by Victoria Silverwolf
For the past few years, there's been a cycle of psychological horror films starring famous actresses who are no longer young enough to be ingenues. One producer/director is mostly responsible for this trend, as we'll see. However, I believe its roots begin in a classic film nearly two decades old.
Sunset Boulevard (1950) stars Gloria Swanson, a major star in silent films and early talkies. She plays Norma Desmond, who was — guess what? — a major star in silent films. (Apparently not in early talkies.) She is also as mad as a hatter.
The film is something of a satire of Hollywood and a dark comedy (it's narrated by a dead man) but it also has elements of horror. Desmond is a grotesque caricature of a fading star who lives in a Gothic mansion that would suit the Addams Family. The final scene is as creepy as heck.
Sunset Blvd (as the title actually shows up on the screen) is a great film, but it wasn't until a dozen years later that a fellow named Robert Aldrich took the idea of casting famous actresses who were no longer young in psychological shockers and made it a fad.
1962 saw the release of What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?, based on the 1960 novel of the same name by Henry Farrell. It stars Bette Davis and Joan Crawford as sisters. Davis plays Baby Jane Hudson, a former child star. Crawford plays Blanche Hudson, whose own movie career was cut short when she was paralyzed from the waist down in an automobile accident.
The siblings now live together. Baby Jane is completely insane, dressing like a little girl and wearing outrageously heavy makeup. This unhealthy situation leads to psychological torture and, of course, murder.
The two stars play against each other very well. Hollywood gossip says they loathe each other, which may help. Davis has much the meatier role. The scene in which she sings I've Written a Letter to Daddy (His Address is Heaven Above), a sentimental number from her days as a child star, may give you nightmares.
The film was a success. Aldrich decided that there was no reason to mess around with a winning formula. He produced and directed Hush…Hush, Sweet Charlotte, released in 1964, with the same screenwriter (Lukas Heller, this time assisted by novelist Farrell) and one of the same stars. Bette Davis is back, and Joan Crawford was supposed to return also, but she was eventually replaced by Olivia de Havilland.
Davis plays Charlotte, whose lover was brutally murdered in 1927 (in an extremely gruesome and bloody scene). Decades later she's a recluse. She's blamed for the killing, but it was never officially solved. Suffice to say that de Havilland plays a cousin who shows up to help Charlotte; or does she?
Other film makers jumped on the bandwagon. William Castle, famous for his gimmicky shockers, brought us Strait-Jacket the same year. Crawford (and not Davis) returns, this time as a woman who murdered her husband and his lover with an axe. Her three-year-old daughter witnesses the crime. A shocking scene opens the film, so know what you're in for.
Crawford spends twenty years in an institution for the criminally insane. When she gets out . . . Let's just say that heads will (literally) roll.
Not to be outdone by Yanks, British production company Hammer offered Fanatic (known as Die! Die! My Darling! on this side of the pond) in 1965. This time the actress of mature years is Tallulah Bankhead, who terrorizes the woman who was going to marry her recently deceased son.
Is there murder on the way? You betcha.
This trend has become so obvious that Mad magazine came up with a spoof of it.
It's in the January 1966 issue. Track down a copy of the issue and enjoy the full parody.
Let's take a look at the latest example.
What Ever Happened To Aunt Alice?
Aldrich is back, but only as producer. The director is Lee H. Katzin, and the screenplay is by Theodore Apstein. It's based on the 1962 novel The Forbidden Garden by Ursula Curtiss.
Obviously, Aldrich is alluding to the title of his biggest success in this genre. The trailer for the film makes this clear. It's also misleading, implying that it's a whodunit. We know who the killer is right at the start.
We don't even get the opening titles until after the first murder.
Geraldine Page, who has been nominated for four Oscars, a Tony, and who has won an Emmy, has the lead role. (Not Aunt Alice; we'll get to her later.) The film begins with her discovery that her recently deceased husband left her nearly penniless.
The new widow.
She doesn't even own her palatial home, so she moves to an isolated house in the American Southwest. (The film is unusual in having a sunny desert setting instead of the usual dark and spooky one.)
We find out right away that she has a habit of hiring housekeepers, convincing them to let her invest their savings, murdering them, burying them in her garden, keeping the loot, and making up some story about how the servants left.
Not the first victim, but the one that gets the plot going.
Some time after this latest killing, Ruth Gordon, fresh from her Oscar-winning performance in Rosemary's Baby, shows up and applies for the job. (She's Aunt Alice, but we don't find out who she's the aunt of for a while.)
Aunt Alice and the desert landscape.
Aunt Alice has her own secret, but let's not give too much away. Suffice to say that events threaten to unravel Page's little scheme. The arrival of a young widow and her pre-teen nephew in the abandoned house nearby, the only one for miles around, adds complications.
There's also a dog that's very interested in the Forbidden Garden.
Aunt Alice snoops around, for a reason we'll discover later. She finds evidence of Page's crimes.
A letter written to the victim we saw above.
Not quite as gruesome as some others of its kind — it almost looks like a made-for-TV movie at times — this is an enjoyable thriller. There are a lot of other characters I haven't mentioned yet, and even a love story.
But Page and Gordon are the whole show. The interaction between these two gifted actresses is a joy to behold. Page is imperious, haughty, sarcastic, and ruthless. Gordon is down-to-earth but brave and clever.
The plot creates a great deal of suspense. It's not obvious whether or not Page will get away with it, or whether Gordon will expose her. There's a nifty bit of irony at the very end.
Four stars.
I hope you enjoyed this journey through what has become a bonafide subgenre. Who knows when the next film of this type will come out—but you can bet it'll make a killing…