I created the QCK feature here on the Vault to celebrate the 25th anniversary of A Nightmare on Elm Street. Make no mistake about that. And that's usually what I do on here. But after a recent re-viewing of the original classic, there's a matter that I feel I have to address. I've always felt this way, but this last viewing was really the straw that broke the camel's back:
Ronee Blakley, the actress who plays Nancy's mother Marge, is terrible. Absolutely dreadful. So bad that she almost distracts from how great the rest of the movie is.
As Wes Craven himself says in a very telling moment during the DVD commentary track, she seems as if she's in a completely different movie from everyone else. That's right, even Wes himself cannot help but poke fun at Ronee's performance, which he does throughout the movie, along with Heather Langenkamp, who joins him on the commentary. That really speaks volumes.
Not to say that Langenkamp is going to win any Oscars anytime soon, but her performance fits nicely within the context of the movie--as does that of the young Johnny Depp, or the terrific Robert Englund and the always-badass John Saxon. Clearly we don't expect Shakespearean level acting in a film like this, but at least no one else in the cast can be accused of stopping the proceedings dead like Ms. Blakley does.
I swear, there are times that I believe she really was drinking vodka throughout her scenes. Or maybe popping ambiens or something. That vacant stare. Her almost surreally melodramatic delivery of most of her lines. Even her movements are exaggerated and hackneyed. Check out that moment when she steps into frame and lights a cigarette, as she informs Nancy that she's locked her in the house. It's like she imagines she's Bette Davis or something. Only this isn't Mr. Sceffington; it's a 1980s slasher flick.
Even her look is wrong, and listening to the commentary, I finally understood why. Wes and Heather have a laugh at one point about how Ronee was never satisfied with the makeup and hair people on set, and would always disappear before shooting to fiddle with everything herself. This might explain why she often looks like something out of Madame Tussaud. I really believe she's trying to channel some kind of old-school Hollywood thing, but I have no idea as to why.
One wonders how she wound up being cast for the part. Everyone else seems at least adequate for the role they've been given--oftentimes far better than adequate. Yet Blakley sticks out like a sore thumb, almost ruining each scene she's in, taking away from the tension with her performance--which somehow manages to be simultaneously overdone and trance-like. I don't even know how she pulled that off. And worst of all, one even gets the sense listening to the commentary that Craven himself regrets casting her. Of course, he never comes out and says that, but take a listen like I did, and you might come away with the same impression.
And yet, unlike Heather Langenkamp, Ronee Blakley actually was nominated for an Oscar--Best Supporting Actor 1975 for her role as country singer Barbara Jean in Robert Altman's Nashville. She didn't win, but it's still baffling to think that the same person who turned in such a painfully bad performance in NOES could have garnered such acclaim less than a decade earlier. Amazing. Maybe it speaks to Altman's better way with actors than Craven. Who knows. All I do know is Ronee Blakley is really bad in A Nightmare on Elm Street.
And that's really all I need to say. It's something that's bugged me for years, since I really like the movie and respect it's importance amongst '80s horror movies. I also know I can't be alone in this opinion.
See, just because NOES is a classic of the "horror canon", doesn't mean it doesn't have its flaws, or that we shouldn't point them out and discuss. And Ronee Blakley is definitely one of them.
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18 comments:
I always assumed Nancy's Mom was whacked out on goofballs... of course I was in high school when I saw it.
Now I have to watch the film again with an eye towards her performance.
I agree that lady did look like she was on some drugs,haha.
I was a child of the 70's and most of the Moms were on Valium
Definitely, Aleata! I'm thinkin life was imitating art...
And Al, I'm right there with ya!
I think Ronee Blakely must have been playing herself in Nashville and that's how she won the Oscar, cause remember that Barbara Jean lady was about batshit crazy!
I always thought that Blakley was one of those "method" actor types and she felt her dazed performance was how Marge Thompson was supposed to be realized; a woman so consumed with guilt over the fact that she and the others killed Fred, she is now a functioning alcoholic, and once her daughter starts having nightmares about the man she killed, it just makes her more of a nut case.
Of course that does not make her performance any good, you are right, she's awful; but if you can embrace that awfulness, it's unintentionally hilarious acting; campy to the nth degree!
She was awful, but I too have to wonder if the actress thought she was pulling off "drunk, depressed mom" well.
I thought her mom was high and drunk, that's why she was so out of it. But her bad performance is what makes Elm Street the movie it is just as Depp's horrible Flock of Seagulls hair.
You guysss... Nancy's mom was drugged out and depressed because she's still dealing with her demons. Let's not forget she played a major role in the murder of Freddy Krueger AND keeps his knife fingers in her basement. Who knows...maybe Fred still visits her every night in her dreams too.
But in all seriousness she is awful. Stop being so over dramatic you killed a child molester, God loves you. OH wait she's also married to a cop-in a small town....booze for everyone!
Poor Ronee - I think you guys are being a touch too harsh. Her performance, while certainly not great, isn't really THAT bad - she kinda does what she's supposed to, what with her playing a doped up, alcoholic mother of a troubled teen in what amounts to a relatively low-budget slasher film from the 80s and all. Albeit an INCREDIBLY influencial one.
Surely the worst performance of this film goes to the klutz portraying Glen's Dad!?
I won't say that it was a great performance, but personally I don't think it takes that much away from the film. Because of what she's been through, Nancy's mom is over-protective but too drunk to actually protect her only daughter; I think Blakley's over-dramatic acting basically reflects this. Moms like that often are drama queens.
I see what some of you are saying, that it was a dramatic choice on her part to play it that way. I just happen to find that it was a very poor dramatic choice. But yeah, there is much camp to be appreciated in it.
i always assumed she was on valium or something due to keeping the secret and trying to cope with the secret of being part of killing fred krueger. i thought it was written into the script. haha that's funny that it was something she just did on her own. maybe that was her interpretation, too.
Yeah, the truth hurts sometimes...
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I thought only I thought like that!
I totally agree - Blakley's performance really stank in an otherwise great movie. When I think back to 1984, it was the creepiest horror flick I had ever seen. Thoroughly enjoyed it!
Jamie, Adelaide SOUTH AUSTRALIA
I just knew I couldn't be the only one!
I disagree with you guys. Ronee played a major character suffering from depression due to being a divorcé, from seeing the trouble with her daughter and being unable to deal with it. It appears clearly from her acting that Marge is fragile and under antidepressant or something. We know from the begining that she is alcoholic. On the contrary she played beautyfully her character of a woman that was not there! Not sure that your interpretation of what Craven thought on her acting is accurate. I think in that case he would have changed the actress. I want to add that I found Ronee very attractive in the movie. Nicolas a fan from Paris, France.
Spot on. Her acting was awful at best. I was in shock when I found out about the academy award nomination. We are not complaining about her perception of how to play her mother but her acting skills in general. Dreadful
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