The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane | Telescope Film
The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane

The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane

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Quiet, withdrawn 13-year-old Rynn Jacobs lives alone in a New England beach town. Whenever the landlady inquires after Rynn's father, she politely claims that he's in town on business. But when the landlady's persistent son, Frank, won't leave Rynn alone, she teams up with kindly neighbor boy Mario to maintain the dark family secret that she's been keeping to herself.

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What are critics saying?

75

TV Guide Magazine

A disturbing, wonderfully acted, well-scripted, and suspenseful study of a murderous 13-year-old girl.

75

TV Guide Magazine by Staff (Not Credited)

A disturbing, wonderfully acted, well-scripted, and suspenseful study of a murderous 13-year-old girl.

63

Washington Post by Gary Arnold

While it's too pat, Little Girl is several cuts above thrillers in the dopey, bedraggled class recently exemplified by Burnt Offerings and The Sentinel. [17 May 1977, p.B9]

60

Village Voice by Melissa Anderson

Gessner’s film may be for Foster completists only. But the intensity of her dead-eyed stare as the final credits scroll across her face reminds us of her preternatural ability, as a kid and beyond, to transform even the most negligible movie or scene into an event.

50

The New York Times by Janet Maslin

Nicolas Gessner's direction has a correspondingly comfortable feel, but this type of story is as old as the hills—no, older—and Mr. Gessner doesn't do much to make it plausible.

40

Variety

This film, about a homicidal orphan girl, is farfetched nonsense with precious little to appease shriek freaks. Laird Koenig's screenplay from his novel is riddled with unsuspended disbelief - coincidences, gimmicks.

40

Variety by Staff (Not Credited)

This film, about a homicidal orphan girl, is farfetched nonsense with precious little to appease shriek freaks. Laird Koenig's screenplay from his novel is riddled with unsuspended disbelief - coincidences, gimmicks.