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5,6/10
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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueStory of the decades-long affair between married newspaper magnate and movie producer William Randolph Hearst and actress and former "Ziegfeld Follies" showgirl Marion Davies.Story of the decades-long affair between married newspaper magnate and movie producer William Randolph Hearst and actress and former "Ziegfeld Follies" showgirl Marion Davies.Story of the decades-long affair between married newspaper magnate and movie producer William Randolph Hearst and actress and former "Ziegfeld Follies" showgirl Marion Davies.
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The Hearst Castle has only been used once for a movie set. They used the outdoor Neptune pool for a scene in Spartacus. This movie does show exteriors of the Hearst Castle but any interiors must have been filmed somewhere else. Either England or Canada. Did I say Virginia Madsen was young? Well Robert Mitchum is old! But somehow they are both convincing as lovers. Shows what good acting is all about. The supporting cast could have used a little more star power. Who was that guy playing Charlie Chaplin? Marian Davies had a terrific career in movies both before & after the introduction of sound & I don't think that comes across.
Where May I watch this film? It seems interesting. Robert Mitchum is one of the best.
This is a TV movie with good production values. It was filmed in the actual Hearst Castle. Madsen and Mitchum give good performances. Over all enjoyable. It is still available on some on-line video retailers.
If you don't know anything about newspaper tycoon William Randolph Hearst or silent film actress Marion Davies, you probably won't come across this tv biopic while you're trying to decide what to watch this evening. You wouldn't know what to look for! But if you did know what to look for, look no further than this lovely, adorable, sweet yet dramatic, well-acted love story starring Robert Mitchum and Virginia Madsen.
If you've been reading my reviews, you know how I feel about virile, studly actors being put out to pasture when they get old, and thankfully, Robert Mitchum's career didn't take that turn for a very long time. At sixty-eight years old-which, back then, was the equivalent to seventy-eight nowadays-he starred in two romantic films! In Reunion at Fairborough, he actually had a bedroom scene with Deborah Kerr, and in The Hearst and Davies Affair, he had beautifully tender scenes with twenty-four-year-old Virginia Madsen! A perfect choice to be cast as the powerful, magnetic mogul with a dashingly romantic side, it's easy to see why Virginia's character can't resist him, even though he's married.
Virginia looks beautiful in her wigs and 1920s dresses, designed by Dianne Cohoon. Fans of the golden age will love the sets and throwbacks to silent films, including Lorne Kennedy playing Charlie Chaplin. If you've already seen The Cat's Meow, rent this one for the bigger slice of the story. Plus, you'll get to see Robert Mitchum acting exactly the same as he did thirty years earlier: singing, dancing and romancing!
If you've been reading my reviews, you know how I feel about virile, studly actors being put out to pasture when they get old, and thankfully, Robert Mitchum's career didn't take that turn for a very long time. At sixty-eight years old-which, back then, was the equivalent to seventy-eight nowadays-he starred in two romantic films! In Reunion at Fairborough, he actually had a bedroom scene with Deborah Kerr, and in The Hearst and Davies Affair, he had beautifully tender scenes with twenty-four-year-old Virginia Madsen! A perfect choice to be cast as the powerful, magnetic mogul with a dashingly romantic side, it's easy to see why Virginia's character can't resist him, even though he's married.
Virginia looks beautiful in her wigs and 1920s dresses, designed by Dianne Cohoon. Fans of the golden age will love the sets and throwbacks to silent films, including Lorne Kennedy playing Charlie Chaplin. If you've already seen The Cat's Meow, rent this one for the bigger slice of the story. Plus, you'll get to see Robert Mitchum acting exactly the same as he did thirty years earlier: singing, dancing and romancing!
This TV movie from 1985 is pretty accurate in a lot of things and pretty inaccurate in a lot more. But it's a fascinating look at one of the early "power couples" of filmmaking., and as an extra bonus, we get an inside look at the fabulous "ranch" at San Simeon in California.
Robert Mitchum stars as Hearst and Virginia Madsen stars as Davies. Hearst of course was the media mogul of his time, with an empire of newspapers, magazines, and radio stations. He added movie making not long after meeting Davies, who was a featured player on Broadway, notably in the 1916 edition of the "Ziegfeld Follies."
Davies and Hearst remained a couple for well over 30 years, until his death in 1951 at age 87. Hearst was never able to obtain a divorce from his wife Millicent. Davies never married until after Hearst's death, when she married Horace Brown.
Hearst founded Cosmopolitan Productions largely to make movies starring Davies, but of the 95 or so films produced thru Cosmopolitan between 1918 and 1939, only about half starred Davies.
Davies entered films in 1917 in RUNAWAY ROMANY, a film she wrote herself. The film was largely financed by Paul Bloch and was produced and directed by her brother-in-law George Lederer (called Byron in this movie). Davies would star in about 48 films between 1917 and 1937, transitioning from silent films to talkies in 1929.
Unfortunately this TV movie perpetuates the image of Davies as a movie star propped up by Hearst's media blitz and not thru her own talent. From 1922 on, Davies was a superstar, signing with MGM in 1924 and reigning there for a decade before moving on to Warners.
Davies was voted the #1 female star of 1923 by theater owners in April of 1924 for the blockbusters WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER and LITTLE OLD NEW YORK. Both films ranked in the top 5 at the box office and catapulted Davies into the highest ranks of stardom, where she remained until her retirement in 1937.
This TV movie shows scenes filming RUNAWAY ROMANY (1917), a film Hearst had no connection to. Since the film does not survive, there's no way to compare Madsen's impersonation of Davies. There's also a small scene filming WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER (1922), which is dismissed as something second rate, when it was a mammoth production and a major hit.
The third scene shown filming is not identified in the TV movie and is misidentified on IMDb as being POLLY OF THE CIRCUS (1932). Wrong. The scene is intended to be about filming ZANDER THE GREAT (1925) in which, Davies claimed in her memoir, Charlie Chaplin donned her costume and filmed the scene with the lion. The scene does not exist in the surviving print.
The scene between Davies and Chaplin is also bizarre for having them worrying about "talkies" in 1925 when they didn't become a major factor in Hollywood until 1927. The film touches on scandals like the "Marion Davies Murder" and the suspicious death of Thomas Ince onboard Hearst's yacht.
While Madsen does a good job in showing Davies as an intelligent woman and not a brainless floozy, the film overall shortchanges Davies by not giving her credit for having a solid and long career in films. To be fair, in 1985 the filmmakers didn't have access to many of Davies' silent films that we now have.
Not really bad, but why not just watch a Marion Davies film?
Robert Mitchum stars as Hearst and Virginia Madsen stars as Davies. Hearst of course was the media mogul of his time, with an empire of newspapers, magazines, and radio stations. He added movie making not long after meeting Davies, who was a featured player on Broadway, notably in the 1916 edition of the "Ziegfeld Follies."
Davies and Hearst remained a couple for well over 30 years, until his death in 1951 at age 87. Hearst was never able to obtain a divorce from his wife Millicent. Davies never married until after Hearst's death, when she married Horace Brown.
Hearst founded Cosmopolitan Productions largely to make movies starring Davies, but of the 95 or so films produced thru Cosmopolitan between 1918 and 1939, only about half starred Davies.
Davies entered films in 1917 in RUNAWAY ROMANY, a film she wrote herself. The film was largely financed by Paul Bloch and was produced and directed by her brother-in-law George Lederer (called Byron in this movie). Davies would star in about 48 films between 1917 and 1937, transitioning from silent films to talkies in 1929.
Unfortunately this TV movie perpetuates the image of Davies as a movie star propped up by Hearst's media blitz and not thru her own talent. From 1922 on, Davies was a superstar, signing with MGM in 1924 and reigning there for a decade before moving on to Warners.
Davies was voted the #1 female star of 1923 by theater owners in April of 1924 for the blockbusters WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER and LITTLE OLD NEW YORK. Both films ranked in the top 5 at the box office and catapulted Davies into the highest ranks of stardom, where she remained until her retirement in 1937.
This TV movie shows scenes filming RUNAWAY ROMANY (1917), a film Hearst had no connection to. Since the film does not survive, there's no way to compare Madsen's impersonation of Davies. There's also a small scene filming WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER (1922), which is dismissed as something second rate, when it was a mammoth production and a major hit.
The third scene shown filming is not identified in the TV movie and is misidentified on IMDb as being POLLY OF THE CIRCUS (1932). Wrong. The scene is intended to be about filming ZANDER THE GREAT (1925) in which, Davies claimed in her memoir, Charlie Chaplin donned her costume and filmed the scene with the lion. The scene does not exist in the surviving print.
The scene between Davies and Chaplin is also bizarre for having them worrying about "talkies" in 1925 when they didn't become a major factor in Hollywood until 1927. The film touches on scandals like the "Marion Davies Murder" and the suspicious death of Thomas Ince onboard Hearst's yacht.
While Madsen does a good job in showing Davies as an intelligent woman and not a brainless floozy, the film overall shortchanges Davies by not giving her credit for having a solid and long career in films. To be fair, in 1985 the filmmakers didn't have access to many of Davies' silent films that we now have.
Not really bad, but why not just watch a Marion Davies film?
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film La romanichelle (1917) was actually produced and directed by George W. Lederer, but in this story he's referred to as Byron.
- GaffesThe scene in the theater where Sur les marches d'un trône (1922) is being shown shows a poster which misspells the name of Forrest Stanley as Forest.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Captured on Film: The True Story of Marion Davies (2001)
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By what name was Scandale à Hollywood (1985) officially released in Canada in English?
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