I Never Promised You a Rose Garden

I Never Promised You a Rose Garden

197796 min
5.8/10
Drama

Plot Summary

A disturbed and institutionalized 16-year-old girl struggles between fantasy and reality.

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Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (38)

Kathleen Quinlan

Kathleen Quinlan

Deborah Blake

Bibi Andersson

Bibi Andersson

Dr. Fried

Ben Piazza

Ben Piazza

Jay Blake

Lorraine Gary

Lorraine Gary

Ester Blake

Martine Bartlett

Martine Bartlett

Secret Wife

No Image

Margo Ann Berdeshevsky

Drawing Patient

No Image

Darlene Craviotto

Carla

Reni Santoni

Reni Santoni

Hobbs

Susan Tyrrell

Susan Tyrrell

Lee

Signe Hasso

Signe Hasso

Helene

Norman Alden

Norman Alden

McPherson

Sylvia Sidney

Sylvia Sidney

Miss Coral

🎬Crew

Director

Anthony Page

Writers

Gavin Lambert, Lewis John Carlino

Producers

Terence F. Deane, Edgar J. Scherick, Michael Hausman, Daniel H. Blatt, Roger Corman

🖼️Gallery (3 images)

I Never Promised You a Rose Garden backdrop 1
I Never Promised You a Rose Garden backdrop 2
I Never Promised You a Rose Garden backdrop 3

🏷️Keywords

disturbed teenager

💬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

10/18/2025

Kathleen Quinlan delivers powerfully here as the disturbed “Deborah” who has been institutionalised by her therapist “Dr. Fried” (Bibi Andersson). She’s delusional and walks a fairly fine line between a reality in which she doesn’t feel pain and a fantasy land with it’s own language that she must, at all costs, keep secret. Once ensconced, she finds herself staring at a stark world where her humanity is very much subsumed into a violent, noisy and drug-induced environment run by an eclectic combination of mostly men, who have varying degrees of sympathy for their patients/inmates. Fortunately for “Deborah”, her psychiatrist is genuinely interested in trying to help her recover, and against a backdrop that is hardly conducive, there might be hope that she can possibly emerge from the toxic alternative world that she has become dependent upon. It’s the noise that got me most here. The reverberations of the shouting and the screaming around rudimentary accommodation that has more in common with a prison than an hospital all adds to the general sense of craziness. There are a few potent efforts from the supporting cast, like Norman Alden’s “McPherson” whose more measured and considerate behaviour contrasts well with the otherwise often chaotic and even dangerous environment and from Sylvia Sydney too. Andersson is well cast bringing a certain caring aloofness to her role and the whole effect of the film is scarier than almost all of the other films produced by Roger Corman. It has dated and there is a degree of over-descriptive psycho-babble from the often heavy handed script, but Quinlan holds this together well and it’s still quite a solid indictment of 1970s psychiatric care.

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Production Companies

New World Pictures