Little Sweetheart (1988) Poster

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5/10
Poison Candy
Prismark1016 June 2014
Little Sweetheart also known as Poison Candy is the first feature film made for cinema release by the BBC. Its a little seen film and was released in the cinemas in America some years after it was made.

John Hurt and Karen Young are a couple who have embezzled money and hiding out in a coastal resort. They cross paths with two nine year-old girls who themselves have just met. We have already been introduced to Thelma (Cassie Barasch) who is blackmailing her older brother and is addicted to violence on television.

The other girl is Elizabeth (Ellie Raab) who has moved into the area. The girls burgle the couple's house and steal a gun. Later Elizabeth goes missing and the police become involved putting the errant couple in danger.

Despite the location filming this is a low budget morality tale and an insight on a girl who is sweet but beneath the surface is malevolent and might be willing to kill and frame others. John Hurt and Karen Young do well in this offbeat and little known film and the child actors carry of their roles with aplomb. Its a minor character study, lacking in strong direction with a minimalist score.
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7/10
Don't talk to kids you don't know
manchild50027 October 2003
Warning: Spoilers
Let me add "especially if you are on the lam from the police" to my summary of "Little Sweetheart", the female version of "The Good Son" (1994). Thelma (Cassie Barasch) isn't quite as evil as Macaulay Culkin's "Henry" in "The Good Son", but she comes close.

She meets Robert and Dorothea, a couple who have just committed a robbery and are trying to lay low. Robert, played by John Hurt, thinks Thelma is an innocent (soon-to-be) 9-year old. He buys her a camera for her birthday. Big mistake as he soon finds out. Thelma decides to use her camera in a way Robert never would have anticipated. When her new friend Elizabeth (Ellie Raab) threatens to tell on Thelma for her behavior, Thelma puts to use Robert's gun (which she stole after sneaking into his house). After Elizabeth's disappearance becomes known, Thelma puts on her naive child act in front of everyone while the police finger her brother Richard (James Waterston) and eventually Robert for the murder.

If you get offended by crazy little kids with guns, you may not want to watch this movie. I found its' plot unpredictable at times, which is always a plus. It is flawed by some bad acting from Waterston and an overall gratuitously violent theme, but it was still fairly entertaining.
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5/10
Only a few elements prove to be effective.
rsoonsa11 September 2003
This film is shot primarily upon St. George's Island, a resort site along Northern Florida's Gulf Coast, that becomes the transposed location from France in the original novel, of which only a basic outline has been retained. John Hurt portrays Robert Burger, a middle-aged bank employee who has embezzled over one million dollars and, along with his co-conspirator and girl friend Dorothea (Karen Young) is on the lam from Texas, and from his wife, with an idea of relaxing a bit on the island before continuing their flight. Unprovidentially for the renegade pair, they cross paths with two nine-year-old girls, one of whom, Thelma (Cassie Barasch), bristles with curiosity about the newcomers. Thelma is addicted to television and to the violent action she finds available there, and when she and her young friend Elizabeth (Ellie Raab) burglarize the cottage of the fugitives, Thelma steals Robert's revolver, whereupon her imagination becomes hazardous to all about her. Director Anthony Summers creates the script, and wherever a change is made from the plot of the admittedly third-rate novel, credibility goes begging, particularly when homage is being made to Kubrick's LOLITA in referential scenes not difficult to identify. His direction is weak, a source for those frequently occurring scenes when players are left upon their own, with Hurt improvising as always; yet, Guy Boyd as a sheriff is smooth and consistent as silk, easily regulating scenes in which he appears. A minimalist score, composed and performed by guitarist Laurence Juban, matches an obviously minimal budget, with Juban's suspended chords, particularly in the case of the main theme: "Oyster Blues", conjugating nicely with the palmetto plaited scenery. Cinematographer John Hooper's closeups help define this flawed but interesting piece, and he emphasizes the omnipresent gloss from the sun, making this perhaps a first example of a genre: Incandescent Noir.
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7/10
DVD please
aplantage22 May 2012
I saw this when it came out on TV, but didn't tape it then, and always wanted to see it again. I finally did only recently. I found that it held up very well, and now I would love to have it on DVD. It certainly has its flaws, for example, the made-for-TV budget is obvious, but the story is interesting, and the actors, first and foremost John Hurt, are engaging enough to make it stand out.

Who cares if the idea isn't completely new - which story is? LITTLE SWEETHEART is much more modern and suspenseful than BAD SEED (for example, the adult characters contribute more to the plot, and there is less analysis and moralism). Furthermore, I find the comparisons with LOLITA highly problematic: in contrast to Humbert Humbert, there is no reason to assume that Robert Burger (Hurt's character) has any paedophilic notions. If some people find the film fascinating in this way, I wonder how much is due to the film's portrayal of the girls, whether deliberate or not, and how much in the eye of the beholder. In any case, this is putting the film in the wrong category, at least in terms of subject matter.
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2/10
For only the most devoted of John Hurt fans.
mark.waltz15 July 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I'm wondering if this movie was indeed worth a trip to the beach for it stars John Hurt and Karen Young, playing a married couple on the run who encounter a child who may be a nut case. Cassie Barasch is difficult to watch as the possible bad seed who was allegedly blackmailing an older brother, taking pictures of a couple making Love on the beach and just getting nuttier and nuttier as a film goes on.

She's also in much more footage than the veteran actors (which also includes stage legend John McMartin), and to be honest, Hurt's character is far from even remotely interesting. That's a shocking statement to make about the actor who played such unforgettable characters as Caligula and Quentin Crisp, the Elephant Man and a prisoner in "Midnight Express". It's truly tedious to wait for anything to happen in this, and after a while, I honestly felt that this film just needed to be buried in the muck covered in reeds on the not so suitable side of the beach.
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1/10
The stupidity of adults resorts to kids getting with away with so much
jordondave-2808519 March 2023
(1989) Little Sweetheart PSYCHOLOGICAL THRILLER

Adapted from the book, "The Naughty Girls" by Arthur Wise, written and directed by Anthony Simmons that has nine-year old turning ten, Thelma (Cassie Barasch) who lives near a beach with her mother and inspired photog older brother. There's a cafe nearby, but she rarely buys anything, and just goes there to watch as much violent tv as possible without paying. And one other thing I forgot to mention she has a smart mouth. When nine year old Thelma makes a new friend with another 9 year girl, Elizabeth (Ellie Raab) moving in right next to her. It is not long before another couple of John Hurt and Karen Young come by in search of an address which is coincidentally a beach house almost near Thelma's. And it is not long the mischievous of two 9 year old girls begin to happen, beginning with that idiot, Robert (John Hurt) buying Thelma a camera she asked for for her birthday, who would eventually take pictures of him even after she promise him she would "not" do. Taking pictures of him making out with his new mistress, Dorothea (Karen Young) while they were lying on the beach. The two brats would soon attempt to blackmail both Robert and his mistress, Dorothera for money unbeknownst to the brats that they were running from the law themselves for embezzlement. And it's like, it never occurred to Robert that who ever took pics of him making out with his mistress that perhaps it must be the girl that he bought the camera for on her birthday. And they do more mischievous by breaking into Robert and Dororthea's beach house uncovering a gun and so forth.

Just because it came from a book, it does not mean the movie is good as it lacks common sense and logic. Any young kid who is ungrateful as ten year old Thelma would have gotten the life choked out of her. I mean, Robert buys her a camera when no one else would, and she in turn thanks him by taking pictures of him when he told her not to. In this movie 'kids are rotten' like what comedian Bill Mahr often says- sarcastically speaking. Like, why would anyone would want kids after watching this film.
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10/10
A little-known gem.
simnia-127 March 2006
This little-known British film is excellent in every way. There is an interesting and memorable story, good acting, beautiful Florida beach scenery set to beautiful jazz guitar solos, attractive actresses, and more. All actors and actresses were very well chosen for their parts--young and old, male and female--with respect to looks, personality, and demeanor.

Regarding the two starlets involved, this is Cassie Barasch's only film (to date), but Ellie Raab appeared in several other films after this one, the most popular of which were probably "Eyes of An Angel" (1991) and "The Fabulous Baker Boys" (1989). John Hurt and Karen Young of course have many films to their credit. Blond Cassie Barasch plays the innocent-looking but precocious bad girl whereas brunette Ellie Raab plays the sweet, naive good girl, who in the movie are friends until their differences strain their friendship to the breaking point, to put it mildly. It is unfortunate that Cassie did not continue in film in the way that the actress Patty McCormack did after Patty played the cunning young murderer in the very successful and groundbreaking film "The Bad Seed" (1956), since there are parallels between the stories and the starlets.

The film script is based on a rather obscure and out-of-print paperback novel called "The Naughty Girls" by Arthur Wise, 1972. Whereas the novel was set in France in the 1970s, the movie was set in the U.S.A. in the 1980s, on the gulf coast of Florida around St. George's Island and Apalachicola. Therefore numerous details such as place names, people names, song titles, dates, and various laws had to be updated from the book to reflect American culture in the 1980s. However, the film follows the book rather closely: a man and his female companion who have just embezzled funds are attempting to lie low until interest in their crime blows over. This couple selects an out-of-the-way rental property that they believe to be safe and private, but through chance meet up with two little girls, Thelma and Elizabeth, who live in the area. Thelma's natural intrusiveness, nosiness, and interest in photography lead her to take photographs of the couple and to uncover part of the couple's sordid past, which then leads to the two girls blackmailing the couple. Conditions then rapidly and continually degrade for everybody even remotely associated with Thelma while all the while Thelma continues to look like an innocent little sweetheart.

The film has some strong Lolitaesque undertones that weren't present in the book, a fact which may have given the film a cult following and made the film ahead of its time. While current public interest and a DVD version are lagging, expect the popularity of this well-made film to rise in upcoming decades as more people discover it.
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8/10
TV child vs bad guys
DomiMMHS6 April 1999
"Little Sweetheart" is an extremely suspenseful and very odd movie, basically--- it's not handled that perfectly, that's some problem. As the third time I saw it, I noticed many things which didn't make sense to me, about the development of the plot, mainly. Also some of the suspense was gone, but I still enjoyed it much and I'm surely seeing it again.

The *little sweetheart* is called Thelma, is nine years old, and goes to a boarding school where *the others* don't like her, as we learn from herself. In the summer, she lives at some vacation place with her careless and rather stupid, widowed mother and her brother - rather a cartoon in a would-be mother-teenager-conflict, sorry film makers! She makes friends with another girl her age, Elizabeth. The both of them meet a pair of gangsters, played by John Hurt and Karen Young. Hurt seems to like Thelma, while his *mistress* Young sees her as a rival. She's so mad at the girl that it's only ridiculous. However, she seems to be kind of right, when Thelma decides that the two girls blackmail the pair. The blackmailing is no big deal and no big movie making - but it's only the prelude...

In some moments this movie is really chilling and eerie, because of its absurd and disturbing events and possibilities. I won't judge if the events in this movie are realistic enough, so that they could really take place, but the movie illustrates how kids are always underestimated in our society. Regarded as *cute*, *innocent*, *dull*, *can't do no harm*, they're not taken seriously. Therein lies the intelligence and the irony of the movie: To what point the kid may be *evil* and spoiled, she remains the good guy in a way, as she is just a little girl. And John Hurt is the bad guy, though he's probably the nicest character in the film.

There's one rather fake dialogue with Thelma speaking to Elizabeth. But as her brother tells us, the kid has been loafing around in front of the TV all her life, so that may explain much. The un-known young actress, Cassie Barasch, is very cute and smart in the film, so that you want to like her, on the other hand she acts her character spoiled enough that you want to hate her. Good job! Which part of you is likely to win?

Not a too caring piece of art, nor deeply psychologically analytic, but a convincing, entertaining, suspenseful film with an extraordinary story and a little ironical humor. 8 out of 10!

"Watch me!"
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8/10
Very well done killer kid thriller
The_Void11 May 2009
Little Sweetheart is a thriller with a lot of problems. While the basic idea for the plot is good; the execution is rather uneven and many of the plot details don't hold up to close scrutiny in some cases; and outright don't follow any sort of logic in others. However, for me the film gets round all of its problems simply by being very entertaining for the entire duration. The idea of a child being immoral enough to commit murder purposely has surfaced occasionally in films ever since it was done brilliantly in 1956 with The Bad Seed; and generally it at least provides an interesting film. That is certainly the case here. This film focuses on a nine year old girl named Thelma. She is introduced to another girl her age, Elizabeth, when her parents move to the town Thelma lives in. Shortly thereafter, a couple turns up and Thelma takes an interest in them. The male half of the couple at first sees the girls as being rather cute and harmless; but this changes when the girls realise they can play the couple to their advantage.

Cassie Barasch takes the lead role and fully convinces with it. She always seems at home with the role and it's very easy to take her seriously as the young kid with an agenda. She is joined by Ellie Raab; who puts in a similarly effective portrayal, but the standout has to be John Hurt; who as usual delivers the standout performance. The film is always driven by the story rather than just the premise, and the drama is very character lead. Writer-director Anthony Simmons skilfully keeps the film interesting by constantly introducing new twists and ideas and never leaving the film long enough for it to get stale. Of course, the plot is rather unlikely (this is even acknowledged at one point in the film) but that never gets in the way too much and even the less likely elements of it never really throw a spanner into the works. The film flows well throughout, and boils down to a well orchestrated and suitable conclusion. This film is not an easy one to find; but its well worth seeking out if you enjoy entertaining thrillers.
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Unsuccessful melodrama
lor_29 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
My review was written in May 1988 after a Cannes Film Festival Market screening.

"LIttle Sweetheart" is an amoral modern version of the "Bad Seed" school of precocious kid melodrama. First BBC production aimed at theatrical release faces a tough sell, due to rather brittle treatment of the material.

Atmospherically lensed in Florida, adaptation of Arthur Wise's novel "The Naughty Girls' concerns 9-year-old terror Thelma (hissably played straight by Cassie Barasch, baby fat and all), who teams up with her new neighbor Elizabeth (Ellie Raab) to nose into all the adults' business in their rural location. Chief victims are an odd couple (John Hurt and Karen Young), on the lam from Hurt's bank where he's embezzled some bonds and left his wife.

Thelma's pestering of the couple results in Hurt trying to buy her off with a camera as a birthday present, which she proceeds to use to photograph them making love and blackmail them.

Plot complications multiply rapidly, as the brats break into Hurt's residence, photograph evidence of his embezzlement, blackmail him further and significantly, Thelma steals his gun. Improbably, she shoots little Elizabeth during an argument during an argument and Hurt is framed for the youngster's abduction and murder. Climax is tragic with an effective final twist tinged in acid irony.

The trouble is that writer-director Anthony Simmons (known for sensitive work such as tv's "On Giant's Shoulders") gets some very shrill and unbelievable performances from his supporting cast, especially Karen Young and James Waterson as Thelma's older brother. Wild plot developments, particularly Thelma's ice-cold demeanor, require exceptional verisimilitude to be accepted and it just isn't there. Major theme is that tv and other stimuli from the adult world have corrupted Thelma, but it is hammered home unsubtly.

Hurt acquit himself well in the tailor-made fall guy role (which he fit to a T in "10 RIllington Place") and Barasch is memorably evil. Lalo Schifrin's jaunty, jazzy score is quite a treat.
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