Bunny Lake Is Missing

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Bunny Lake Is Missing
Directed by Otto Preminger
Produced by Otto Preminger
Written by Marryam Modell (novel) (as Evelyn Piper)
John Mortimer
Penelope Mortimer
Starring Laurence Olivier
Carol Lynley
Keir Dullea
Martita Hunt
and Noel Coward
Music by Paul Glass
Cinematography Denys N. Coop
Editing by Peter Thornton
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) 1965
Running time 107 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

Bunny Lake Is Missing is a film in the psychological thriller genre directed by Otto Preminger. Filmed in the UK in black and white widescreen format, it was released in 1965. The film score is by Paul Glass and uses the opening theme as a constant refrain. The Zombies also appear, playing their own songs.

Dismissed by critics (and Preminger) as being insignificant upon release, it has since earned a reputation as a cult classic. Critics such as Andrew Sarris have long championed it, and its fans have long demanded it be released on video and DVD, which it was in 2005.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Ann Lake, who left the US for a new life in London, where she plans to settle with her daughter Bunny Lake and brother Stephen, arrives at Bunny's new school to collect her. But Bunny is not there and the school has no record of her. She reports the apparent abduction to the police, but when they fail to locate the child, suspicion mounts that Bunny never existed.

When Stephen arrives, he supports Ann, but also undermines her in private, dropping hints that Bunny is in fact a childhood imaginary friend of hers. Ann attempts to convince the police by locating Bunny's belongings, but is frustrated when a burglary removes all traces of the child. However, she recalls that Bunny's doll is being repaired and heads off to find it. Stephen destroys the doll and it soon becomes apparent that he has something to hide.

Ultimately, Ann finds Bunny in the now visibly disturbed Stephen's car and faces a night distracting him from murdering both herself and her daughter before the police finally arrive to take him away.

An interesting performance in film features Noel Coward as Horatio Wilson, a sadistic, whip-loving landlord.

A Hollywood remake of the film, starring Reese Witherspoon, was being planned as of 2006.

Reese Witherspoon has reportedly dropped out of this remake. The search for her replacement is in progress.

  • Maria DiBattista (Princeton University): "Afterword". In: Evelyn Piper: Bunny Lake Is Missing (Femmes Fatales: Women Write Pulp) (The Feminist Press at The City University of New York: New York, 2004) 198-219 (ISBN 1-55861-474-5) (includes a discussion of the differences between Modell's novel and Preminger's film version).
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