Psychological drama, set in a boys Boarding School, dealing with the after effects of a sexual harassment charge against one of the teachers.Psychological drama, set in a boys Boarding School, dealing with the after effects of a sexual harassment charge against one of the teachers.Psychological drama, set in a boys Boarding School, dealing with the after effects of a sexual harassment charge against one of the teachers.
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- Aunt Mildred
- (as Marjery Mason)
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- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
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- TriviaClive Endersby receives an "introducing" credit
- Quotes
Elizabeth Hemming: That girl must go.
John Hemming: Oh, why?
Elizabeth Hemming: Isn't it obvious?
John Hemming: Seems perfectly adequate.
Elizabeth Hemming: Hm Perfectly - for a brothel. Happens to be a boys' boarding school. Mildred should never have engaged her while I was away.
John Hemming: Mildred's been with us for years. We can hardly dismiss her niece without a good reason.
Elizabeth Hemming: Reason? Girl's a menace. This hotbed of masculine puberty.
John Hemming: I'm sure Mildred meant well.
Elizabeth Hemming: I asked her to get me a housemaid, not a budding sex symbol.
John Hemming: Is that really why you want to get rid of her?
Elizabeth Hemming: What other reason would I have?
John Hemming: The reason that she looked upon me with a moment's kindness.
Elizabeth Hemming: That's a rotten thing to say.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Ban the Sadist Videos! Part 2 (2006)
I am a fanatical lover of obscure films (my excel file of films I've seen that are not listed at all in IMDb is now over 1,400, including short films), but temporarily I met my match with WALK. It is as morbid as any horror or sex film, but without their over-the-top fun elements. Instead Brason dishes up a deadly dull concoction that makes Basil Dearden's trailblazing VICTIM look like a delirious Ken Russell opus by comparison.
Picture starts disarmingly (and deceptively) like a routine drama in the THESE THREE vein, with nasty young student Philip (played with thoroughly unconvincing American accent by failed actor -turned TV writer- Clive Endersby) accusing his favorite teacher at a boys' school in Surrey of having tried to molest him on a walk home through the woods. Nobody believes his story, including classmate Mullvaney (my fave Robert Powell, in nearly his first film role).
The teacher, Tenniel Evans, in a dour, one-note turn (looks like he's frankly uncomfortable appearing in this project, and I don't blame him), has bigger problems, because his drunk of a wife (Faith Brook, in thankless role with a capital T) is belittling him for failing to get the headmaster job, passed over after 17 years of service. He's also having to deal with ultra-sexy, underage housemaid Elaine (Georgina Simpson, easy on the eyes, and briefly moving this stuffy exercise into entertaining sexploitation mode), who comes on to him to no avail.
After this standard setup, film goes way off the rails, and I would be handing out a sh-tload of spoilers to describe the thoroughly unbelievable succession of plot twists that follow. You could hurt yourself slapping your forehead "What the f--k?" style at the number of idiotic switches to come. Suffice it to say that when Philip's mum arrives, her character and behavior make no sense at all (except to keep this potboiler boiling); there is no end of treachery afoot by not only the principals but their neighbors too; secret conspiracies and counter conspiracies, possible suicide and all sorts of nonsense ensue, leading to melodramatic reveals and about as nasty a resolution as could possibly be derived from the starting point.
Unlike VICTIM, the treatment of homosexuality here is completely unsympathetic, and I was shocked to see according to IMDb that this sludge played at the Chicago International Film Festival (thankfully I didn't attend that year!). Filmmaker Brason had an apprenticeship working on a nudist camp film, and based on his non-achievement here, he belongs in the Pete Walker school of soft porn. But watching WALK is like watching porn with all the fun (naughty to you Brits) bits removed -sheer self-torture.
Apart from seeing Robert Powell for about a minute, and catching Miss Simpson in her only feature film role of any substance, this is unwatchable. I made it to the end and was in a sour mood for the rest of the evening - its downbeat finish is as morbid as the tackiest of horror or porn films.