CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.0/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Una reina del cine fracasada encuentra el romance, pero sigue deseando volver.Una reina del cine fracasada encuentra el romance, pero sigue deseando volver.Una reina del cine fracasada encuentra el romance, pero sigue deseando volver.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Nominado a 1 premio Óscar
- 1 nominación en total
Robert Warwick
- R.J., Aging Actor at Party
- (as Robert Warrick)
David Alpert
- Keith Barkley - Director
- (sin créditos)
Florence Auer
- Annie's Friend in Store
- (sin créditos)
Marie Blake
- Annie, Stones' Maid
- (sin créditos)
Paul Bradley
- Party Guest
- (sin créditos)
Claire Carleton
- Jailbird
- (sin créditos)
Steve Carruthers
- Party Guest
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Although some of Bette Davis' films were not great, a few like'Wicked Stepmother' not even good, her best films were incredible. 'All About Eve' in particular is a personal favourite film and performance of mine, both for Davis and in general. 'The Star' also has a subject that is easy to relate and is still relevant oddly enough today, on the outside stardom seems glamorous but underneath all the glamour it is much darker than it looks and many struggled, and still are struggling, with the pressure it causes.
'The Star' may not be one of Davis' best films or performances, but she still comes off very well which says a lot about the general high quality of her performances and her as an actress. It took a lot for her to give a bad performance, even in her twilight years. The film does a good, if not quite great, job with the subject, it is relatable and it holds up. For what 'The Star' lacks in subtlety and an ending that is in keeping with the rest of the film, it makes up for in emotion and intelligence.
For my, and other people's, tastes, 'The Star' does go a little too over the top on the melodrama. Melodrama can tend to get overheated, and the melodramatic bits here are on the overwrought side. It can be contrived with things happening too easily.
Did have reservations with the ending. It did admittedly leave me misty eyed, but it had a tacked on and studio interference-like feel and doesn't gel with the rest of the film, a darker and more daring ending would have been better perhaps.
On the other hand, Davis gives it absolutely everything in a meaty role and is terrific. Gutsy but also vulnerable. There is also strong work from Sterling Hayden playing his role with integrity and young pre-'Splendor in the Grass' and 'West Side Story' Natalie Wood is also worth looking out for. The direction is very skilled and judges and paces everything well, though other more distinguished directors understood Davis' strengths more perhaps.
It is an in general intelligently scripted film, subtlety is not a strong suit as said already but there are some memorable lines that made me think and came over as sincere. The story moves swift and, although it is far from flawless, it has the right amount of tension and poignancy when needed and doesn't soften the subject too much. 'The Star' is not lavish visually but it has atmosphere, as does Victor Young's haunting score.
All in all, not great but well done. 7/10
'The Star' may not be one of Davis' best films or performances, but she still comes off very well which says a lot about the general high quality of her performances and her as an actress. It took a lot for her to give a bad performance, even in her twilight years. The film does a good, if not quite great, job with the subject, it is relatable and it holds up. For what 'The Star' lacks in subtlety and an ending that is in keeping with the rest of the film, it makes up for in emotion and intelligence.
For my, and other people's, tastes, 'The Star' does go a little too over the top on the melodrama. Melodrama can tend to get overheated, and the melodramatic bits here are on the overwrought side. It can be contrived with things happening too easily.
Did have reservations with the ending. It did admittedly leave me misty eyed, but it had a tacked on and studio interference-like feel and doesn't gel with the rest of the film, a darker and more daring ending would have been better perhaps.
On the other hand, Davis gives it absolutely everything in a meaty role and is terrific. Gutsy but also vulnerable. There is also strong work from Sterling Hayden playing his role with integrity and young pre-'Splendor in the Grass' and 'West Side Story' Natalie Wood is also worth looking out for. The direction is very skilled and judges and paces everything well, though other more distinguished directors understood Davis' strengths more perhaps.
It is an in general intelligently scripted film, subtlety is not a strong suit as said already but there are some memorable lines that made me think and came over as sincere. The story moves swift and, although it is far from flawless, it has the right amount of tension and poignancy when needed and doesn't soften the subject too much. 'The Star' is not lavish visually but it has atmosphere, as does Victor Young's haunting score.
All in all, not great but well done. 7/10
... because the plot is about an aging actress in an industry that worships youth who can no longer get parts of any kind, whose friends have abandoned her, and who is so broke she is about to be kicked out of her small apartment - Bette Davis as Margaret Elliot. I guess I'd also mention that her star has fallen so far that she can't even get arrested in this town (Hollywood), but alas she can, as she gets arrested for driving drunk and getting into a one car accident, all while lugging her Oscar around.
Jim Johannsen (Sterling Hayden) bails her out of jail. He does this partly because she gave him a break in his very short movie career before he moved on to a boat building business of his own, partly because he is kind, partly because he is still in love with her although he is noticeably younger than she is. She actually does get a shot at another part - a supporting role playing the part of the much older sister of the actual lead actress. The test was just a formality, but Margaret messes it up by trying to play the middle aged scrub woman role she has as sexy rather than disheveled and dispirited as directed. When she asks to see her screen test she sees how ridiculous it looks and, as a result, has an epiphany. You'll have to watch and find out just what that epiphany is.
This film is supposedly based loosely on the late career of Joan Crawford, although she got parts - and good ones - past the date of the release of this film. Not to be unkind, but Joan Crawford aged quite well where here, Bette Davis actually looks every day of her 44 years. It's interesting to see Sterling Hayden play a strong yet sensitive guy. There is a good role here for Natalie Wood as Davis' adoring teen daughter.
One thing that the film ignores, probably because it had been written several years before, is that by 1952 actors and actresses whose stars were no longer on the ascent or who maybe were never that well known in the first place were getting steady work on television. In fact, both Bette Davis and Joan Crawford started getting regular appearances on television starting in the 1950s.
Jim Johannsen (Sterling Hayden) bails her out of jail. He does this partly because she gave him a break in his very short movie career before he moved on to a boat building business of his own, partly because he is kind, partly because he is still in love with her although he is noticeably younger than she is. She actually does get a shot at another part - a supporting role playing the part of the much older sister of the actual lead actress. The test was just a formality, but Margaret messes it up by trying to play the middle aged scrub woman role she has as sexy rather than disheveled and dispirited as directed. When she asks to see her screen test she sees how ridiculous it looks and, as a result, has an epiphany. You'll have to watch and find out just what that epiphany is.
This film is supposedly based loosely on the late career of Joan Crawford, although she got parts - and good ones - past the date of the release of this film. Not to be unkind, but Joan Crawford aged quite well where here, Bette Davis actually looks every day of her 44 years. It's interesting to see Sterling Hayden play a strong yet sensitive guy. There is a good role here for Natalie Wood as Davis' adoring teen daughter.
One thing that the film ignores, probably because it had been written several years before, is that by 1952 actors and actresses whose stars were no longer on the ascent or who maybe were never that well known in the first place were getting steady work on television. In fact, both Bette Davis and Joan Crawford started getting regular appearances on television starting in the 1950s.
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.
During "The Star," Bette Davis commands the lead as Margaret Elliott, a Hollywood, Oscar-winning has been. The show is about handsome Jim Johannson (Sterling Hayden), a boat mechanic & fan of Elliott's, teaching her that there's more to life than being an actor. The adorable adolescent, Natalie Wood, plays Gretchen, Elliot's beloved daughter.
Elliot can't deal with the mid-life transition off the set & into retirement. She's so resentful she becomes a drunkard. During a classic scene, Davis uses one of her own Oscars, propped on the dashboard of Elliot's car & heads for the posh homes of the stars in Beverly Hills saying, "Come on, Oscar, let's you & me go get drunk!" Davis' portrayal of a fallen actor makes her seem older than she actually was. Of all the characters Davis embodied, I think she got Margaret Elliot spot-on! After she gives a faux sight-seeing tour of the stars' mansions to no one while drunk & driving, she lands in jail. That's when Jim bails her out, then takes her to his home on the ocean docks. The rest of the story is worth knowing.
Interestingly, this 1952 performance earned Davis her 9th Oscar nomination at 44yo. She was anything but washed up like the character she played, with 43 years of acting in movies & many more nominations & awards left to go. Davis was less than half-way into her acting career!
Elliot can't deal with the mid-life transition off the set & into retirement. She's so resentful she becomes a drunkard. During a classic scene, Davis uses one of her own Oscars, propped on the dashboard of Elliot's car & heads for the posh homes of the stars in Beverly Hills saying, "Come on, Oscar, let's you & me go get drunk!" Davis' portrayal of a fallen actor makes her seem older than she actually was. Of all the characters Davis embodied, I think she got Margaret Elliot spot-on! After she gives a faux sight-seeing tour of the stars' mansions to no one while drunk & driving, she lands in jail. That's when Jim bails her out, then takes her to his home on the ocean docks. The rest of the story is worth knowing.
Interestingly, this 1952 performance earned Davis her 9th Oscar nomination at 44yo. She was anything but washed up like the character she played, with 43 years of acting in movies & many more nominations & awards left to go. Davis was less than half-way into her acting career!
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!
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaWhen a drunken Margaret Elliot takes her Oscar for a ride in her car, Bette Davis used one of her own Oscars.
- ErroresWhen 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.
- Citas
[to her Oscar statuette]
Margaret Elliott: Come on, Oscar, let's you and me get drunk!
- ConexionesFeatured in Hollywood: The Great Stars (1963)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- The Star
- Locaciones de filmación
- May Company Department Store - 6067 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos(Margaret Eliot's workplace)
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 29 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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