The Star (1952) Poster

(1952)

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8/10
Once A Star, Always A Star
ferbs5424 May 2011
Warning: Spoilers
In 1950, in one of her greatest films, "All About Eve," Bette Davis, in the role of Margo Channing, played a Broadway stage actress "of a certain age" who has become fearful about her future career and personal attractiveness. Two years later, Ms. Davis essayed a similar kind of role--an aging Hollywood actress who can no longer get parts and who is on the edge of bankruptcy--in Stuart Heisler's "The Star." When we first encounter Margaret Elliot, she is standing outside an auction house that is selling off all her worldly effects, the words "Going, going, gone" also serving as a cruel commentary on her vanishing career. A former Oscar winner, Margaret is now divorced, broke and with little in the way of prospects. Her young daughter Gretchen (played by 14-year-old Natalie Wood, here on the cusp of womanhood) still reveres her, but to the rest of Tinseltown, she is "box office poison." After serving a night in the can for a DUI, Margaret is bailed out by her one-time fellow actor Jim Johannsen (played by the great Sterling Hayden). The possibility is held out for a normal life with this gentle and understanding man, but can Margaret resist the urge to try for a comeback, in the form of an "older sister" screen test?

Often seen as a film that closely parallels Davis' own career, "The Star" is only analogous to a certain point. Like that of Margaret Elliot, Davis' career of course had its ups and downs, its Oscar win(s) and its fights with the studio system. But unlike Margaret, Davis would go on to appear in many more great pictures in her later years (such as "The Virgin Queen," "The Catered Affair," "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?," "Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte," "The Nanny," "The Whales of August" and on and on). Still, Davis must have identified closely with her character here, and it shows in some truly great work. In a film with numerous compelling scenes, two with Davis especially stand out: her drunk-driving episode while clutching her Oscar in one hand and a bottle in the other, simultaneously giving the imaginary listener a tour of Hollywood ("On your left is the home of Mr. and Mrs. Brinkman...better known to you tourists as Jeanne Crain...."), and the sequence in which she reacts, in horror, to the results of her most recent screen test. Bette, indeed, at her finest, and certainly worthy of her real-life Oscar nomination for her work here. Hayden, of course, is at his sterling best; how nice to see him playing a tender, kindly role, for a change, coming back into Margaret's life as some kind of impossibly understanding guardian angel. In another strange parallel, Hayden, an ex-sailor who became an actor to raise money for a boat, here plays an ex-actor who gives up his career to become a boat mechanic! And how strange to see Natalie, with her well-known fear of ships and the water, here blithely bouncing all over the deck of Johannsen's schooner!

"The Star" is a compact film, coming in at 90 minutes, and Heisler serves it well. Five years earlier, he had directed Susan Hayward in her breakout film, "Smash-up: The Story of a Woman," which also featured a frustrated female entertainer going on a drunken bender. "The Star" is at least the equal of that great film, and indeed features what turns out to be an essential Bette Davis performance. No, it is not as fine a picture as "All About Eve" (few films are), but is still eminently likable, memorable and praiseworthy. All this, and a Hollywood happy ending, too!
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7/10
Grim forecast
drjgardner13 February 2019
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.
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8/10
C'mon Oscar, let's you and me go get drunk!
Boyo-29 March 2001
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.
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Somewhat depressing but fascinating
preppy-323 July 2017
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!
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7/10
"Come on Oscar, let's you and me get drunk!"
classicsoncall20 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Ironic isn't it, that Bette Davis would get a Best Actress Oscar nomination for a role in which she portrays a washed up actress? There's a great 'Sunset Boulevard' moment in the story when she affirms to her daughter Gretchen (Natalie Wood) , "...if you're a star, you don't stop being a star". One has to wonder how many past and present movie celebrities go through the same run of emotions once their individual star has burned out.

More than anything, the story line deals with someone lying to everyone including themselves about hanging on to past glory. I thought the picture hit the proverbial wall when Margaret Elliot (Davis) really believed she could land a role calling for an eighteen year old. That takes some kind of chutzpa when you're in your mid-Forties and haven't aged particularly well. She finally figured it out when she saw the screen test, at least her eyesight wasn't affected along with her poor judgment.

I don't know if there's a quintessential Bette Davis role; Margo Channing in "All About Eve" might come the closest, but of her lesser known films this one comes close to capturing her essence as an actress. It's a good film with a good story that the tabloids of today would eat up in a heartbeat.
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7/10
Rather hard to watch...
AlsExGal18 March 2023
... 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.
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7/10
Stardom's dark side
TheLittleSongbird25 February 2020
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
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9/10
"I Know Lance Garfield, pretty well...you don't know HOW well I know your brother".
algernon416 March 2002
I loved this movie! I campaigned 20th Century Fox to bring it out on video because my copy was on BETA and my Betamax has long since broke. What's interesting about this movie is that it was first offered to Joan Crawford who turned it down flat. At the same time, "Sudden Fear" was presented to Davis, who didn't like the script. Davis also turned down "Come Back, Little Sheba". Well, guess what? Davis accepted "The Star", Joan accepted "Sudden Fear" and Shirley Booth got the chance to repeat her stage success in "Sheba" and all three got nominated for the Best Actress Oscar in 1952! Amazing.

Bette Davis did everything but hit the ceiling in "The Star". She was trying her best to give an Academy Award-type performance. And it was. Margaret to her agent: "You can do everything but get me a picture, can't you?! Harry Stone, the big star-maker, the gentleman agent, my friend!" That was one of the early great lines uttered by has-been movie queen, Margaret Elliot. There were many more to come. Davis turned in a realistic performance as the aging star and conveyed the frustrations that many older performers feel when they realize the truth about their failing careers.

Margaret is torn between her fear of age, her devotion to her young daughter and her drive to be "put back where I belong." She is saddled with a family that she had cared for, financially, since she became a star and their inability to understand that she was no longer a rich and famous actress. I loved the scene when she throws out her sister and brother-in-law in a fit of screaming anger, then grabs her Oscar and takes a drunken ride through the streets of Beverly Hills. After her arrest, Margaret pays a visit to her agent's office. He tell her that she's had his office "running around in circles". Margaret retorts, "Well I'VE been 'running around in circles', too! But not MARGARET ELLIOT circles!"

When Margaret gets the chance to tryout for a movie ("The Fatal Winter") she's wanted for years, she's informed that she is not reading for the lead, but the lead's older sister, Sara. Elliot plots to convince the producers that she should play the younger part by botching the screen test, playing the older sister like a young siren.

Sara: "It isn't like you to pay a social visit, Jed Garfield, what are you doing here?" Jed: "You got it fixed up real nice, Sara, real nice". Sara: "I like things nice. What do you want?" Jed: "You used to be quite a girl, you still think you are, don't you?" Sara: "I still know what's right from wrong." Jed: "You think it's right to tell folks you were in the lane the night of the murder?" Sara: "I was there, Jed Garfield, you KNOW I was there..." Jed: "Well, if you was there, what was you doin' there?" Sara: "None of your business what I was doing there." Jed: "Well, it's my business if you're tryin' to ruin my brother." Sara: "Maybe I was thinking what he tried to do to me." Jed: "You don't know Lance, when he's crossed." Sara: "I know Lance Garfield, pretty well! You don't know HOW well, I know your brother."

She played this like a flirting, young teenager and the test was awful. But it was wonderful ACTING by Miss Bette Davis!

For those who expect to see Margo Channing of "All About Eve", they won't see her here. Davis IS Margaret Elliot! When she said to the old women at the department store, "I AM Margaret Elliot, and I intend to STAY 'Margaret Elliot'!" she meant it.

I am crazy about the entire movie. The ending is contrived, but so what? This is what Davis herself described: A GOOD OLD-FASHIONED BETTE DAVIS MOVIE! Pop some corn, get a candy bar and a big soda and watch this on a very rainy day.
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7/10
Margo Channing on the skids
FilmOtaku8 February 2005
Warning: Spoilers
"The Star", released in 1952 and starring Bette Davis as aging and washed up actress Margaret Elliot is an absolute riot to watch. Margaret is an actress who had her decades in the spotlight, but has lost her fortune and lost her career. From the onset of the film, the desperation Margaret feels is almost tangible. Because of a series of bad investments, a leeching family and an ex-husband or two, Margaret is left with $3 in her purse, her belongings are being auctioned off by her creditors, and her young teenage daughter Gretchen (Natalie Wood, almost unrecognizable, she's so young and fairly awkward in this film), who desperately wants to live with her, can't because Margaret's just been evicted from her apartment. One night, she goes on a bender (uttering what is clearly the best line of the film, after grabbing an Oscar she had won, "C'mon Oscar, let's you and me go get drunk!") and ends up with a DUI. One of her former co-stars, Jim Johannson (Sterling Hayden) comes and bails her out and tries to help her turn her life around. At first, she goes to work at a department store, but when someone recognizes her and insults her, she throws a fit and quits. Begging her agent to talk to a producer about a part she wants in a film she used to have an option for, the producer finally agrees to give her a screen test – for the part of the dowdy older sister of the "star". Margaret concedes to a test, but clearly has her own agenda, and disillusions about her star power, because she fails the test miserably by acting how she feels the part should act, rather than how the director would like to see the part played. In a moment of clarity, when she is screening the test, she actually realizes how ridiculous she has become, and decides to move on to the next phase of her life.

"The Star" was made two years after "All About Eve", and the difference in Davis is stunning. Going from the glamorous (but insecure) Margo Channing to the very unglamorous (and insecure) Margaret Elliot, Davis shows how truly versatile she is. More importantly, it shows that she was also unafraid to take roles like this, roles that arguably reflect on not only her own career, but the careers of many aging actresses of the day. With fresh-faced actresses like Marilyn Monroe, Debbie Reynolds and even the up and coming Elizabeth Taylor, there weren't a lot of roles for women in their 40's to play, a trend that seems to continue today to some extent. Davis plays the role with dignity and camp, and I thought she was fantastic.

During "The Star" I couldn't help but think that it was the personification of what would have happened had Norma Desmond had another chance, and the results are not pretty. From what I gather, this is a pretty rare film, but it's worth watching if you're a Bette Davis fan; I had never heard of it before stumbling across it online, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. 7/10 --Shelly
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8/10
Like a knife in the back from Bette Davis!
planktonrules15 July 2006
Much of the reason Bette Davis did this movie was because it was apparently a movie based, in part, on the life of Joan Crawford. While this was never announced by the studio for fear of legal action, Bette apparently delighted in doing the part because she loathed Joan so much! Oddly, the movie also COULD have been based on Davis' life as well, as there were also many parallels, but I doubt if Miss Davis noticed this.

The star in the title refers to a down and out and faded movie star who is all but forgotten and given to getting drunk and screwing up her life. As a result, it is a very tough film to watch, as your skin crawls in embarrassment at just how low this actress has fallen. However, despite this, it is an excellent and "in your face" melodrama about the dark side of stardom. Davis' performance is excellent and just plain creepy!
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7/10
Bette makes the most out of choppy script
sdave759624 June 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Bette Davis had a triumphant comeback in 1950 with "All About Eve" just a year after leaving Warner Brothers. That great role, however, did not result in an avalanche of great scripts to come her way. After all, she was well past the age of 40, and considered difficult to work with by many Hollywood moguls. "The Star" released in 1952, is respectable, although not quite of the caliber of Margo Channing. Davis plays Margaret Elliot, a big Hollywood star on the way down. Not only does she find herself replaced by younger actresses on the screen, she's also out of money. Yes, this could have been Davis' life story at the time. To deal with her problems, Margaret finds herself turning to drink -- she is picked up for drunk driving while touring the Hollywood celebrities homes (with her Oscar propped up on the dashboard!). Enter Jim, played by Sterling Hayden, who bails her out of jail and begins a relationship with this difficult and temperamental actress. Just why he seems to take to her strains credibility a bit -- apparently Margaret gave him a part in a movie, but barely remembers him. After all, Jim is a handsome, rugged boat-builder; and she is a spoiled actress. The differences between them escalate, and Margaret sinks all her hope in a movie role given her. In typical vain Hollywood fashion, she fails to listen to the director, and tries to turn a middle-aged frump role into a ridiculous sexy one. This, of course, results in disaster for Margaret. This is not a perfect film, and there are holes n the script, and the ending feels tacked on. But what set Bette apart from other actresses of her genre was her ability to take a mundane script and run with it -- she runs the gamut of emotions in this part, and has at least several breakdowns and tantrums that are always a joy to watch her perform. I don't feel Bette and Sterling Hayden had much chemistry on screen, although Hayden does a respectable job with his role. A young Natalie Wood is also on hand as Davis' daughter; she has little to do here except look cute, but the future would tell a different tale.
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8/10
The Star; truth or illusion.
bennyraldak20 March 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Tragic but redeeming film about a fallen movie star called Margaret Elliot, played by the incomparable Bette Davis. Once one of the great Hollywood faces, her face now seems to be a cynical mirror of disillusionment. A 'washed up' and 'over the hill' actress's struggle with life, identity and human alienation is the story of this very moving and poignant film. Wat struck me about this film are more things than I could mention, but in particular the way this film plays with reality and illusion; fact and fiction. For the film is about a vain, self-absorbed, older movie star struggling with the loss of her appeal and beauty. And, her confrontation with the new young stars that have taken her place in the publics perception. All things that Bette Davis herself must have been dealing with at that time. There for it's a very brave and dramatic film and part for her to chose in that phase of her career. I truly admire her for that. "The Star" has obvious parallels with Billy Wilder's "Sunset Blvd" (1950), but this film is a little more raw and down to earth. Less stylish but a little more human and dramatic perhaps. Some of the metaphors and uses of symbolism are beautifully sharp and touching at the same time. I love the scene where Margaret in her desperation steels a bottle of her famously worn expensive perfume 'I Desire', and then has an awakening when the bottle turns out to be odorless; a display bottle - an illusion; empty and meaningless. Watching this picture gave me another great title to put on my list of favorite films about film. Also a true recommendation for fans of classic cinema, in particularly Bette Davis fans.
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6/10
Very mixed feelings
vincentlynch-moonoi29 May 2015
Warning: Spoilers
I love Bette Davis, but by 1952, just as with her character in this movie, her best days were behind her. But, that didn't mean one couldn't enjoy a good Bette Davis performance.

The main problem I have with this film is not Miss Davis (my all-time favorite female actress), but with her co-star -- Sterling Hayden. If ever there was a limited actor, he was it. The desk I'm sitting at is less wooden than he was.

The second problem I have with this film, and only slightly less significant is the script. At first it seems plausible. An older Academy Award winning actress is suddenly on the skids, and she is reaching her breaking point (which might have been a good title for the film). But why drop into the depths when television was alive and well, and yes, although "Playhouse 90" was not around yet, there were dramatic television series on the air already, and quite a few actors and actresses (including people like Ronald Colman) were beginning to do work in television. But, that logical storyline wouldn't have made a dramatic film, even if it had been based on reality. And then there's the ending of the film. She basically kidnaps her own daughter (gee, no problem there) because she has suddenly realized that true love conquers all, and heads off to a relationship which is outside of show biz. Really, that's sort of pathetic.

But back to Bette Davis. Her performance here is, in my view, flawed. There are scenes with brilliance. And there are scenes where I really felt she was "overacting".

Natalie Wood is here as the daughter, but isn't given much of do of significance, but wow -- this was his 17th film! It was good to see an older Minor Watson here...always a welcome character actor.

I see this film as abounding in transition. Bette Davis transitioning into films where she played older character. But even the film industry transitioning (coarsely at times) into what it saw as more realistic and gritty film-making. But is this a top-notch film? No. Good, but not great.
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4/10
Bette hamming it up
joclmct22 February 2021
This is trash but it's hilarious trash w/ Bette giving one of her worst performances but it can be enjoyed for its camp value. Bette has several scream fest scenes that alone make the film a hoot & her drunken drive through town with her Oscar in hand is classic camp. Bette is a great actress but many actresses give horrible performances @ some point in their careers. The Star ranks (& I do use the word rank intentionally) as one of her worst. The screen test scene where she gives a ridiculous terrible performance is no different from her performance in the entire movie. Perhaps her decision to mock her nemesis Joan Crawford came back to bite her in her derrière. Sometimes revenge can end up a boomerang. Grab the popcorn, add extra butter & prepare to watch an unbelievably unintentional comedy of the highest order. That is if you are clever enough to appreciate camp.
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1952 Davis Earns Her 9th Oscar Nomination . . .
semioticz18 October 2007
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!
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6/10
A Movie Star First
bkoganbing8 June 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Although Bette Davis received one of her ten Academy Award nominations for Best Actress in The Star, the thing that struck me about this film is how Sterling Hayden managed to land a part that was so much about himself in real life.

Hayden had a great love of the sea and sailing and in this film he played a character akin to himself in real life. He was a one film wonder who Bette Davis made a leading man on a whim and who proves to be her salvation. As for Davis she is in the title role of a film star whose day has come and gone.

Davis's character of Margaret Elliott is obsessed with her stardom, not her craft as an actress, but with film stardom. She's a has been who just refuses to accept that she's growing older. Had she been an actress first she would have considered transitioning to character roles.

There are some similarities to Gloria Swanson's Norma Desmond. But unlike Desmond, Bette's money has dried up and instead of living in splendid and aloof isolation in her Beverly Hills mansion, she's having all kinds of problems both with bad behavior and the fact she can't get work.

Margaret Elliott in The Star is a great role for Bette Davis. The film is contrived and the ending quite artificial, but it allows Davis to chew the scenery and make it work because it's a part of her character. The part was originally offered to Joan Crawford who turned it down and I think the film may have it a little too close to home for Joan. One reason I think Davis did the part was that she also recognized that it hit home for Crawford and she may have used Joan as a model of someone who was a movie star first and an actress second.

The film is an absolute must for Davis fans.
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6/10
Davis makes the most of substandard material
movieman-20012 June 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Hollywood actress, Margaret Elliot (Bette Davis) is a has-been – only she refuses to believe it. After a career, par excellence that made her the toast of two continents, Margaret's fame and fortune is reduced to a pick and save garage sale and public auction to help raise money. She's broke – with no prospects of regaining her illustrious toe-hold in the land of make-believe. However, if living in the past agrees with Maggie, it certainly doesn't do anything for her beaux, Jim Johannson (Sterling Hayden) or adult daughter, Gretchen (Natalie Wood). But this can't be the end…can it? Is there life after fame? These are just two of the questions that director, Stuart Heisler attempts to answer in his interesting – if a tad stoic – reliquary of mumbo-jumbo that sadly, gets mired in a bit of heavy handed melodrama before the final fadeout. What is interesting about "The Star" (1952) is that, for the most part, it might have best been re-titled as "Bette Davis: My Life So Far." By 1952 Davis had lost the supremacy of acquiring plum roles for herself over at Warner Bros. In fact, her studio contract had been canceled. She had made a resounding comeback with "All About Eve" (1950) but had not been offered any more tour de force parts to aid in that upswing. By all accounts, Davis was a has-been. It is that underbelly of life imitating art that adds layering to a tale that otherwise would not be there for the asking.

Warner's transfer on "The Star" is rather good, exhibiting a very pristine characteristic with solid blacks, clean whites and a minimal amount of film grain. Fine details are nicely realized throughout the film without the appearance of edge enhancement. The audio is mono but has also been very nicely cleaned up. We also get a brief, but adequate featurette "How real is the Star?" that is a succinct summation of both Davis' status at the box office and the overall impact of the film itself. Not bad, but one wishes that Warner Brothers had had the courage to remaster some of Bette Davis' more lucrative and popular endeavors which made her a star in the first place.
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6/10
Delirious Hollywood nonsense...
moonspinner554 November 2016
On-the-skids melodrama with Bette Davis as fallen movie celebrity Margaret Elliot, watching as all her belongings go up on the auction block ("one dollar!" someone calls out); her motto from this point seems to be "Going, going, gone." The picture, enjoyable and perhaps cathartic for both Davis and her fans at the time, is both campy and ferocious, with claws out; a look at how celebrity changes perceptions and, when that celebrity fades, how difficult it is for once-famous people to get their lives back on track. There are slow stretches involving Davis with potential suitor Sterling Hayden; however, her early downward spiral and subsequent struggle to find work is absorbing--in a masochistic, gaudy way. A last-act tease, wherein Margaret is approached for a humiliating role in a new movie project, deliciously appears to parallel Bette Davis in "The Star"! Her grit and determination makes the picture a satisfying wallow. **1/2 from ****
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9/10
Bette Davis Triumph
williwaw14 July 2011
Bette Davis deservedly won world wide fame at Warner Bros with a string of hits for the record books: Oscars for Jezebel, Dangerous, and to me her two greatest at Warners that Davis should have won Oscars : Now Voyager and The Letter. Bette Davis lucked out as she would be the first to admit when Bette Davis inherited from Claudette Colbert another great role starring in 20th's "All About Eve". The Star is another 20th film and this film may be one of her finest performances yet the film is overlooked when one discusses the gallery of great Bette Davis performances. Bette Davis takes role said to be based on Joan Crawford and runs with it. I like the desperation Bette's Margaret Elliot feels and one sees a true artist at work. Bette Davis scored her 9th Oscar nomination.

PS Joan Crawford also thought that this film was based on her and played a cruel trick on the films authors who were estranged from their daughter at the time. Crawford planned the Young Lady's elopement and wedding at her Mansion and then called the parents to advise them of the wedding and saying she had a piece of wedding cake for them.
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6/10
Bette Davis Could Sell Me a Four-Sided Triangle
evanston_dad21 June 2010
"The Star" gives Bette Davis a chance to tear up the screen as a one-time Hollywood legend who's forced to watch her youth and career slowly fade away.

The film is pure melodrama and soap opera, but this is Bette Davis we're talking about here, and the material was never found that she couldn't sell if she had half a mind to. One might be tempted to suspect that Davis's performance was semi-autobiographical, but based on what I've read, it sounds like this film is much more reminiscent of Joan Crawford's experiences in Hollywood than Davis's.

Sterling Hayden co-stars as the man who makes a woman of Davis, and an adolescent Natalie Wood plays her daughter.

The Oscar Davis's character carries around and gets in a car accident with was real and one of the two Davis won earlier in her career.

Grade: B-
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10/10
Great Stars, Great Acting!
nadya-9108012 February 2019
I've read the snarky, snide, dismissive reviews. I am sad that the sages passing judgment on this film and its stars, cannot see Bette Davis' and Sterling Hayden's charisma, star quality. They rise above what one reviewer sniffed as "a threadbare Sunset Boulevard." I find Bette Davis always fascinating, engrossing.
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7/10
When age hits a female movie star, and her ego won't accept it
blanche-29 June 2010
Bette Davis is "The Star" in this Hollywood story done in 1952.

It begins with the debt-ridden actress, Margaret Elliot, walking by an auction house that is selling her possessions on behalf of her creditors. Her agent walks out with something he bought, and Margaret tells him that she wants a part in the film version of a book that she once optioned. The agent attempts to discourage her. When she goes home, her sister and brother-in-law are there for their monthly check; she flips out on them and throws them out. Margaret lost all of her money - she gave it away to people who soaked her dry, she poured money into flop films to revitalize her career - realizing all of this, she grabs her Oscar, gets drunk, and gets arrested. She's bailed out by an actor she once starred with (Sterling Hayden) who decided Hollywood wasn't for him, and has gone into shipbuilding and repair. But he's always loved Margaret and been grateful to her for his break. He gives her his spare room and attempts to give her a dose of reality.

Margaret, however, still wants back where she was - on top - and to erase the bad headlines for drunk driving, she demands that her agent give her an appointment with the producer of the film she wants to star in. The producer decides she could do the role of the older sister, but she has to do a screen test.

"The Star" is a realistic look at the ego of someone who has been isolated from reality and surviving on her identity as a film star. Unlike her male counterparts, she has to face the passage of time, and she can't. This still happens today, though probably at a later age than it did in Davis' era. And although someone commented that this character is probably like Davis herself, yes and no. Davis was very smart in that she went into character roles - where every leading lady ends up eventually - comparatively early in her career. The actresses who never accepted that fate, such as Merle Oberon, faded from view. Nowadays, there are people writing lead roles for older women. Meryl Streep or Diane Keaton get them.

How Margaret is like Davis is that her ego makes her think that she knows it all and that she can get what she wants as she once did. She doesn't - and she can't.

I really liked this film, except for the eternal '40s, '50s and beyond idea that one can have love or career, but never both. One either gives up the idea of a career and becomes a woman or chooses a career and loses out on love, meaning that she is a big loser. Certainly there's a happy medium - to figure you had a good "sleigh ride," as it's put in the film, and move on - to, for instance, character roles - and have love too. But for career gals, somehow there was always a choice.

Bette Davis does a terrific job as Margaret. I was never a fan of Sterling Hayden's, but having seen more of his work, I have grown to like him. Also, he was a fascinating person as well. He gives a solid performance here. Natalie Wood is very sweet as Margaret's daughter. All in all, recommended.
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10/10
DAVIS W/ANOTHER TRIUMPH...!
masonfisk9 December 2019
Coming off her career triumph w/All About Eve, Bette Davis returned in 1952 w/another voyage into the lifespan of an actress (Oscar winning mind you) who has to deal w/her dwindling vocation as midlife rears its ugly head. Davis stars as Margaret Elliot, a once prominent actress who's now struggling to pay bills as her prized possessions head to public auction. Trying to get her long time agent to get an acting job, any job, is a fruitless affair which sends her (after her sister & husband show up at her apartment looking for their monthly handout) on a drunken binge (w/Oscar in tow) & a night in the drunk tank. Enter a face from the past, played by Sterling Hayden (Captain McClusky from The Godfather), a one time actor who Davis handpicked for a role years before now a handyman in a boatyard who comes to her rescue w/much needed bail money. He tries to convince her that as much as Hollywood doesn't have a place for her, maybe she should reciprocate the same attitude for the establishment that really has never done her any favors. Of course news of the arrest has elevated her standing as a problematic yet bankable property w/an offer to play a role in a movie whose script she's been championing for years comes up. Partnered w/Eve, this decent into the mind of a once hot thespian who now falls into the chasm of reality is fascinating (& still topical right Liv Tyler?) aiming all guns of accusation at Tinseltown which still regards ageism (throw in sexism as well as a freebie) as a matter of course. Davis, entering her middle age w/grit & determination, nails all the right notes in a role which could have could've come off as maudlin or cliched. Look for Natalie Wood as Davis' daughter.
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7/10
Bette Bette Bette
SnoopyStyle29 March 2020
Margaret Elliot (Bette Davis) is a faded Oscar winning movie star who can't get a role to save her life. Her daughter Gretchen (Natalie Wood) still worships her and is living with her ex-husband and his wife. She is bankrupt and can't even pay the rent. Her sister and her husband come demanding their monthly payment. She gets arrested after drinking and driving. Jim Johannsen (Sterling Hayden) bails her out to repay her for a past kindness.

Bette Davis easily falls into this role. I didn't recognize Natalie Wood at first. She's a little too sexy on the boat. Her character must be strictly a child unless the movie is willing to go to that romantic triangle route. Also, their relationship is a little odd. It would have been better if they had a continuous connection over the years. Overall, this is Bette's movie and she excels.
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4/10
Camp fest
grahamclarke13 April 2016
To compare "The Star" to "Sunset Boulevard" and "All About Eve" is to do an injustice to those films. They are classics because at their helm were Billy Wilder and Jospeh Mankiewicz, directors of great intelligence and above all great style – qualities blatantly missing in "The Star".

"The Star" has no style whatsoever. All it has is a big star, Bette Davis. Ironically her character boasts having directed more than one director and that's exactly what seems to be happening here. Hers was a talent that needed to be harnessed by a strong director. Stuart Heisler clearly leaves Davis to her own devices and what results is an over the top, campy, mannered performance. Of course her fans will eat it up. But this is not good acting. Its acting that weakens what from the start is not a strongly scripted film.

"The Star" should have been memorable as a film about ageing in Hollywood, an ever pertinent subject, rather than being memorable as Bette Davis camp fest.
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