Mother and daughter take some “medicine”. Image: The Mind Reels

When we were in elementary school, there was a boy who was always in trouble.

Today, we would assume the poor kid had ADHD, but he wasn’t diagnosed with such Back in the Day. We could only see a boy who Never complied with the Rules.

We felt the boy couldn’t help it, but we children often wondered why he behaved that way.

A movie from the 1950s asks the same question about a little girl. The Bad Seed (1956) stars Patty McCormack as a young girl with a Very Dark Side.

“Dark” may be an understatement, because by the time the film is done, we almost can’t believe what we’ve witnessed.

When the film opens, we meet a Typical middle-class American family. There’s a loving husband and wife, along with their 8-year-old daughter. Alas, the husband is in the military and is absent for most of the film. This leaves the mother (Nancy Kelly) to raise McCormack alone.

McCormack is brilliant as a girl who specializes in fooling adults. She acts like a respectful child around her parents and neighbours, but there’s something Off about her. She’s almost robotic in her responses.

We quickly realize the girl has an antisocial personality disorder – to put it mildly – who uses her mother’s blind love as a shield.

A classmate’s mother wants answers. Image: IMDb

After the accidental drowning of McCormack’s classmate at a school picnic, Kelly starts to wonder about her daughter. McCormack displays no curiosity or grief over the boy’s death, even though she publicly fought with him and was the last person to see him alive.

But Kelly sweeps away any suspicions: The girl is in shock, she doesn’t understand, the boy had an accident, these things happen.

There are two adults, however, who have Real Doubts concerning McCormack.

One is Eileen Heckart who, in a heartbreaking performance, plays the dead boy’s mother. Heckart keeps pestering McCormack because she senses the girl knows why her son died.

Heckart has two scenes, and her character is drunk in both. Even inebriated, she knows something doesn’t Add Up. But we do not judge her. Her grief is so enormous, it’s paralyzing.

The other person who has doubts about McCormack is a maintenance man, played by Henry Jones.

Jones’s character is slimy and creepy, and Kelly warns McCormack to stay away. McCormack shrugs it off; she thinks she can handle Jones. However, the maintenance man sees through her façade and accuses her of murdering her classmate.

He taunts her, to his peril.

It’s not until Kelly realizes McCormack has been present at three fatal accidents, that she begins to Piece Things Together.

Then she’s slapped with another horrible truth. She discovers she herself was adopted at a very young age because her birth mother was a serial killer.

Kelly wrestles with several questions. Why is her daughter the way she is? Are her destructive tendencies a product of heredity or environment?

And: Did did she pass along a bad gene to her daughter?

The maintenance man isn’t fooled. Image: Vagebond’s Movie Screen Shots

The Bad Seed is flawed and dated and fascinating.

It’s one of those novel-becomes-Broadway-play-becomes-movie endeavours, which usually turn out well, but there are some cringing scenes here. Kelly, in reprising her Broadway role, doesn’t seem to realize Film is different than Stage, and her overly theatrical gestures look ridiculous.

The movie is best when it takes the action outside, especially in the scenes where McCormack and Jones Square Off. Their onscreen antagonism is the best part of the movie, with each one believing they can outsmart the other.

McCormack is perfect as the troubling child. Her mood darts between charm and fury, and she’s believable in both.

This film (and novel and stage play) must have been shocking for the 1950s. After all, to have a child – a girl – as such an evil character would have been most unusual. Yet, it was one of the biggest films of the year for Warner Bros.

Should you see The Bad Seed? Yes, but know when it’s slow it drags, especially when McCormack is absent from the screen. The movie feels aimless without her.

This is a contribution to BLOGATHON & THE BEAST hosted by the Classic Movie Blog Association.

The Bad Seed: starring Nancy Kelly, Patty McCormack, Gage Clark. Directed by Mervyn LeRoy. Written by John Lee Mahin, Maxwell Anderson & William March. Warner Bros., 1956, B&W, 129 mins.

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