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All About Eve

December 13th, 2007

Outfest Executive Director Stephen Gutwillig performed his last official duty last night before stepping down to join a new group. He chose to screen the 1950 classic All About Eve. Joseph L. Mankiewicz wrote and directed, and the equally legendary Darryl F. Zanuck produced. The dialogue holds up to this day, and I consider it one of the best movies ever about Hollywood and theatre. Bette Davis is Margo Channing, a fading actress of a certain age (OK, my age). She is eventually supplanted by Eve Harrington, whose character undergoes a remarkable transformation from mousy sycophant to conniving backstabbing competitor with the help of poison pen theatre reviewer Addison Dewitt (played to perfection by George Sanders). The movie is high camp and dripping with irony and cynicism. It also has a then-unknown Marilyn Monroe as an aspiring actress. The movie is framed by the award scene above, so viewers know that Eve is going to change from when we first meet her. The final scene is not only perfectly shot, but very chilling. I’d put this on my must-see list for everyone. 

Random thoughts

  1. Michael Cota
    December 29th, 2007 at 17:44 | #1

    Ha, you’ve got me interested in the artsy films you have mentioned on your blog, so I Netflixed a few!

    I really liked this movie in particular. smile

  2. January 13th, 2008 at 00:22 | #2

    *Classic!*

    I remember the first time I watched this in high school with my grandmother (who exposed me to all KINDS of camp!)… Honestly, I can see a lot of my Margo in my mom (can you say drama queen?!)..

    I love camp! I love Betty Davis!

    I love the fierceness!  HA! 

    Great pick! Of course you have to watch a double

    feature with Sunset Blvd. which also came out in 1950.  Set back to back you get this very desperate plight of women in Hollywood!  Aging isn’t easy!

    I wonder when we will remake such classics with like you know, washed up teen-queens like Britney and Lindsay Lohan! That would be classic!

    ~D*

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