The Clouded Yellow
The Clouded Yellow

The Clouded Yellow   1951

Release Date: 
1951

Rating: 6.9

genres: 
Thriller  /  Mystery
Stars: 
Jean Simmons  /  Trevor Howard  /  Sonia Dresdel
Never Let Go
Never Let Go

Never Let Go   1963

Release Date: 
1963

Rating: 7.1

genres: 
Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Richard Todd  /  Peter Sellers  /  Elizabeth Sellars
Cosh Boy
Cosh Boy

Cosh Boy   1953

Release Date: 
1953

Rating: 6.1

genres: 
Drama  /  Crime
Stars: 
James Kenney  /  Joan Collins  /  Betty Ann Davies
Blackout
Blackout

Blackout   1954

Release Date: 
1954

Rating: 6.2

genres: 
Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Dane Clark  /  Belinda Lee  /  Betty Ann Davies
Stolen Face
Stolen Face

Stolen Face   1952

Release Date: 
1952

Rating: 6

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Paul Henreid  /  Lizabeth Scott  /  André Morell
Blind Date
Blind Date

Blind Date   1959

Release Date: 
1959

Rating: 6.7

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Hardy Krüger  /  Stanley Baker  /  Micheline Presle
Obsession
Obsession

Obsession   1949

Release Date: 
1949

Rating: 7.3

genres: 
Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Robert Newton  /  Phil Brown  /  Sally Gray

Reviews

Phonearl
2018/08/30

Good start, but then it gets ruined

More
Taha Avalos
2018/08/30

The best films of this genre always show a path and provide a takeaway for being a better person.

More
Deanna
2018/08/30

There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.

More
Juana
2018/08/30

what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.

More
joe-pearce-1
2014/06/02

I am dismayed by just about all the reviews which precede mine, mainly due to the fact that they seem seriously involved with the film only when trying to psychoanalyze the title character, which simply cannot be done because the screenplay never really gets very involved in doing so; this actually makes the nuanced performances of all concerned that much more admirable and certainly does so with the direction of the film by Lance Comfort. This may not be LAWRENCE OF ARABIA, but I think the dismissal of it as a quota quickie or a British B film is a bit much. The carnival scenes alone seem to demonstrate that some expense was gone to in the film's making and, in pure size at least, compare well with those in Hitchcock's STRANGERS ON A TRAIN. And while Comfort may not be David Lean, it is obnoxious to call him, as one commentator did, the English Ed Wood, as this bespeaks a total lack of knowledge of either man's work. Comfort achieves a tremendously atmospheric production throughout, and is hampered in suspense only by the holes in the screenplay, which simply do not give any indication of what forces drive the title character. (He does similar and excellent work in BEDELIA.)As for the acting, which is excellent on everybody's part, someone complains about the 'posh' accents used in the farming family for whom the Irish girl goes to work, but he should be advised that not every farming family in England is the British equivalent of the Joads, especially in the post WW2 era. Many of those families were quite wealthy and educated - this particular family seems to have at least 15 or 20 farmhands working for them and are leaders in the community. Also, with the exception of some undeservedly nasty remarks about Maxwell Reed (who could hardly be better at playing a lowlife than what we see here), and a couple of mentions of this being Honor Blackman's first movie (actually, it was her second), the important considerations about most of the cast go unmentioned. The first may be that we get a look at a very young Barry Morse (later, of THE FUGITIVE TV fame), more importantly at the very stylish Anne Crawford, who was a fairly major English star of the day and who tragically died of leukemia at 36, and most particularly, at Siobhan McKenna, who was quite arguably the greatest Irish actress of the entire twentieth century (and certainly of the second half of it) and regarded so by critics and audiences alike, but who, with the exception of not more than a half-dozen times (mostly early on), eschewed film appearances almost entirely in favor of stage work on both sides of the Atlantic and a very occasional TV appearance. Do most of the correspondents here even know that? It would seem not. That all of this about her (and to some extent the others) goes unmentioned, while commentators waste their time with gratuitous attacks on even the unnamed wife of one of this film's stars, does not say a great deal of good about much of what appears in these reviews. This is a rock-solid film made less than it might have been by an unclear screenplay; it might have been something of a masterpiece if made by an Alfred Hitchcock, but to blame Lance Comfort for not being Alfred Hitchcock is like blaming Cary Grant for not being John Gielgud - in other words, just plain silly.

More
Spikeopath
2014/03/28

Daughter of Darkness is directed by Lance Comfort and adapted to screenplay by Max Catto from his own play titled They Walk Alone. It stars Anne Crawford, Maxwell Reed, Siobhan McKenna, George Thorpe, Barry Morse, Liam Redmond, Cyril Smith and Honor Blackman. Music is by Clifton Parker and cinematography by Stanley Pavey.Emmie Beaudine (McKenna) isn't liked by the women folk of the Irish village community where she lives. There's something about her that riles them, frightens them even. So when the women of the village round up on her keeper, the priest, she is sent off to live on a farm in a North Yorkshire county of England. Which is timely as she has had an altercation with one of the men from a travelling fair. Once at the "Tallent" family farm, Emmie settles in well and seems genuinely happy, but still some of the women folk in the vicinity view her with suspicion, and when a face from Emmie's past shows up, it's the catalyst for doom and desperation.It's an odd chiller of a movie, something of an acquired taste, it's hard to pigeonhole. Never overtly horror, noir or otherwise, it's not hard to see why some specialist genre fans have found it a disappointment. Yet if you can buy into Comfort and Catto's ethereal world there's a picture of great rewards here, a complex character study mingling with asides on sexual empowerment, even a story with supernatural leanings, the edges of which are deliberately shaded in grey. And of course there's the crime factor bulging at the seams, Emmie Beaudine a cold murderess, her rhyme and reason for being so repulsed by male sexual contact is again deliberately left floating in an emotionally distorted purgatory.Nicely photographed in black and white, the visual atmosphere is very tight to the murky themes swirling around the plot. There's also a number of memorable scenes, the hurly burly of the carnival sequences, the hauntingly troubling playing of an organ, and some super scenes featuring Thorn the Alsatian dog, a real life war hero (look him up, amazing animal) who is also very much a key character here. Strong acting performances around McKenna are a bonus (including the beautiful Blackman in her first credited role), but it is the Northern Irish actress who spellbindingly holds court, with much of her visual acting stunning in its execution.Love it or hate it, you wont be able to ignore it. 9/10

More
writers_reign
2010/04/09

If you know the name Lance Comfort today you're either 80 plus with a total recall of British 'B' pictures you saw more than half a century ago or else a film student specializing in British 'programmers' from the 40s and early 50s. Daughter Of Darkness dates from 1948 and introduced Siobhan McKenna to British film-goers, not that anyone seemed to care. In one sense acting joke Maxwell Reed enjoyed a higher profile but then he did marry Joan Collins before she decided that one non-actor was enough in any family and gave him the old heave-ho. What we have here is the old con trick; we're shown McKenna as a seemingly innocent, naive colleen in Ould Oirland, who wouldn't say boo to an erect phallus and gradually come to realize that she is a prototype serial killer before the term existed. Liam Redmond, Ann Crawford and Honor Blackman are along for the ride and those with a keen eye will note an uncanny resemblance between Maxwell Reed and another Max, Wall. Worth watching if it surfaces on the Late, Late Show but don't go out of your way.

More
lorenellroy
2007/10/16

This is a little known movie but one undeserving of the obscurity into which it has fallen ,throwing,as it does , a sharp light on the narrow mindedness and pettiness of small ,enclosed and isolated communities .The opening sequence is especially gripping and commands attention from the word go.It takes place in a church in a small ,backwater Irish community where the local women break off from their gossip to eye with undisguised loathing a younger woman ,Emily Beaudine (Siobahn Mckenna).She has the reputation of being a siren ,a temptress able to turn the heads of the men of the village .In a scene between herself and the local priest it is hinted strongly that he too feels an attraction towards Emily .To add to the miasma of gloom and oppression ,she is a talented organist but one with a fondness for the tonally darker and more plangent aspects of the instrument's tonal pallete . She is isolated within her community and young girl's warned not to associate with her .When a fair visits the village she receives the unwanted attention of Dan ,a boxer employed by the fir ,and she wounds him in self defence .She is sent away to england where she ingratiates herself with the Talent family ,until the return of Dan and the suspicion of the eldest Talent sister Beth precipitates the final tragedy Lance Comfort directs with fine use of light and shade and good use of some neat monochrome photography .The script leaves open the issue of Emily's true nature giving a pleasing ambiguity to proceedings and the fine ,intense performance of Siobahn Mckenna makes her relatively sparse engagement with the movies a matter to be regretted This is no masterpiece but it is a subtle ,ambiguous picture that should be better known

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now