After a schoolgirl is raped while taking a short cut through the local woods, and another murdered a few days later, the police are baffled. With the help of a reporter, and against the wishes of a local psychologist, a young schoolteacher uses herself as bait to lure the perpetrator out.
Suzy Kendall
Julie West
Frank Finlay
Det. Chief Supt. Velyan
Freddie Jones
Reporter
James Laurenson
Greg Lomax
Lesley-Anne Down
Tessa Hurst
Tony Beckley
Leslie Sanford
Anthony Ainley
Mr. Bartell
Dilys Hamlett
Mrs. Sanford
James Cosmo
Det. Sgt. Beale
Marianne Stone
Matron
Allan Cuthbertson
Coroner
Kit Taylor
Doctor
Janet Lynn
Girl in Library
Patrick Jordan
Sgt. Milton
Anabel Littledale
Susan Miller
Tom Chatto
Police Doctor
Jan Butlin
Day Receptionist
William Hoyland
Chemist in Hospital
John Swindells
Desk Sergeant
Jill Carey
Night Receptionist
David Essex
Man in Chemist Shop
Valerie Shute
Girl in Chemist Shop
John Stone
Fire Chief
Siobhan Quinlan
Jenny Greenaway
Patricia Driscoll
Mrs. Hurst (uncredited)
Pat Gorman
Final scene pc (uncredited)
Charles Rayford
Dead Chemist (uncredited)
Renu Setna
Doctor (uncredited)
Reg Thomason
Man in Police Station (uncredited)
Joe Wadham
Police Driver (uncredited)
Director
Sidney Hayers
Novel
Kendal Young
Screenplay
John Kruse
April 20, 2025
6
**_A rapist/murderer lurks in the woods outside a girls’ school near London_**
“Assault” (1971) was renamed “In the Devil’s Garden” for its American release. It fits because the only eyewitness in the movie says that the killer looks like the devil. Yet producers also wanted to take advantage of satan’s popularity in cinema in 1973-1974 when it finally made it to America.
Lesley-Anne Down appears as the main student and was only 16 years-old during shooting. She hadn’t yet blossomed into the jaw-dropping beauty of “The Great Train Robbery” eight years later, but it’s interesting seeing her when she was so young. Elsewhere, Suzy Kendall plays the art teacher, the story’s heroine, and is quite attractive with the quintessential early 70’s look.
As for the masculine cast, there’s a pesky reporter reminiscent of the soon-to-come Kolchak. Meanwhile three main suspects rise to the fore, but I had a hard time distinguishing between them.
At the end of the day, this is a British murder mystery comparable to a giallo and I found the commentary on male lust psychologically interesting. For instance, the headmistress’ husband regularly leers at the girls at the school and even “cops a feel” when he can, which naturally doesn’t help his marriage. It’s frustrating for the wife, needless to say. Then there’s the contrast between fantasizing about alluring lasses versus actually raping & killing them. As the detective points out, he can’t book men for their dubious thoughts, only their criminal actions.
You have to roll with the questionable elements in order to appreciate the flick. For instance, why would the killer be skulking in the titular “garden” waiting for prey when he knew the area was taboo by that point, although a clueless girl indeed walks through. Not to mention, the teacher & several of her students drive through at the very moment a crime is committed (or, more accurately, just committed). Why Sure!
It runs 1 hours, 31 minutes, and was shot in Buckinghamshire, which is just northwest of London, and more specifically: Heatherden Hall, Pinewood Studios; Windsor’s End; Black Park Country Park; and London Road, Beaconsfield.
GRADE: B-
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00