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IMDbPro

L'enfant

Original title: The Child
  • 1977
  • R
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
4.9/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
L'enfant (1977)
A newly hired housekeeper arrives to her employer's house in the countryside. She slowly discovers that the only child in the house, an eleven-year-old girl, hides a deadly secret.
Play trailer2:21
1 Video
20 Photos
Horror

A newly hired housekeeper arrives to her employer's house in the countryside. She slowly discovers that the only child in the house, an eleven-year-old girl, hides a deadly secret.A newly hired housekeeper arrives to her employer's house in the countryside. She slowly discovers that the only child in the house, an eleven-year-old girl, hides a deadly secret.A newly hired housekeeper arrives to her employer's house in the countryside. She slowly discovers that the only child in the house, an eleven-year-old girl, hides a deadly secret.

  • Director
    • Robert Voskanian
  • Writer
    • Ralph Lucas
  • Stars
    • Laurel Barnett
    • Rosalie Cole
    • Frank Janson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.9/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Voskanian
    • Writer
      • Ralph Lucas
    • Stars
      • Laurel Barnett
      • Rosalie Cole
      • Frank Janson
    • 47User reviews
    • 49Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

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    Trailer 2:21
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    Photos20

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    Top cast13

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    Laurel Barnett
    • Alicianne Del Mar
    Rosalie Cole
    Rosalie Cole
    • Rosalie Nordon
    Frank Janson
    • Nordon
    Richard Hanners
    • Len Nordon
    Ruth Ballan
    • Mrs. Whitfield
    • (as Ruth Ballen)
    Slosson Bing Jong
    • Gardener
    Rod Medigovich
    • Priest…
    Wendell Hudiburg
    • Pall Bearer
    Chris Tieken
    • Jefferson
    Ralph Lucas
    • Creature
    Jim Dickson
    • Creature
    Chick Cavanaugh
    • Creature
    Anoosh Avan
    • Creature
    • Director
      • Robert Voskanian
    • Writer
      • Ralph Lucas
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    4.91.5K
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    Featured reviews

    5Coventry

    Not bad but way too weird

    A pretty lady is hired as the nanny of a spooky little girl called Rosalie. The girl is a bit of a loner, mostly hanging out in the woods that surround her house and grieving over her dead mother. Thing totally go awry when Rosalie starts to act more and more like a little psychopath, drawing morbid pictures of her family and hiring her "friends" from the woods to kill people that get in her way. There's some eerie atmosphere in "The Child" as well as some ominous guiding music and macabre scenery. The pacing is slow, though, and there's much too much weirdness going on that remains unexplained. The kid is okay, I guess, but not half as creepy as the juvenile murderers in "The Children", "Bloody Birthday" or "Village of the Damned". The budget obviously was very limited, resulting in poor editing and cheesy make-up effects. Not a bad little movie, but you'll forget about it pretty soon.
    ericdetrick2002

    bread and butter 70s drive in horror

    When I say the "bread and butter" of 70s drive-in horror, I mean movies like this one came and went, forgotten and/or never seen by the majority. But it was films like this that kept drive-ins and smaller movie houses in business. I am so

    thankful for the age of the DVD. With the DVD era, companies such as Anchor

    Bay, Something Weird Video (Image), Blue Underground, Shriek Show, and

    many others have brought back lost cult classics (and not so cult classics) so that new generations can discover them, and the older generations can

    rediscover them.

    "The Child" has all the right ingredients for a b-horror movie. A little bit of homemade special effect gore, a soundtrack that gives you the creeps, zombies, and it set in the countryside. It may have it's slow parts, but the final 20 minutes or so deliver the goods in fine 70s b-grade fashion. You will be getting startled one minute, then laughing the next (unintentionally of course).
    bob wolf

    Great For A Cold Dark Night!

    If you can get around the horrible soundtrack and cheap special effects you might actually like this movie. I did.

    It's sort of a Carrie meets The Night Of The Living Dead clone about a little girl who lives with her father and brother in some isolated backwoods community. She spends her nights at the graveyard deep in the woods behind her house.

    A sitter arrives from the big city to help take care of the little girl and soon discovers the rash of killings in the community might have something to do with the 12-year old. When the sitter realizes that the little girl has the power to move and animate inanimate objects it becomes crystal clear about just what she has been doing at the graveyard all those nights.

    I adored this movie. The title Kill and Go Hide conjured up so many idea's in my mind that I just had to see it and I wasn't disappointed. It is heavy on the cheese factor in some scenes and actually quite frightening in others. There is a scene where the babysitter awakens from a slumber at four a.m. and looks out her window at a scarecrow hanging on a post. What came next kind of gave me a chill. I also enjoyed the stormy grave side promise from the little girl to her deceased mother. "I promise you, they'll pay."
    Krug Stillo

    You have to love these rarely seen obscurities

    `A powerful combination of the evil-child subgenre and the Zombie Movie' Aurum Encyclopaedia of Horror

    `Zombie Child has it all: Murderous kids, cannibal zombies and lashings of gore. Another unbelievably ghoulish offering from the legendary Harry Novak.' David Flint. Divinity

    To sum up Zombie Child in two words, cheap and weird. What do you expect from producer Harry Novak? For those who are familiar with the ‘Sultan of sexploitation's work, you may remember his other horror productions, Axe, Mantis in Lace and The Mad Butcher. Don't let this put you off. Zombie Child does have the occasionally atmospheric scene or effective sets to redeem it.

    Alicianne Del Mar (played by the lovely Laurel Barnett) arrives in the heart of the forestry to look after the difficult child, Rosalie. Her has broken down and she is now stranded. What are those creatures wandering around the grounds at night? Why does everybody act so strangely? It transpires that Rosalie's mother has recently died and ever since her departure, her only daughter has found comfort visiting the nearby graveyard at night. She admits that the ‘things' in the woods don't scare her because they are her ‘friends'. Alicianne soon realises that these ‘friends' are the murderous zombies who have killed everyone that have, in some way, annoyed the spoilt little girl. The climax involves the old favourite boarding up every possible entry as the horde of ghouls gather around an old mill to get at Alicianne.

    Zombie Child is so peculiar, not to mention obscure and hard to find, you end up liking the film. The eerie misty cemetery scenes and some of the murders are quite well executed for a film whose low budget is obvious in every shot. You even begin to appreciate the silly looking zombies who appear like they've wondered in off the set of the terribly cheesy Astro-Zombies (Ted V. Mikels, 1969).

    If you manage to find this old gem, I recommend you check it out. Just wait until you see the acting of the nosy neighbour. Especially in the scene preceding her death. I wonder what was her motivation...
    thomandybish

    Run-of-the-mill no budget pap

    Despite an interesting premise, this film doesn't deliver. Attempted as a period piece(probably because someone was able to get a-hold of some vintage 1930's cars)set in the 30s/40s, this flick involves a young housekeeper hired by a farmer to care for his house and young daughter after his wife's death. The daughter, Rosalie, apparently shares a penchance for telekenesis with her departed mother, and uses her unusual mental powers to reanimate putrid corpses and use them to hack apart people she doesn't like. The naive young housekeeper gradually becomes aware of Rosalie's strange abilities and eventually runs afoul of the little girl's graveyard friends!

    This film doesn't really succeed in the period detail department, primarily because the housekeeper spends nine-tenths of the movie in peasant dresses, not exactly the going fashion in 1939 or whenever this movie was supposed to be set. A quibble to be sure, but come on, the wardrobe people could have tried more. The flick does have some nice atmosphere, with dark woods, brooding sunsets, and lots of dark interior shots. And there is a half-baked attempt to establish a romance between the housekeeper and the farmer's adult son. Nothing in the way of camp or bad acting to recommend it, but probably not a bad way to kill ninety minutes

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      All the dialogue for this movie was dubbed in post-production.
    • Goofs
      Len's hairstyle and clothing do not match the film's 1930s setting.
    • Quotes

      Rosalie Nordon: My friends are going to come and hurt you both! Hurt you bad!

    • Alternate versions
      The German DVD released by Best Entertainment in 2004 is listed as and has a running time of 85 mins. However the longer running time is due to a time expansion (meaning the film print was slowed down). It has nothing extra and the content is exactly the same as the US VHS tape with the following two exceptions- The opening title sequence is a little different in the way the credits appear and that it has some added wind sound effect playing in the background (which you can hear was from the film print and not something added as a new sound effect). Also towards the end when the zombies attack, our two main characters are fighting one by a saw mill type building where the zombie gets stabbed with a wooden stake. The US version then shows a far away shot of our two heroes running around to the front of the saw mill building before her leg breaks through a floorboard in the front. The German dvd omits this long shot, so after the zombie is stabbed it cuts to them already in the front of the building a second before her leg goes through the floorboard.
    • Connections
      Featured in Movie Macabre: Kill and Go Hide (1986)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 1977 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Child
    • Filming locations
      • Boyle Heights, Los Angeles, California, USA(filming location)
    • Production company
      • Panorama Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $30,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 22m(82 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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