In an idyllic setting, a likable but dangerously volatile twelve-year-old boy tries to settle a score with his disagreeable, mysterious neighbor.In an idyllic setting, a likable but dangerously volatile twelve-year-old boy tries to settle a score with his disagreeable, mysterious neighbor.In an idyllic setting, a likable but dangerously volatile twelve-year-old boy tries to settle a score with his disagreeable, mysterious neighbor.
Nancy Reagan
- Marge Fontaine
- (as Nancy Davis)
Stanley Andrews
- Mr. Wetzell - Orange Grower
- (uncredited)
Margaret Bert
- Woman
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Ed Cassidy
- Soloway
- (uncredited)
Wayne A. Farlow
- Twin Boy
- (uncredited)
Virginia Farmer
- Mrs. Campbell
- (uncredited)
Kathleen Freeman
- Rosa - Grocery Clerk
- (uncredited)
Jon Gardner
- Boy
- (uncredited)
Donald Gordon
- Boy
- (uncredited)
Harry Hines
- Talmadge
- (uncredited)
Teddy Infuhr
- Gregory - Boy in San Sala
- (uncredited)
Charles La Torre
- Batastini - Grocer
- (uncredited)
Harry Lauter
- Clarence the Bookkeeper
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
An old dark house in a California orange-growing community gains a mysterious tenant, and, scared on Halloween, the kids take an instant dislike to him. When the mutt belonging to one of them, Bud (Billy Gray), is later found poisoned, Bud fixes on the strange neighbor as its killer. With a November freeze threatening the crop, already restive townsfolk start to gossip, egged on by the implacable Bud. His parents, George Murphy and Nancy (Reagan) Davis -- both actors to become major forces in California and national politics in the next decade -- find him careening out of control. The story starts out as a fairly routine thriller based on a courageous (for its time) caution against McCarthyist hysteria. But then it turns into something more complex and memorable. When Bud sets off to find incriminating evidence, the tone and the images grow more gothic and evocative. John Alton's superb cinematography conjures up masterful effects from the smoke rising from the smudge-pots, the twisted branches and dark foliage, and the beclouded moonlight. (There's much in this movie that steals the thunder from Charles Laughton's solo masterpiece, the 1955 Night of the Hunter). The script deserves credit, too, for resolutely retaining the young adolescent's point of view while never stooping to condescend.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMade during the height of the Joseph McCarthy era, this film is an allegory of the anti-communist fervor that commanded America's headlines at the time. Ironically, co-star and M-G-M contract player Nancy Reagan (née Davis) previously had her career derailed when she was erroneously branded a communist in one of the many red-baiting publications of the time. She sought dispensation from the then-president of the Screen Actors Guild, Ronald Reagan. This was how they met and they married a month before this film was released.
- GoofsThe boy Robert Jr. talks to in San Sala says Dr. Mahler went missing and in October and that it was now January. However, at the end of the film, Camille speaks as if her early November birthday was very recent (remarking that Robert didn't get her a present).
- ConnectionsFeatured in Noir Alley: Talk About a Stranger (2018)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Enemy
- Filming locations
- Morey Mansion, 190 Terracina Blvd, Redlands, California, USA(House of Dr. Paul Mahler, alias Matlock in the film.)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $481,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 5 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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