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The Barefoot Contessa

  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 2h 8m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Humphrey Bogart and Ava Gardner in The Barefoot Contessa (1954)
Watch Trailer [OV]
Play trailer1:52
1 Video
71 Photos
TragedyCrimeDramaMysteryRomance

This is the life of a Hollywood movie star named Maria, as told by writer/director Harry Dawes, from being discovered in Madrid, Spain, until her funeral in Italy.This is the life of a Hollywood movie star named Maria, as told by writer/director Harry Dawes, from being discovered in Madrid, Spain, until her funeral in Italy.This is the life of a Hollywood movie star named Maria, as told by writer/director Harry Dawes, from being discovered in Madrid, Spain, until her funeral in Italy.

  • Director
    • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
  • Writer
    • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
  • Stars
    • Humphrey Bogart
    • Ava Gardner
    • Edmond O'Brien
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
    • Writer
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
    • Stars
      • Humphrey Bogart
      • Ava Gardner
      • Edmond O'Brien
    • 134User reviews
    • 59Critic reviews
    • 70Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 2 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 1:52
    Trailer [OV]

    Photos71

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    Top cast33

    Edit
    Humphrey Bogart
    Humphrey Bogart
    • Harry Dawes
    Ava Gardner
    Ava Gardner
    • Maria Vargas
    Edmond O'Brien
    Edmond O'Brien
    • Oscar Muldoon
    Marius Goring
    Marius Goring
    • Alberto Bravano
    Valentina Cortese
    Valentina Cortese
    • Eleanora Torlato-Favrini
    • (as Valentina Cortesa)
    Rossano Brazzi
    Rossano Brazzi
    • Count Vincenzo Torlato-Favrini
    Elizabeth Sellars
    Elizabeth Sellars
    • Jerry
    Warren Stevens
    Warren Stevens
    • Kirk Edwards
    Franco Interlenghi
    Franco Interlenghi
    • Pedro Vargas
    Mari Aldon
    Mari Aldon
    • Myrna
    Alberto Rabagliati
    • Proprietor
    Enzo Staiola
    Enzo Staiola
    • Busboy
    Maria Zanoli
    Maria Zanoli
    • Maria's Mother
    Renato Chiantoni
    • Maria's Father
    Bill Fraser
    • J. Montague Brown
    John Parrish
    • Mr. Max Black
    Jim Gérald
    • Mr. Blue
    • (as Jim Gerald)
    Diana Decker
    Diana Decker
    • Drunken Blonde
    • Director
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
    • Writer
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews134

    6.913.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6TheLittleSongbird

    This contessa is beautiful but both overblown and bland

    Was really intrigued into seeing 'The Barefoot Contessa'. Joseph L Mankiewicz was responsible for 'All About Eve', which is one of my all time favourite films, and when you have the likes of Ava Gardner, Humphrey Bogart and Edmond O'Brien one does expect a lot.

    'The Barefoot Contessa' was disappointing. It is a long way from an awful film and has several very good things, but with such a talented cast and a director who was really good when he is in his prime it could have been so much more. Can totally see the polarising reactions on both sides, while 'The Barefoot Contessa' has a good deal to admire (more so than has been given credit for) it is not going to appeal, and has not appealed, to everybody. 1954 saw some great films, 'Rear Window', 'On the Waterfront', 'A Star is Born', 'Sabrina', 'Dial M for Murder', 'White Christmas' and '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea', 'The Barefoot Contessa' to me just isn't in the same league.

    Starting with what is good about 'The Barefoot Contessa', it looks great visually with beautiful autumnal cinematography and sumptuous costumes and settings, the very meaning of extravagant. The music score from Mario Nascimbene is lush and subtly done. There are some cracking lines and there is evidence of sincerity. Was very surprised at how daring and ahead of its time it was.

    Ava Gardner lives up to her glamorous "the world's most beautiful animal" image and character and is positively luminous and graceful, she is very much in her prime here. Late-career Humphrey Bogart, rightly regarded as a cultural icon who died far too soon (only three years later), is as commanding as ever and not only the best actor in the cast but also one of the film's strongest elements. Edmond O'Brien is deliciously oily and in his best moments on dynamite form. Warren Stevens is very good too.

    Rossano Brazzi was the weak link however in the cast, his role has little if anything to it and the only thing Brazzi brings to it is handsome looks, everywhere else he's very wooden and dull. Mankiewicz really is not at his best in the directing, he delivers on the style but elsewhere it's pedestrian and uninspired.

    His writing fares even weaker, despite some moments of sincerity and cracking lines the acerbic wit that sparkled in 'All About Eve' four years earlier does not come through enough. Most of the film is too talky and rambling, as well as overwrought, flimsy and too rehearsed. The thin and sometimes muddled story does suffer from dull pacing that rarely fires on all cylinders and an overlong length, and feels both overblown as a result of being overwritten and bland due to the lack of depth to the writing and characterisation. Despite the great efforts of the cast the characters are under-explored and don't have much to allow us to connect properly with them.

    Overall, beautiful but uneven. 5.5-6/10 Bethany Cox
    7Xstal

    The Crown Jewelless...

    There's a beauty that's discovered and she's a star, the kind of woman who would twist your neck and jar, and there are those who want to own her, with gifts a plenty they can confer, she won't let them through her door, as there's a bar. Harry Dawes becomes a friend and helps her grow, giving advice and wise direction she glows and glows, until one day the magic spells, she meets a Count, it all just gels, there's a proposal, a great big wedding, it's a great show. But the fruits of expectation are not hanging, it's not just hearts who's beats slow down, there is no banging, it all drives the lady nuts, and this might make you cuss and cuss, the deception is extreme, fraudulent planning.

    Ava Gardener, what more can you say.
    7ptmcq05

    All About Maria

    Four years after the phenomenal All About Eve, Joseph L Manckiewicz moves away from Broadway and lands in Hollywood. Naturally, everything in Hollywood is bound to be louder, more vulgar, more shallow and more expensive and surprisingly less relatable, less credible. Ava Gardner is breathtakingly beautiful and Jack Cardiff photographs her like a goddess but that's no match for any of the exchanges between Bette Davis and Thelma Ritter in All About Eve. Here the soap opera elements dominate the tale. The Italian aristocrats as played by Rossano Brazzi and Valentina Cortese take the story for a ludicrous spin. Josseph L Manckiewicz as a writer and director makes sure the film doesn't become "The Legend Of Lylah Clare" for instance. Humphery Bogart plays the lead and I forgot to mention it. I wonder why. He's wonderful in it but the Oscar went to Edmond O'Brian for his unbearable press agent. Ava Gardner presence transformed this lurid tale into a classic and it's bound to remain so for ever.
    8BuddyBoy1961

    Bittersweet tale of success leading to tragedy

    Scouting talent for an upcoming film to be shot in Italy, a trio from Hollywood (writer/director Bogart, producer Stevens and publicist O'Brien) travel to Spain to scope renowned local dancing sensation Maria Vargas (Gardner). Immediately, they are struck by her beauty and presence. In fact, Gardner has a profound effect on every man she meets...though the effect is as unique as each man she encounters. Stevens sees a talent to be exploited for all it's worth and O'Brien sees only huge marquees and dollar signs. But Bogart, after a couple of brief but revealing conversations with Maria, sees so much more. Expecting a naive Spanish peasant eager to grab at the brass ring, he finds instead a woman as smart as she is beautiful, whose main motivation is to enjoy the challenge and escape that a Hollywood career might offer a woman who will nevertheless always value the simpler things in life. Even with her inate beauty and uncommon savvy, to Maria's detriment she does not have eyes in the back of her head. Told in flashback the viewer experiences her success in Hollywood and her quest to find the true love of a man (Brazzi) that has always eluded her.

    In the hands of Joseph Mankiewicz, "The Barefoot Contessa" frequently bristles with crackling dialogue (would you have expected less?). Unique to this contribution from Mankiewicz is the portent that hangs over the film. As the details of Maria's life are expounded, empathy for her fate increases accordingly. Impeccably well-cast, this is actually an ensemble film. Gardner is luminous as Maria, though she is not solely dependent on her looks to carry the film--she gives a real performance. Bogart is stalwart and sympathetic as Maria's protector. And O'Brien, in an Academy Award-winning turn, is sly and oily as the single-minded publicist who changes allegiances as often as his sweat-soaked shirts. Lensed by the great Jack Cardiff and shot largely in Italy, the European ambiance, as well as the snappy dialogue, push the credibility of the premise a notch or two above so many other so-called exposés of Hollywood excess and pretense.
    7cowboyandvampire

    Down and out in Hollywood, Rome and the Riviera

    When a movie opens with the funeral of the main character, you know you are in for a long, sad ride. Really long, in this case – the movie clocks in at two hours. With the inevitability of a tragic death fixed at the opening, it's hard not to see the entire film through filter of sadness.

    The Barefoot Contessa follows the rise, perpetual dissatisfaction and demise of a beautiful, charismatic Maria Vargas, a young Spanish woman played by Ava Gardner. A powerful wall street type turned movie backer wants her to be the new face and visits her in her small village, dragging along a PR man, the director and washed up actress. There are two narrators – a little confusing at times – but most of the movie is relayed from the perspective of Humphrey Bogart, a sad sack, world weary writer/director (in a mythical time when writers were as famous as the stars). He was great, as always, and Gardner was good but lacked oomph for someone supposedly able to set the world on fire.

    I think that was due mainly to the direction, she wasn't allowed to sparkle; quite the opposite, she was prohibited from shining. The odd thing about the movie is how much of her action happened off screen. When Hollywood arrives in her village to see her dance, we only see her hands clicking castanets. When she has a screen test which dazzles jaded directors and, we don't see it. When she makes three movies, we never see her on set or even get a hint of what she was like in the movies. When she rises to the top of the celebrity mountain with legions of adoring fans, we don't see them or even understand why. In fact, all she really does is mope around and wait for her demise. The only time she is allowed to partially captivate is during an odd scene where she hand-dances at a Gypsy camp.

    It must have been intentional, and added to the doomed mood throughout. Instead of the details, instead of watching a small town girl lose her innocence (though she always seemed quite confident, self-possessed and resigned to her fate) we see the outcomes -- cruel people growing crueler, the dehumanizing effect of fame and redemption for a few characters (Bogart's character finds true love after three marriages and manages to kick the booze habit for good). Mostly we see barefoot Ava, drifting through life, never able to let herself be happy, or fall in love, or enjoy success, or even laugh. And we are never really able to understand why. The opening shot shows that she is doomed and I was never able to shake that inevitability throughout.

    Still well worth the time.

    -- www.cowboyandvampire.come --

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The statue of Ava Gardner used in the film was by Bulgarian artist Assen Peikov. After the film Frank Sinatra bought the statue and installed it in the garden of his Coldwater Canyon home.
    • Goofs
      Standing in the rain at Maria's funeral, Harry's raincoat is notably more drenched before Oscar's dissertation than afterward, when the lapels are suddenly dry.
    • Quotes

      Drunken blonde: [of Maria Vargas] She hasn't even got what I've got.

      Jerry: What she's got you couldn't spell - and what you've got, you used to have.

    • Connections
      Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Le contrôle de l'univers (1999)

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 30, 1954 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • Italian
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Bosonoga kontesa
    • Filming locations
      • Portofino, Genoa, Liguria, Italy(Dawes directing a film shoot)
    • Production companies
      • Transoceanic Film
      • Figaro
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $18,437
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 8 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.75 : 1

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