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Bunny Lake Is Missing

  • 1965
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Bunny Lake Is Missing (1965)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer3:26
2 Videos
88 Photos
DramaMysteryThriller

A woman reports that her young daughter is missing, but there seems to be no evidence that she ever existed.A woman reports that her young daughter is missing, but there seems to be no evidence that she ever existed.A woman reports that her young daughter is missing, but there seems to be no evidence that she ever existed.

  • Director
    • Otto Preminger
  • Writers
    • John Mortimer
    • Penelope Mortimer
    • Marryam Modell
  • Stars
    • Keir Dullea
    • Carol Lynley
    • Laurence Olivier
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Otto Preminger
    • Writers
      • John Mortimer
      • Penelope Mortimer
      • Marryam Modell
    • Stars
      • Keir Dullea
      • Carol Lynley
      • Laurence Olivier
    • 138User reviews
    • 87Critic reviews
    • 77Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 BAFTA Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:26
    Trailer
    Bunny Lake Is Missing: The First Day Room
    Clip 1:44
    Bunny Lake Is Missing: The First Day Room
    Bunny Lake Is Missing: The First Day Room
    Clip 1:44
    Bunny Lake Is Missing: The First Day Room

    Photos88

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Keir Dullea
    Keir Dullea
    • Steven Lake
    Carol Lynley
    Carol Lynley
    • Ann Lake
    Laurence Olivier
    Laurence Olivier
    • Superintendent Newhouse
    Martita Hunt
    Martita Hunt
    • Ada Ford
    Anna Massey
    Anna Massey
    • Elvira Smollett
    Clive Revill
    Clive Revill
    • Police Sgt. Andrews
    Finlay Currie
    Finlay Currie
    • Doll Maker
    Lucie Mannheim
    Lucie Mannheim
    • Cook
    The Zombies
    The Zombies
    • The Zombies
    Noël Coward
    Noël Coward
    • Horacio Wilson
    Adrienne Corri
    Adrienne Corri
    • Dorothy
    Megs Jenkins
    Megs Jenkins
    • Sister
    Delphi Lawrence
    Delphi Lawrence
    • 1st Mother
    Jill Melford
    • Teacher
    Suzanne Neve
    Suzanne Neve
    • 2nd Mother
    Damaris Hayman
    Damaris Hayman
    • Daphne Mushgrave
    Jane Evers
    • Policewoman
    Lisa Peake
    • Undetermined Secondary Role
    • Director
      • Otto Preminger
    • Writers
      • John Mortimer
      • Penelope Mortimer
      • Marryam Modell
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews138

    7.310.9K
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    Featured reviews

    Poseidon-3

    Unfairly obscure piece of psychological mystery

    Taciturn director Preminger created here an atmospheric, beautifully shot film of mystery and oddity. Though it isn't 100% satisfying, it remains quite entertaining and visually arresting. Lynley, a newcomer to London, England, takes her four year-old daughter to nursery school and, in a hurry to meet movers at her new flat, briefly leaves the child in the custody of a rather unfriendly cook. Later, the cook has quit and the child is gone. Worse, no one seems to have ever known about the child or has ever even seen her except Lynley and Dullea. No tangible trace of the child seems to exist! Olivier is brought in to head up the investigation and scours all the various clues and suspects, all while trying to determine if there even IS a child to be searching for. The film kicks off with famously innovative Saul Bass titles and sets its contrived, but fascinating story in motion with skill. Lynley manages to come off rather well in a difficult role. Dullea is also strong in a part that never gets completely fleshed out. Olivier is reliably commanding and slick and offers a lesson in understated excellence. These performers are surrounded by a lustrous galaxy of terrific British character actors. Most notable is the delicious Hunt as the vaguely sinister, yet delightful headmistress of the school. Massey is also excellent as a frustrated teacher. Coward pops up as a creepy landlord with designs on Lynley. It is not easy to watch the somewhat disintegrated legend put the moves on her. Many other great people show up and, even if they don't get a moment of glory, their participation adds greatly to the class and feel of the film. A sense of dread and uncertainty hangs over the movie as the viewer is never exactly sure what is going on. As stylish and intriguing as the film is, certain sections drag on a bit too long, none more so than the climax, in which Lynley must fend off the villain of the piece and seems to go out of her way NOT to escape or harm the person, at times. Even with this and other gripes (like a needless, annoying and intrusive "appearance" from The Zombies), the film is well worth watching and deserves a better availability and reputation than it currently accords.
    9lucy-19

    Great British movie

    Stuffed with wonderful character actors and recognisably shabby locations - like the little school in an old house where the cook is making junket (whatever happened to junket?). Her accent is familiar: she once played a beautiful spy in 39 Steps, warning of leaking "secrets vital to your air defence". After many viewings, it's easy to forget that it's a mystery and everyone is a suspect. Has Bunny been abducted by sinister Martita Hunt (the slightly dotty founder of the school)? Or creepy Noel Coward (the landlord)? The Zombies song "Just Out of Reach" keeps being reprised.

    They were more famous, though, for a song called "She's Not There". How's that for intertextuality? The script is by John and Penelope Mortimer. John is famous for the Rumpole series, and Laurence Olivier's detective has echoes of Rumpole, muttering that bus conductors never notice anything - they are dreamers and philosophers. Noel Coward's character too is very Mortimerian: "There are many at the BBC who bear bruises left by the love of Horatio Wilson." Mortimer reveres Shakespeare and Conan Doyle and sometimes it shows.

    The plot is stuffed, sometimes clunkily, with issues that were only just beginning to be spoken about: perversion (in the person of whip-wielding Horatio), teen pregnancy (Anne Lake seems about 20), unmarried motherhood and abortion. Anne chose to have her baby and raise it on her own. This is still a difficult course of action, but in 1965 it was groundbreaking, especially if you were - as she is - middle class.
    8blanche-2

    The imaginary world of children

    Sir Laurence Olivier, Carol Lynley, Keir Dullea and Noel Coward star in "Bunny Lake is Missing," a 1965 black and white British film directed by Otto Preminger.

    A young woman, Ann Lake (Lynley) and her brother Steven (Dullea) report the woman's little girl, nicknamed Bunny, missing when she can't be found at her school on her first day of class. The detective in charge, Supt. Newhouse (Olivier) soon finds out that Bunny's things are disappearing from the new apartment where she, her mother and uncle live, and Newhouse begins to wonder if Bunny ever existed at all.

    This is a dark, atmospheric film that takes the viewer into an adult world where a child's fantasy life is explored and often accepted - the cofounder of the school on its top floor listening to children's dreams on tape as she writes a book about children's fantasies; the man who runs the doll hospital; and Ann herself, who had an imaginary friend as a child called Bunny, named after a character in a book.

    Is Bunny Lake missing? Was there ever a Bunny Lake? Is Steven trying to cover for his sister? "Bunny Lake is Missing" is very offbeat and will make you uneasy as you, along with Newhouse, try to figure out what's going on.

    The acting is very good - Olivier obviously did this role for money - there is nothing particularly interesting about it, though he does a good job. The pretty Lynley gives an ambiguous performance - she's either a grieving mother, a nut, or both, and Dullea is equally ambiguous - does he know more than he says he does? Is he placating his sister?

    Noel Coward has a showy if small role as the Lake's landlord, a rather strange bird into S&M who proudly shows one of the detectives the skull of the Marquis de Sade.

    Though not entirely satisfying, this is a great movie to see on a Sunday afternoon. It takes you right into the darkness of London and leaves you there as it travels through a child's strange world and comes out in illusion? Reality? Or madness?
    8moonspinner55

    More surprising than the outcome is how well Carol Lynley holds her own against Laurence Olivier!

    Carol Lynley does some fabulous work here as American woman newly arrived in England whose little daughter is apparently kidnapped from school on her first day. The catch is, nobody knows the child and Lynley is having trouble proving she even exists! Terrific mystery from director Otto Preminger, an uneven filmmaker who does strong work just up to the finale (which is somewhat anti-climactic). Laurence Olivier is the police inspector on the case and he's very smooth, cunning and yet sympathetic to Lynley. There are some mod overtures which seem misplaced, and Noël Coward has a gratuitous bit as Carol's drunken landlord (and BBC celebrity!), yet the film does have many sharp bits of minute detail, intriguing and funny supporting characters, terrific cinematography and locations. Does it all add up? No, but it's inscrutable fun nevertheless. *** from ****
    8warrenk-2

    Haunted Art

    I saw "Bunny Lake Is Missing" for the second time last night at San Francisco's Castro Theatre. The first time was also at the Castro twelve years ago during an Otto Preminger festival. Preminger made a number of better films – "Laura" and "Anatomy of a Murder" come to mind – but I have a special fondness for "Bunny Lake" even though at times it drags and is overly talky.

    Among the merits of casting Carol Lynley and Keir Dullea, it can be successfully argued that they look like siblings – often not the case in films – which works very well for this film, as does their ethereal out-of-body quality.

    Criticism has been made that the role of Ann Lake was written one dimensionally and therefore offered Lynley little to do but weep and whine; but this may have been Preminger's intention to support that part of the plot that suggests Ann may not have a daughter and that Ann herself may be more than a bit unbalanced.

    Dullea is an unusual looking actor who can photograph good looking or simply strange. Preminger used this well early in the film, although he seemed to lose subtlety as the narrative headed towards its denouement.

    The film's superior black-and-white widescreen photography is one of its strengths. London locations and interiors are effective and impressive. I especially liked the doll hospital cellar sequence with Lynley holding an oil lamp as she moves about, the high angle shot of the backyard the begins the final sequence, and several sequences when characters pass quickly from one room to another.

    The sexual subtext is not as hidden as it would have been in the 50s, but subtler, say, than after 1970; its ambiguity adds to the film's texture without getting in the way.

    In fact, 1965 seems a perfect time for this film to have appeared since the cinematic fulcrum was still well placed to balance a filmmaker from older Hollywood who also enjoyed pushing the envelope. A little bit later, color photography would have been mandatory, and the characterizations would have moved into a much more bizarre, psychedelic arena.

    Perhaps because of how its strengths and weaknesses combine, the film has a seductive, haunting integrity for me. As the film began with the Saul Bass titles and Paul Glass's score, I felt a pleasurable sensation of awe which I used to feel more often when seeing a movie, and which reoccurred a number of times in "Bunny Lake".

    Try to see this film on a large theater screen to experience the full power of the black-and-white widescreen cinematography. Otherwise, view the letterbox DVD on a screen large enough to allow you to see details. There is much to enjoy in "Bunny Lake Is Missing", so don't miss out.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      It was Keir Dullea's performance in this movie that led to Stanley Kubrick choosing him to play his most famous role of Dave Bowman in 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). He didn't even have to audition; Kubrick simply asked him if he wanted the role, and he said yes.
    • Goofs
      Steven uses the fuel from the oil lamp to light the doll's hair on fire. However, he should have burnt his hand when pulling off the glass chimney which would have been very hot.
    • Quotes

      Newhouse: Bus conductors are rarely observant. They tend to be dreamers, philosophers, that sort of thing. Self protection I suppose.

    • Crazy credits
      The names in the opening credits are revealed by a hand tearing away parts of the black background as if it were paper, revealing the names printed beneath on a white background.
    • Connections
      Featured in Preminger: Anatomy of a Filmmaker (1991)
    • Soundtracks
      Just Out of Reach
      Written by Colin Blunstone

      Performed by The Zombies

      Played on the television in the pub and later on the radio

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    • Are viewers cued at the beginning of the movie as to whether or not Bunny exists?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 15, 1965 (Canada)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bunny Lake ist verschwunden
    • Filming locations
      • Warrington Arms - 93 Warrington Crescent, Maida Vale, London, England, UK(Pub)
    • Production company
      • Wheel Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 47m(107 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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