Movies That Inspired My Childhood
Based on the similarly titled book by Frances Hodgson Burnett, the story follows young Mary Lenox, recently orphaned in India to very self-centered parents. She travels back to England to the dismal and wintery Misselthwaite Manor, home of her uncle Lord Craven. Whilst adjusting to life in the manor, she discovers her cousin, hidden away out of sight. She also discovers the closed-up gardens that once belonged to her Aunt, her Mothers twin sister, which she brings back to life with the help of Dickon, her maid's brother and her cousin. Together, they help break the melancholic spell that holds over the Manor and the deep mourning still gripping tight to Uncle Craven.
I remember when I first saw this movie and how I came to own it. It used to be the common thing for me and my Father to pop to town on a Saturday and he would get me a video to watch from W.H Smiths, to keep me entertained on a Saturday afternoon. I remember picking this movie out and watching it and absolutely loving it! I recalled reading the book in primary school too. The story was beautiful, the music was beautiful. It was one of the movies that got me loving period/costume dramas so much and it's a movie I still enjoy to this day without getting bored of it. I also think it was the first movie, other than Hook, that I saw with Dame Maggie Smith.
Set in 1870s Northern England, young Annabella has no idea her family hides a terrible secret that must be kept from her and everyone outside the family estate; even the servants are threatened into silence. When the secret comes out as Annabella grows into a young woman, she runs away from home, aided by her Fathers exotic Spanish/Irish groomsman, Manuel Mendoza (Brendal Coyle). Now living as a worker, Annabella must learn to put all her education and lady-like upbringing aside, fighting for survival amongst the poor class. Nobody truly understands her but Manuel and soon nothing would ever keep them apart.
Evil Queen Bavmorda seeks to kill a newborn girl bearing a certain birthmark which would been the sign of her undoing. The child that has the mark would be the new Queen and overthrow the evil sorceress and dispel all her tyranny throughout the kingdom. When a captured peasant woman gives birth to a beautiful red-haired baby girl with the birthmark, she finds a way to get the baby to safety and unwittingly the baby is found by Willow, a halfling or "peck", floating down the river by his village. The halfling villagers, being spooked by the baby of the "tall people" and what her presence might cause, decide that Willow, with the help of the village's bravest warriors, would seek to find a place for the baby amongst her own kind. Things of course do not go according to plan and Willow, now accompanied by the rogue Madmartigan and two clumsy brownies, battle to keep the baby safe from those trying to take her back to Bavmorda.
With how Iconic this treasured 80's movie is, I'd be very shocked and surprised if you did not know it, especially the well-known song "Magic Dance". The movie features songs performed by David Bowie himself and intentionally romanticizes the bad guy vibe, hinting that there is an attraction to the characters. This is another movie that was watched by my whole family over the years and kept young me very entertained. The songs from the movie are still popular to this day.
The Amazing Mr Blunden (1972)
Set in 1917 England, mysterious Mr Blunder visits Mrs Allenn and her three children in their run-down basement flat in London, offering them the opportunity to live and work at Langley Park, a derelict crumbling manor house. He tells them to visit the Solicitors office but when there, they are informed that Mr Blunden has been ill in bed and was senile and had been so for some time. They also discover a painting which the clerk informs them is the Great Grandfather of the current Mr Blunder; the living image of the old man who visited them. So who came to their house? Despite this strange circumstance, they accept the job and move to the small cottage which adjoins the manor house. The two eldest children Benjamine and Lucy hear local gossip from Villagers about how the Manor came to be so ruined and then, one day, they are met by the ghosts of two children, Georgie and Sara. Georgie and Sara inform them they are not ghosts but came from the past and explained how the Mother of their Uncle's Wife plotted their death, for young Georgie would inherit a vast amount of money on his coming of age. They ask Lucy and Bejamine to prevent their deaths and change the past, so the pair go back in time and meet old Mr Blunden, but will they change the past?
My Mother loved this movie as a girl so naturally, she introduced us kids to the movie too over the years. It's a beautiful story and was made in the same style/era as The Railway Children (1970). It's a family movie/story based on the novel "The Ghosts" by Antonia Barber. The movie has loveable and comical characters without feeling too much hatred for the protagonists. The twist at the ending is lovely and pulls the whole movie together.
Like The Secret Garden (See Above), this was a movie my Father bought me on VHS on one of our weekly Saturday jaunts in town, to help pass away the afternoon. I live in the North, close to the Yorkshire Dales, so as a child I could imagine seeing places like those in the movie. I knew about Sir Arthur as my Father loves Sherlock Holmes Mysteries. It was a lovely movie to watch and the fact it was based on true events really captured me.
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