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Mandy
Mandy

Mandy (1952)

69% User Rating
1h 33min
Drama

"The Greatest Emotional Drama yet brought to the screen..."

London, the early 1950s. Born deaf, Mandy is mute for most of her childhood. As she reaches school age her family itself is in danger of breaking up. Christine, Mandy's mother, has heard of a residential school for the oral education of the deaf.

Alexander MackendrickDirector

Cast

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Phyllis Calvert

Phyllis Calvert

Christine Garland

Jack Hawkins

Jack Hawkins

Dick Searle

Terence Morgan

Terence Morgan

Harry Garland

Godfrey Tearle

Godfrey Tearle

Mr Garland senior

Mandy Miller

Mandy Miller

Mandy Garland

Marjorie Fielding

Marjorie Fielding

Mrs Garland senior

Nancy Price

Nancy Price

Jane Ellis

Edward Chapman

Edward Chapman

Ackland

Patricia Plunkett

Patricia Plunkett

Miss Crocker

Eleanor Summerfield

Eleanor Summerfield

Lily Tabor

Colin Gordon

Colin Gordon

Woollard (Junior)

Dorothy Alison

Dorothy Alison

Miss Stockton

Julian Amyes

Julian Amyes

Jimmy Tabor

Gabrielle Brune

Gabrielle Brune

The Secretary

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John Cazabon

Davey

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Gwen Bacon

Mrs Paul

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W.E. Holloway

Woollard (senior)

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Phyllis Morris

Mrs Tucker

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Gabrielle Blunt

Miss Larner

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Jean Shepherd

Mrs Jackson

Jane Asher

Jane Asher

Nina

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Marlene Maddox

Leonie

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Michael Mallinson

Pupil

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Doreen Taylor

Pupil

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Doreen Gallagher

Pupil

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Michael Davis

Pupil

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Colin Wilkinson

Pupil

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Joan Peters

Pupil

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Michael Kelly

Lorry Driver (uncredited)

Ernie Rice

Ernie Rice

Taxi Driver (uncredited)

Ewan Roberts

Ewan Roberts

Audiologist (uncredited)

William Simons

William Simons

Boy with Ball (uncredited)

Philip Stainton

Philip Stainton

Chairman of the Board of Governors (uncredited)

Reviews (1)

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CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
Rating 70%

March 17, 2025

When they realise that their daughter “Mandy” (Mandy Miller) isn’t so responsive to sound, they take her to a physician who tells them that she is profoundly deaf, and will most likely never be able to learn to speak either. Parents “Christine” (Phyllis Calvert) and “Harry” (Terence Morgan) are determined to keep her with their family, so move into his parents large home in a still largely bombed out area of London. Her early years pose less of a problem for her caring family, but as she gets older and begins to become frustrated with her inability to react to the outside world and her playful contemporaries, they decide that perhaps some form of more formal education is required. They’ve heard good things of the slightly maverick “Searle” (Jack Hawkins) who is trying to use sonics to introduce the concepts of sounds to other children, and so they take her there. Never having been away from her parents though, she struggles to adapt - and that puts quite a strain on a marriage that is divided as to how best to proceed. This is one of those films that tugs at the heart strings. It’s not sentimental, nor is it melodramatic - it just illustrates how an ordinary family struggles to deal with the stress of having a child who has to live her life differently amidst a society that is unaware of her disability. Sometimes that puts her at greater risk, or requires a greater patience from those around her. That very relentlessness is captured well here by both Calvert and Morgan, and there’s also a sub-plot between Hawkins and his trustees (Edward Chapman) that demonstrates a clinical reluctance to challenge existing thinking and experiment with new methods. There is also a look taken at just how difficult is is for adults to maintain relationships when constantly frazzled, and at just how toxic gossiping tongues can be when nerves are frayed. Hats also have to come off to the young Miller, who delivers personably here and who elicits sympathy, yes, but also a degree of appreciation of her character’s own courage as she strives to conform without having the faintest idea what it is that she is “missing”. Thoughtful and at times provocative and it still has relevance seventy years later.

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