VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,0/10
4382
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA washed-up movie queen finds romance, but still desires a comeback.A washed-up movie queen finds romance, but still desires a comeback.A washed-up movie queen finds romance, but still desires a comeback.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Candidato a 1 Oscar
- 1 candidatura in totale
Robert Warwick
- R.J., Aging Actor at Party
- (as Robert Warrick)
David Alpert
- Keith Barkley - Director
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
James Anderson
- Bailey - Actor playing Jed Garfield in The Fatal Winter
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Florence Auer
- Annie's Friend in Store
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Marie Blake
- Annie, Stones' Maid
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Paul Bradley
- Party Guest
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Claire Carleton
- Jailbird
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Steve Carruthers
- Party Guest
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Watching The Star I wondered how close to him it all was for Davis. There's a scene in the end where it gets meta and you can almost see Davis as Margaret hearing the script storyline that she is offered. Regardless, this is a fine film and it has Davis working with her usual spark and unlikeable presence. But like always, she knows how to make you root for her. I also think the running time, while seems short, is pretty much the perfect length for the story the film is trying to tell. This is a problem I thought Mr. Skeffington had, way too long for its own good. So yeah, if you want to seek out all of Davis this is still a fine entry and a required one really.
Bette Davis went to 20th Century Fox and scored a hit in this film "The Star:" which had the tag line "Only the Star Of Stars" Could have starred in this film.
Bette Davis plays a washed up movie star hankering for a comeback. Bette has to take a screen test for a supporting role and it goes badly
Bette says "Bless You" twice in this drama and as we may all know that was what Joan Crawford often said. So maybe Bette was giving a jab below the belt to Crawford?
Bette got an Oscar nomination and deservedly so. A Great Star.
Natalie Wood and Sterling Hayden give great support.
Bette Davis plays a washed up movie star hankering for a comeback. Bette has to take a screen test for a supporting role and it goes badly
Bette says "Bless You" twice in this drama and as we may all know that was what Joan Crawford often said. So maybe Bette was giving a jab below the belt to Crawford?
Bette got an Oscar nomination and deservedly so. A Great Star.
Natalie Wood and Sterling Hayden give great support.
Bette Davis is doing a dry-run/out of town opening for her own future in "The Star". Playing a actress down on her luck and getting it from all sides (creditors are selling her possessions, her ex-husbands' new wife is constantly condescending and her sister is always at the door for a crisp $20.), her only refuge is her daughter, played by Natalie Wood in what appears to be her gawky, teenage phase.
Bette smokes as much as usual, completely blows her top at least five times, and in the most memorable scene, takes her Oscar on a drunken tour of all the young actresses houses - good thing they all live on the same street!
This character is a step below Margo Channing, well on her way to Baby Jane Hudson. Davis received her second-to-last Oscar nomination - her last being for "Baby Jane". She owns the screen because she brings a humanity to the character - she still has her pride, even though that doesn't get you very far in a town with a short memory.
I believe the Oscar used was one of Bette's - at least they didn't use one of those phony ones. Its a symbol in the movie of what once was.
I give Davis a lot of credit for playing characters close to her own life ( I would imagine even she felt the ageism of Hollywood ) and when she says that she's directed more than one director, you can tell she knows what she's talking about.
Its also poignant and a little disturbing to see Natalie Wood on a sailboat at one point.
Bette smokes as much as usual, completely blows her top at least five times, and in the most memorable scene, takes her Oscar on a drunken tour of all the young actresses houses - good thing they all live on the same street!
This character is a step below Margo Channing, well on her way to Baby Jane Hudson. Davis received her second-to-last Oscar nomination - her last being for "Baby Jane". She owns the screen because she brings a humanity to the character - she still has her pride, even though that doesn't get you very far in a town with a short memory.
I believe the Oscar used was one of Bette's - at least they didn't use one of those phony ones. Its a symbol in the movie of what once was.
I give Davis a lot of credit for playing characters close to her own life ( I would imagine even she felt the ageism of Hollywood ) and when she says that she's directed more than one director, you can tell she knows what she's talking about.
Its also poignant and a little disturbing to see Natalie Wood on a sailboat at one point.
Davis (in an Oscar-nominated performance) plays Margaret Elliot as washed out has been actress. She was big once but now can't get a job. She's divorced and penniless but refuses to give up hope for one more acting job. She also has a man who loves her (Sterling Hayden) and is trying to get her to face reality. There's also a scene or two of Margaret with her daughter played by an impossibly young Natalie Wood.
It's a depressing movie of course but you can't stop watching. It's short (89 minutes) and moves quickly. It does have a ridiculously false but happy ending that had me getting misty-eyed. This is worth seeing for Davis alone. She's just great. She also gleefully said she modeled her character after Joan Crawford! OUCH!
It's a depressing movie of course but you can't stop watching. It's short (89 minutes) and moves quickly. It does have a ridiculously false but happy ending that had me getting misty-eyed. This is worth seeing for Davis alone. She's just great. She also gleefully said she modeled her character after Joan Crawford! OUCH!
I never get tired of watching Bette Davis and she is capable of disappearing into so many different roles. This isn't one of her best films, but she gives a good performance and we get a chance to see a young Sterling Hayden and an adolescent Natalie Wood.
There are lots of in crowd Hollywood barbs and you can tell that Davis is having a great time.
Bear in mind that Davis' career peaked in the 30s when she won her two Oscars, but she continued to be nominated often in the 40s (Now Voyager, Mr Skeffington) but between 1944 and 1950 she didn't get a nod. So, despite her marvelous "All About Eve" (1950) she was clearly on the decline when she made this film (for which she earned her final nomination prior to Baby Jane). Following this film she had nearly a decade of decline, made even worse by the decline in her marriage.
There are lots of in crowd Hollywood barbs and you can tell that Davis is having a great time.
Bear in mind that Davis' career peaked in the 30s when she won her two Oscars, but she continued to be nominated often in the 40s (Now Voyager, Mr Skeffington) but between 1944 and 1950 she didn't get a nod. So, despite her marvelous "All About Eve" (1950) she was clearly on the decline when she made this film (for which she earned her final nomination prior to Baby Jane). Following this film she had nearly a decade of decline, made even worse by the decline in her marriage.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWhen a drunken Margaret Elliot takes her Oscar for a ride in her car, Bette Davis used one of her own Oscars.
- BlooperWhen Gretchen changes direction on the boat for the second time, Margaret is knocked way over to the left by the sail. She turns around to laugh, but is shown seated on the far right.
- Citazioni
[to her Oscar statuette]
Margaret Elliott: Come on, Oscar, let's you and me get drunk!
- ConnessioniFeatured in Hollywood: The Great Stars (1963)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Lágrimas amargas
- Luoghi delle riprese
- May Company Department Store - 6067 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(Margaret Eliot's workplace)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 29min(89 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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