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La vipère

Original title: The Little Foxes
  • 1941
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Bette Davis and Dan Duryea in La vipère (1941)
Home Video Trailer from MGM/UA
Play trailer1:24
1 Video
45 Photos
DramaRomance

The ruthless, moneyed Hubbard clan lives in, and poisons, their part of the Deep South at the turn of the twentieth century.The ruthless, moneyed Hubbard clan lives in, and poisons, their part of the Deep South at the turn of the twentieth century.The ruthless, moneyed Hubbard clan lives in, and poisons, their part of the Deep South at the turn of the twentieth century.

  • Director
    • William Wyler
  • Writers
    • Lillian Hellman
    • Arthur Kober
    • Dorothy Parker
  • Stars
    • Bette Davis
    • Herbert Marshall
    • Teresa Wright
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William Wyler
    • Writers
      • Lillian Hellman
      • Arthur Kober
      • Dorothy Parker
    • Stars
      • Bette Davis
      • Herbert Marshall
      • Teresa Wright
    • 147User reviews
    • 38Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 9 Oscars
      • 8 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Little Foxes
    Trailer 1:24
    The Little Foxes

    Photos45

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    Top cast34

    Edit
    Bette Davis
    Bette Davis
    • Regina Giddens
    Herbert Marshall
    Herbert Marshall
    • Horace Giddens
    Teresa Wright
    Teresa Wright
    • Alexandra Giddens
    Richard Carlson
    Richard Carlson
    • David Hewitt
    Dan Duryea
    Dan Duryea
    • Leo Hubbard
    Patricia Collinge
    Patricia Collinge
    • Birdie Hubbard
    Charles Dingle
    Charles Dingle
    • Ben Hubbard
    Carl Benton Reid
    Carl Benton Reid
    • Oscar Hubbard
    Jessie Grayson
    • Addie
    John Marriott
    John Marriott
    • Cal
    Russell Hicks
    Russell Hicks
    • William Marshall
    Lucien Littlefield
    Lucien Littlefield
    • Manders
    Virginia Brissac
    Virginia Brissac
    • Mrs. Hewitt
    Terry Nibert
    Terry Nibert
    • Julia
    Henry 'Hot Shot' Thomas
    • Harold
    Charles R. Moore
    Charles R. Moore
    • Simon
    Hooper Atchley
    Hooper Atchley
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Arie Lee Branche
    • Bit Part
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • William Wyler
    • Writers
      • Lillian Hellman
      • Arthur Kober
      • Dorothy Parker
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews147

    7.913.7K
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    Featured reviews

    rupie

    Davis is unforgettable

    This film fully deserves its reputation as one of the most scorching dramas of greed and corruption ever placed on celluloid. A deceptively slow start soon draws into the machinations of the Hubbard clan whose brazen backstabbings and betrayals even today make our jaws drop. Davis' stunning portrayal of the supremely grasping Regina Giddens leads a stellar cast which does a superb job of delineating a finely drawn group of characters. Charles Dingle's deceptively warm smile masks the cooly intelligent deviousness of Ben Hubbard. Carl Reid's Oscar Hubbard is just as malicious but his inferior intelligence makes him yield to his brother's and sister's lead. Dan Duryea nicely portrays the imbecilic and immature Leo Hubbard, a characterization which borders on but never crosses over into comedy. Patricia Collinge breaks our hearts as the broken-spirited and alcoholic Birdie, Oscar's wife. Herbert Marshall's performance as the doomed Horace, Regina's husband, delineates the pain, anger, and sense of betrayal burning beneath his deathly illness. The star of the proceedings, however, is clearly Davis. Wyler's superb direction blends all these characters into a masterful whole.

    Hellman's skill as a dramatist must be credited for much of this, but her Marxist inclinations clearly peep through the seams of the dialogue.

    I'm glad I finally had a chance to see this undoubted classic. Thanks again to that great channel, American Movie Classics.
    10evanston_dad

    Davis at Her Evil Best

    A gleefully macabre and intensely suspenseful movie based on the Lillian Hellman play. Bette Davis sinks her teeth into the role of icy bitch Regina Giddens with such relish that you can practically hear her sighing with satisfaction at getting away from the noble sufferer roles that had so recently made her famous in films like "Jezebel" and "Dark Victory." She's monstrous here as the frigid wife of Herbert Marshall, waiting impatiently for him to die so that she can get her talons on his inheritance. A group of conniving brothers are trying to outsmart her and claim the inheritance for themselves, but they have no idea who they're dealing with. We ultimately can forgive Davis for her reptilian selfishness, because she's driven to it out of survival. If you want to play with the big boys, the movie seems to say, you have to learn to be one yourself.

    This is a lesson her sister-in-law, Birdie, hasn't learned, and as a result is a fluttering, neurotic mess of a woman, bulldozed by her husband and supreme example of exactly the kind of woman Regina refuses to be. Birdie is played by Patricia Collinge in a devastatingly heartbreaking performance. Just watch her in the scene where her husband slaps her; you can almost literally see the life drain out of her as she accepts her misery as a cage from which she doesn't ever really hope, or feels she deserves, to escape.

    And as the moral conscience of the film, Teresa Wright plays Regina's daughter, Alexandra, slow to pick up on the treacherous games her own mother is playing.

    The classic scene in this film is the one in which Regina's husband actually dies. She's sitting feet away from him, watching him gasp for breath while refusing to get the medication that could save his life, and Davis's creepy, empty expression shows us just how little compassion or sympathy, or even any emotion other than greed and vengeance, remains in this grotesque, twisted creature. Marvelous!

    Grade: A+
    10martindonovanitaly

    The Little Foxes Fatter than ever in 2018

    I always loved Lillian Hellman, way ahead of her time - she may have been controversial with powerful enemies and treacherous groupies but I'm always reminded of the stuff the lady was made of by going back to the letter she wrote to the House Of Un-American Activites that she wrote knowing that she was risking everything. She paid a heavy price but now we know who the real, patriotic Americans were - Lillian Hellman right up there - I saw The Little Foxes last night - first time in two decades - and I was enveloped in its relevance. Lillian Hellman herself wrote the screenplay based on her play about greed, the banquet of the 1 per cent and the blatant social injustice. Class, race and all the rest of it. As if that wasn't overwhelming enough, William Wyler and Bette Davis - what an brilliant combination - Davis was only 33 when she played Regina - Astonishing performance. This must be one of her very best, The film also has the extraordinary Patricia Collinge as Birdie and Teresa Wright. This is a film to visit and revisit for its historical relevance and cinematic brilliance
    semioticz

    1941 Bette Davis is Lillian Hellman's Shrewd Protagonist (2001 DVD)

    Superb playwright, Lillian Hellman (1905-84) wrote this screenplay for "The Little Foxes," saying that she "wrote her 'angry comedy' based on her own family's biannual dinner at which people drew lots for a diamond that had been left in her great-grandmother's estate." Hellman's first play for Samuel Goldwyn was "The Children's Hour." She was in lover with & influenced by author & screenplay writer, Dashiel Hammett. This later became a hit book, script & film based upon a 19th century case of two girls' school mistresses whose reputations were ruined when one of their pupils accused them of lesbianism. Hellman was not afraid to be controversial or write about the unspeakable truths of the day.

    After a poor showing of Hellman's "Days to Come" in 1936, about labor struggles in an Ohio town, Hellman said she "was so scared {that she} wrote "Little Foxes, 1939, nine times." This is the script that made her reputation as a playwright famous. (Jane Fonda plays Lillian Hellman in the movie "Julia" a true story about her best friend, played by Vanessa Redgrave; Jason Robards plays Dashiel).

    "The Little Foxes" is a vivid portrayal of sibling rivalry, Southern plantation slavery & most of all, greed in the Hubbard family of Alabama. The story takes place at the turn of the 19th-20th century, in the deep South of Alabama where the Hubbard siblings are involved in their own brand of a power-hungry uncivil war. Who better to play the reigning schemer Regina than Bette Davis, the Hubbard sibling who commands ownership of a cotton mill that exploits slaves while yielding millions of dollars on their bent backs? Davis gives another Oscar worthy performance, leading a near perfect cast through a major screen achievement that is a page in US history.

    The DVD is almost 2 hours long & in black and white, with English, French & Spanish subtitles. The story is a bone chilling indictment of Alabaman slave plantation white corruption & greed.

    No one should ever say that Lillian Hellman wasn't a controversial & highly political playwright! The film is not rated probably because anyone could watch it. Though I imagine it would bore little children since the play's basic themes are quite complex for adults.
    Lovecats

    Could be known as "The Little Jackals"

    I have been a fan of Bette Davis since I was a young child. Her riveting performance in this movie made me conscious of what a truly good actor can do. Regina (Bette) and her covetous brothers made the biblical passage "the love of money is the root of all evil" come to life.

    The Little Foxes is an apt name. As animals Regina, Horace and Oscar not only would tear others to pieces to get what they want; they would eventually turn on each other to gain satisfaction.

    The performance of Herbert Marshall made me immediately search for his other movies to view; I've not been disappointed. I am thankful his character was included to offset the viciousness of Regina and her brothers.

    More like this

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Bette Davis had legendary makeup artist Perc Westmore devise a white mask-like effect for her face to emphasize Regina's coldness. William Wyler hated it, likening it to a Kabuki mask.
    • Goofs
      At the end, just before Alexandra leaves Regina, when Regina climbs the stairs and asks Zan if she would "like to sleep in her room tonight", there is a chair in the background (which earlier Regina had been sitting in). There is nothing on the chair. Two shots later, when Alexandra goes to collect her hat and coat to leave, they are on the chair.
    • Quotes

      Horace Giddens: Maybe it's easy for the dying to be honest. I'm sick of you, sick of this house, sick of my unhappy life with you. I'm sick of your brothers and their dirty tricks to make a dime. There must be better ways of getting rich than building sweatshops and pounding the bones of the town to make dividends for you to spend. You'll wreck the town, you and your brothers. You'll wreck the country, you and your kind, if they let you. But not me, I'll die my own way, and I'll do it without making the world worse. I leave that to you.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits prologue:

      "Take us the foxes, The little foxes, that spoil the vines:

      For our vines have tender grapes." The Song of Solomon 2:15

      Little foxes have lived in all times, in all places. This family happened to live in the deep South in the year 1900.
    • Connections
      Edited into Myra Breckinridge (1970)
    • Soundtracks
      Never Too Weary to Pray
      (1941) (uncredited)

      Music and Lyrics by Meredith Willson

      Sung off-screen by an unidentified group during the opening and closing credits

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 20, 1946 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La loba
    • Filming locations
      • Belle Helene Plantation, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA
    • Production company
      • The Samuel Goldwyn Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 56 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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