The film opens at a hospital where we meet Neal, who volunteers as a helpmate to various stroke victims. She works there for a couple of hours twice a week, but the doctor on staff would actually like to hire her full time. Sadly, for her, that's not really an option as she has considerable obligations at home and struggles to even make it there the days that she does.
Home is a dilapidated, overgrown house of horrors which has scarcely seen any attention paid it in recent years. The once-grand grounds have been almost completely let go. There is heavy foliage creeping up over everything.
The interior is only scarcely better. The whole cluttered, antique-laden place resembles a faded museum or a funeral parlor which hasn't had a decent overhaul in a decade or two. It's clearly too much for one person to handle, if that person even was permitted the freedom or time to try to tackle it. Neal doesn't have that luxury...
She's too busy waiting hand and foot on her blind mother, Pamela Brown. Brown is her adoptive mother, taking Neal in as a youth and treating her much like an indentured servant in exchange for a (leaky) roof over her head! The commandeering lady likes things done a certain way and on her terms.
When Neal makes the mere suggestion that the hospital would like to employ her full time, Brown suffers an "attack" that sends Neal careening into caregiver mode once more. The idea is quickly discarded, just as Brown would like it to be.
A local acquaintance, the church organist, stops by to deliver some unfortunate news. His nephew was to come and work for Brown as a groundskeeper and maintenance man, but has instead opted to take another position. So the much-needed help she was counting on won't be coming.
Later, the spiteful and vaguely bored Brown concocts a whale of a tale loosely based on a comment that the prior gentleman made. After remarking how efficient the minister's wife is and how she might have made a better religious leader than her husband, Brown tells her neighbor that the two are planning twin sex-change operations!
One day, as Neal is vacuuming the crumbling mansion, she is startled to find a rugged-looking ne'er do well at the door, attempting to be let in. She attempts to ignore him, but he won't have it.
The young drifter, played by roughly handsome Nicholas Clay, tells her that he is a friend of the young man who had intended to work for them and that he would like to take his place as a groundsman for them. Against Neal's protestations, Brown allows the boy to come in.
Clay's no slouch when it comes to making up fanciful stories either and thinks fast on his feet, though he isn't necessarily great at realizing that he'll have to follow through. Before long, though, he has appealed to the older woman's religious convictions and has even got her half-convinced that they may be distantly related! he claims to have lost everything, including his own mother, in a fire.
An already perturbed Neal is positively anguished once Brown insists that the boy be put up in her "old" bedroom. (The only reason Neal isn't currently inhabiting it is because sickly Brown needs her nearby on the ground floor in the night!) She protests this brazen decision, but to no avail.
Neal's lilac bedroom is spotless and bright in contrast to the rest of the house and she resents having to turn it over to a complete stranger. He's humble enough about it, but she remains livid at the imposition.
One thing's for certain. He is working around the house, at least. The next morning, the ladies find him high atop the house fixing the roof. And he's already repaired a broken window prior to that!
He provides Neal with a certain amount of company (and can appreciate her cooking; something her mother tends to complain about - when she can get it on her fork and into her mouth.) The relationship between them is still a bit tense, however, especially when he insinuates that she's an old lady...
"How old do you think I AM??" |
Brown announces, to Neal's undisguised amusement, that he can wear her dead husband's suit to church. She orders Neal to help her out of bed and get upstairs to an old trunk.
Clay is horrified to find out that the dead man was laid out in the suit! In fact, the withered, crumbling carnation boutonniere is still pinned to the lapel and the whole thing reeks of mothballs.
Clay pleads with Neal, explaining that he cannot go through with it, but she is no help. She only steam irons the suit to try to get the wrinkles and smells out of it so that he can head to church with them.
On that Sunday, as Neal and Brown are about to leave, Clay is nowhere to be found. He knows he has to follow through if he wants to stick around, but he's almost pathologically afraid to go with them. Neal finds him hiding upstairs and finally he comes along.
At the service, he reluctantly takes part, but perhaps all this stress has triggered something inside him. A red flag seems to have appeared...
He observes a young lady, a kinder- garten teacher, who is in attendance and is visibly unsettled by her.
Neal finds him outside and informs him that they're about to head home, but he wants to be alone, explaining that he'll be along shortly.
When Clay fails to appear for dinner, Neal heads upstairs to
This knob may need polishing... |
Later that night, Clay leaves the house and tears down the road on his motorbike. As he speeds down the road, he flashes back to a (garishly disturbing) childhood incident in which he, as a schoolboy, was accosted by a pack of gypsy women and sexually molested.
Next he is inside the kindergarten where the young teacher also resides and has slipped into her bedroom as she sleeps! In what is easily the most creepy segment of the film (and yet, thanks to Clay's physique, the most delectable), he begins to remove all his clothing...
Then he circles the bed, all the while whispering little phrases and instructions that she can't even hear, and proceeds to apply thick leather straps to the frame, enveloping her in them! It's a horrifying moment, to be sure, but Clay looks divine (and provides dimly lit flashes of frontal nudity, too.)
Having had his way with her (which is not shown, though it couldn't possibly have been pleasant!), he transports the body to a nearby construction site in which he digs a grave (get it? The night digger?) and puts her into it, covering her with dirt and gravel.
The next morning, in an event he was clearly aware of, a crew comes to pour concrete on top of the area in which she's buried. (The original U.K. title of the movie was "The Road Builder.) Though the schoolteacher will surely be missed, there won't be a body popping up any time soon...!
As Clay continues to work on the estate, Neal's attitude towards him has clearly softened. She brings him tea and rolls cigarettes for him as he works. Brown cannot see any of this, but her associates can observe some of it.
They also alternately revel in and are petrified of the news about the teacher's disap- pearance and apparent murder. It seems she is the seventh victim of an apparent serial killer!
Humpy Clay is making the entire house come to vivid life again and as he does so, Neal is blossoming again in turn. By now there isn't so much as a shred of animosity between them.
In fact, she siphons money out of the household and grocery budget in order to buy him a new robe and shirts! He's grateful to receive them. And at dinner, Brown requests two lamb chops, but Neal tells her there are only one apiece (though Clay gets two.)
Brown, whose health is always tenuous whether she's faking or not, has a visit from a young nurse and, once again, Clay's murderous and libidinous instincts kick in.
While Neal is out, Brown calls and calls for Clay and ultimately suffers a heart attack, falling down the stairs. Clay never comes to see how she is, but instead waits until Neal returns before sauntering down the steps in his new robe.
Neal calls for an ambulance and heads to the hospital with her mother.
Not long after, the nurse comes back to visit Brown, as earlier promised, but finds only Clay on the premises. There's no way this can end well...
At the hospital, the doctor informs Neal that there's nothing more that she can do there and that she ought to go home. Eager to do just that, she acquiesces, but the ever-interfering neighbor insists that she stop by her house for some tea.
The night digger is busy getting rid of his latest victim and has to cover it up in time for the road crew to finish the job the next morning. Meanwhile, Neal is discussing her situation with the neighbor lady, informing her that she once had a chance to leave Brown years ago, but didn't. She nearly eloped, but instead came back and resigned herself to the life she's led.
Clay gets home from his mission and is startled to see that Neal has arrived back at the very same time. He thought she would either be asleep or still at the hospital, but now she's preventing him from slipping back into the house undetected!
As she's calling for him from the foyer, he's clambering up the trellis and bounding into his room as fast as possible. She gets to his door and knocks on it just as he has messed up his bed and stripped down to his tighty whities.
As she heard the crash of the bedroom window, he has to lie and say that he broke it during a violent nightmare. Noting the cold sweat on his brow, she thinks he's getting sick and orders him to bed.
He dons the new pajamas she's purchased for him and she tucks him in. By now she's suffering from a combination of mother love and sexual attraction for her young gardener.
Soon after, Brown is alert again and loaded for bear. She's been informed that Clay and Neal have been enjoying their coexistence at the house and that it looks bad to the community. She tells Neal that he has to go... TODAY!
Neal isn't about to let go of her second chance at getting out from under the thumb of her sour, demanding, narrow-minded adoptive mother and tells her that she's not sending Clay away unless she goes with him, too. Needless to say, this does not sit well with the woman.
Neal discovers that now there's been yet another young girl felled by the serial killer and clearly has some doubts and suspicions about the object of her affection, but she doesn't let that stop her from proceeding to plan a new life.
She heads to the bank and withdraws every penny from her account. (It's more than eight-hundred pounds which equates to about about $1,000, though that went a lot further in 1971 than it would now!)
Clay is once again tinkering with his beloved bike when he hears Neal arriving back at the house. He turns around and can hardly believe what he's seeing. She's in new clothes, has changed her hair and makeup and is like a whole other person. (It should be noted that the score for this film was by Bernard Herrmann who, after Vertigo, 1958, and Psycho, 1960, knew a thing or two about both transformations and disturbed young men!)
Neal reveals to Clay that she did all this for him and that she has the money to establish a new life for them someplace else. The heretofore impotent Clay is somehow able to finally love (and make love) to the newly-transformed Neal.
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Neal never looks quite this pulled together in the actual film for whatever reason, even after the big makeover. Perhaps it's the flattering lighting here that makes the difference. |
Brown was from an impeccable stage background and parlayed that into memorable appearances in movies and on TV. She (and star Julie Harris) took home Emmys for the televised rendition of Victoria Regina in 1961. Some of her movies include Richard III (1955), Lust for Life (1956) and The Scapegoat (1959.) She later appeared as well in Cleopatra (1963) and Becket (1964), among others. Only fifty-four at the time of this movie, she was felled by pancreatic cancer only four years later, depriving the world of further probing, distinctive acting portrayals.
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The Night Digger had some cuts made prior to release including this scene. One shudders at the thought of anything with a shirtless Clay being removed...! |
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Another moment from the trimmed sequence between Neal and Clay. |
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Well, if you must be done in by a murderous nutjob, I guess there are worse options...! |
The End! |