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The Chalk Garden

  • 1964
  • Approved
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Deborah Kerr, Hayley Mills, and John Mills in The Chalk Garden (1964)
An elderly woman hires a governess with a mysterious past to look after her disturbed and spoiled teenage granddaughter, who eventually understands the meaning of self-sacrifice, as an example of love, and grows into a better person.
Play trailer2:50
1 Video
58 Photos
DramaMystery

An elderly woman hires a governess with a mysterious past to look after her disturbed, spoiled teenage granddaughter, who eventually understands the meaning of self-sacrifice as an example o... Read allAn elderly woman hires a governess with a mysterious past to look after her disturbed, spoiled teenage granddaughter, who eventually understands the meaning of self-sacrifice as an example of love and grows into a better person.An elderly woman hires a governess with a mysterious past to look after her disturbed, spoiled teenage granddaughter, who eventually understands the meaning of self-sacrifice as an example of love and grows into a better person.

  • Director
    • Ronald Neame
  • Writers
    • John Michael Hayes
    • Enid Bagnold
  • Stars
    • Deborah Kerr
    • Hayley Mills
    • John Mills
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ronald Neame
    • Writers
      • John Michael Hayes
      • Enid Bagnold
    • Stars
      • Deborah Kerr
      • Hayley Mills
      • John Mills
    • 34User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
    • 61Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 3 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:50
    Official Trailer

    Photos58

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    Top cast9

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    Deborah Kerr
    Deborah Kerr
    • Miss Madrigal
    Hayley Mills
    Hayley Mills
    • Laurel
    John Mills
    John Mills
    • Maitland
    Edith Evans
    Edith Evans
    • Mrs. St. Maugham
    Felix Aylmer
    Felix Aylmer
    • Judge McWhirrey
    Elizabeth Sellars
    Elizabeth Sellars
    • Olivia
    Lally Bowers
    Lally Bowers
    • Anna
    Toke Townley
    • Shop Clerk
    Tonie MacMillan
    • Mrs. Williams
    • Director
      • Ronald Neame
    • Writers
      • John Michael Hayes
      • Enid Bagnold
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews34

    7.22.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8mls4182

    A great story with great actors

    This is about flawed people coming together. Haley plays an attention starved child who demands to be noticed every minute. Kerr offers her true friendship. She then offers it to the lonely strong willed grandmother. Pssst, the lady has a past.

    Beautiful British locales.
    9moonspinner55

    Terrific Hayley Mills performance

    In her A&E "Biography", it was revealed that child actress Hayley Mills apparently got her first mediocre notices from critics with this film, but I do not know why. Mills is engaging and colorful as a 16-year-old with a mind of her own: willful, stubborn, and bratty, she's wonderful on-screen. Deborah Kerr is also very fine, cool-headed and mysteriously reserved playing the new governess in an emotionally-unbalanced household run by haughty matriarch Edith Evans. Talky but entertaining, lively adaptation of Enid Bagnold's play (the title a metaphor for growing something in an improper environment). Exceptionally well-directed by Ronald Neame, who carefully allows the story to unfold like a marvelous novel--one you can get lost in. All the performers, including John Mills as the chief caretaker, are first-rate. Worth finding. ***1/2 from ****
    10timmauk

    A must to see

    It is a film about lies, stories untold, and murder. We enter seeing things one way and then at the end see it another. I am a MAJOR Hayley Mills fan and when I saw this on the AMC channel, I just had to see it. What a movie! It got drawn into it and was held to the end. Deborah Karr plays the role of a new/temp governess of a mean spirited child(Hayley) who can do nothing but lie. Something Deborah's character has in common. We watch as they both try to wear each other down. I was a little surprised to see Hayley bite into a role so unlike her others, and see how well she does. Deborah gives a great performance here as does John Mills(Hayley's real dad) as the caretaker.

    The one who really steals the show is (Dame)Edith Evans. She is fantastic. It's hard to believe that she is older than her character, yet they had to age her for the film so she would look old enough for the role!
    7JamesHitchcock

    The Green and the White

    Hayley Mills is perhaps today best known, at least in America, as the teenage heroine of the series of family-oriented comedies which she made for Disney in the 1960s. She did, however, also make a number of films in Britain, often on serious themes, and "The Chalk Garden" is one of these. (Other examples include "Tiger Bay" and "Whistle Down the Wind").

    The story is set in an old manor house in Sussex. (The house used is a real one, in the village of East Dean on the South Downs near Eastbourne). A mysterious woman calling herself Miss Madrigal arrives at the house to be interviewed for the position of governess to Laurel, the teenage granddaughter of the owner, Mrs. St Maugham. Although Miss Madrigal has no references and no previous experience as a governess, she gets the position, largely because Laurel is such a badly-behaved child that none of the other candidates can bear the thought of looking after her.

    This is, however, no comedy about an amusingly naughty girl. It soon becomes clear that Laurel's behaviour is far more than childish mischief or teenage rebellion, and that she is in fact a deeply unhappy and disturbed young woman. She seems to be preoccupied with crime, especially murder and arson, and the roots of her unhappiness appear to lie in her upbringing. Her father is dead and her mother abandoned her when she married for a second time, leaving the girl to be brought up by her imperious and eccentric grandmother, who has neglected her. Laurel's mother Olivia, however, has now reappeared and is intent on reclaiming custody of her daughter, a prospect Mrs. St Maugham views with abhorrence as she regards Olivia as an unfit mother.

    The title "The Chalk Garden" refers on a literal level to the alkaline chalky soil in Mrs. St Maugham's garden, an unsuitable medium for growing the sort of flowers which the old lady is trying to plant, especially rhododendrons which need acid soil. (In other parts of Sussex they grow like weeds). Metaphorically, it is used to suggest that Laurel, symbolically named after a plant, has also been raised in the wrong type of environment.

    The film was directed by Ronald Neame who was also responsible for "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie". In both films he makes symbolic use of colour. Here the predominant colours are green (representing the "garden" element of the title) and white (representing "chalk"). The green of the vegetation predominates in the outdoor scenes, white in the indoor ones, and many scenes feature a prominent white object- a nightdress, a glass of milk, the cliffs of Beachy Head or the Seven Sisters. Symbolically, green can be seen as symbolising youth and growth, white with innocence but also with aridity and sterility. Other colours are associated with particular characters who are often seen dressed in them- yellow with Laurel, blue with Miss Madrigal, purple (the colour of both royalty and mourning) with Mrs. St Maugham, who is both imperious and unhappy. The bright reds, pinks and oranges which played an important part in "Jean Brodie" are not much used.

    As in "Jean Brodie", Neame elicits some fine performances from his stars, especially the women. (In both films the female roles are more prominent than the male ones). Apart from three silent movies in the 1910s, Edith Evans was an actress who came late to the cinema, not making her first "talkie" until she was in her sixties, but quickly carved out a niche playing haughty upper-class ladies, most famously Lady Bracknell in "The Importance of Being Earnest". Here, as Mrs St Maugham, she shows that she could play this sort of role in serious drama as well as comedy. Deborah Kerr, as Madrigal, is suitably mysterious and inscrutable in the early scenes, more passionate in the later ones after the secret of her past (I won't say what it is) has been revealed. There is also a good contribution from Hayley's father John as the butler Maitland (who may also hide a secret of his own). John Mills also acted with his daughter in three other films, including "Tiger Bay".

    Hayley Mills is brilliant as the disturbed, unhappy Laurel, one of her best roles and a more challenging one even than Gillie in "Tiger Bay" or Cathy in "Whistle Down the Wind". Seeing this film made me all the more surprised that she did not go on to become a bigger star as an adult. This is one of a number of films in which Hayley plays a child or teenager growing up in something other than the traditional two-parent family- in "Whistle Down the Wind" she is being raised by her widowed father, in "Tiger Bay" and "Pollyanna" she is an orphan and in "The Parent Trap" she plays twin sisters whose parents are divorced.

    I would not rate this film quite as highly as "Tiger Bay", "Whistle Down the Wind", or "Jean Brodie", three of the classics of the British cinema. The plot, based upon a play by Enid Bagnold, can seem a bit too neat and schematic when the secret of the mysterious Miss Madrigal's own past is finally revealed, and there is some rather trite moralising. Nevertheless, it is a well-acted and well-photographed piece of film-making, and I am surprised that it is not better known. 7/10
    ivan-22

    One of my favorites

    I saw it for the third time, and liked it just as much as the first time. The first time I was much too young to understand the plot, but I loved Hailey Mills and the aura of doom and gloom coupled to gorgeous landscapes. This is a gorgeous movie, despite its many facial close ups (a sure sign of cinematic deterioration). Toward the end, I wiped a few tears. Ross Hunter has repeatedly delivered gorgeous movies. I am beginning to respect him.

    Mills has a rather impressive collection of movies to her credit. She deserves much more respect than she has received.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Gladys Cooper was originally named to play the role of Mrs. St. Maugham (which was eventually played by Dame Edith Evans). Evans, who had originally played the role on stage, very much wanted the movie role and had director Ronald Neame take her to meet producer Ross Hunter at Claridges Hotel. As Evans won the producer over, she got the part.
    • Goofs
      The wall clock in the kitchen where Laurel, Miss Madrigal, and Maitland discuss the judge's visit changes from 9:30 to 6:30 between shots.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Mrs. St. Maugham: [on the verge of tears] Is it a crime to want to be remembered?

      Miss Madrigal: No. The Pharaohs built the pyramids for that reason.

      Mrs. St. Maugham: What do women do in my case?

      Miss Madrigal: It wouldn't hurt to go on gardening.

      Mrs. St. Maugham: Have I've a muddle of my garden... and my heart? Will Olivia forgive me?

      Miss Madrigal: In time, perhaps.

      Mrs. St. Maugham: Would you stay with me? Would you?

      Miss Madrigal: I'll stay... as long as I'm wanted. You know, we could make this place so full of life - a good life - and people would come from everywhere to see us. What do you think?

      Mrs. St. Maugham: I must know one thing.

      Miss Madrigal: What's that?

      Mrs. St. Maugham: Did you do it?

      Miss Madrigal: What many learned men at the top of their profession couldn't find out after a long, long trial. Why should you know.

      Mrs. St. Maugham: Forty years ago, I should have said the same thing, but I warn you, before I die, I'll find out.

      [the two walk off together]

    • Connections
      Referenced in What's My Line?: Louis Armstrong (2) (1964)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 21, 1964 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Das Haus im Kreidegarten
    • Filming locations
      • Clapham House, Clapham Lane, Litlington, East Sussex, UK(House exteriors and garden)
    • Production companies
      • Quota Rentals Limited
      • Ross Hunter Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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