Bunny Lake Is Missing with Carol Lynley: DVD Cover

    Bunny Lake Is Missing Director: Otto Preminger Cast: Carol Lynley, Keir Dullea, Laurence Olivier, Noël Coward

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    • DVD Release Date: 01/25/2005
    • Original Release: 1965
    • Rating: Not Rated
    • Sales Rank: 13,759
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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
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    Scene Index

    Side #1 --
    1. Start [8:35]
    2. Little People's Garden [10:28]
    3. Little Nightmares [6:34]
    4. Supt. Newhouse [10:22]
    5. "It's Like a Nightmare" [9:53]
    6. Non-Existent? [7:13]
    7. Extremely Seductive [7:46]
    8. Brandy & Zombies [9:07]
    9. Dolls [9:07]
    10. Under Observations [8:28]
    11. "She's Always There Between Us" [9:51]
    12. Madness [9:28]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Based on the mystery novel by Marryam Modell (using the pseudonym Evelyn Piper), Bunny Lake Is Missing is a bizarre study in motherhood, kindness, enigma, and insanity. Ann Lake (Carol Lynley), an American freshly relocated to England, wishes to drop off her daughter Bunny for the girl's first day at a new nursery school. Oddly, Ann cannot locate any teachers or administrators, only the school's disgruntled cook (Lucie Mannheim). She is forced to leave Bunny unsupervised in the building's "first day" room, under the reassurance that the cook will be responsible for the child. When Ann returns in the afternoon, the cook has quit and Bunny Lake is missing. The school's remaining employees vehemently deny ever seeing the child, and Ann desperately calls her older brother Stephen (Keir Dullea) for help. Ann was raised fatherless and never married; she and Bunny have lived under Stephen's care and protection for the majority of both their lives. Stephen is enraged by the irresponsibility of the staff, but as Scotland Yard begins its investigation, it comes to light that he had never officially enrolled a child at the school. When Police Superintendent Newhouse (Laurence Olivier) begins to unravel the Lakes' lives and search their belongings, he discovers that not only did Ann once have an imaginary childhood daughter named "Bunny", but that the young Bunny seemed to have no tangible possessions at the Lake apartment. Bunny Lake (whom we have yet to see onscreen) may not be missing: she may not even be real. Terrified that Newhouse will now abandon the search for the girl, the hysterical Ann sets out to prove her sanity and, in the process, surprisingly uncovers the true psychosis behind the disappearance of her little Bunny Lake. ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, All Movie Guide All Movie Guide

    Customer Reviews

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    Bunny Lake Is Missingby Anonymous

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    July 25, 2005: This fascinating mystery has been made in the tradition of Otto Preminger's classic "Laura", that established him as a top director in the late Forties. Since it would not be fair to spoil the film by revealing much of the story and particularly the ending, let's say only that Bunny Lake is a small girl, who turns up missing in London. At least, so her mother says. "Bunny Lake is Missing" is handsome, well- acted (especially by Sir Laurence Olivier and Carol Lynley - possibly her best performance) and exciting a slick melodrama from an exceptionally well-written screenplay by Penelope Mortimer, and a memorable music score by Paul Glass. Creamy smooth suspense with a genuinely intriguing premise.