7/10
Who's Afraid of Bette Davis?
15 August 2007
"The Catered Affair" was the movie adaptation of a Paddy Chayefsky's TV drama, which starring Thelma Ritter and Pat Henning. I'm guessing this was made due to the success of Ernest Borgnine's "Marty". The film is interesting in its depiction of a different time, when the ceremonial aspects of weddings were very strange. Today, I doubt these people would go on and on about such trivialities. But, then, there were certain "ways" people married.

There are some terrific "period" scenes. The Hurley's home is a real time trip. Great kitchen! I loved the scene when Bette Davis takes in the frozen laundry from a clothesline outside her window. Ms. Davis totally commands the film - at times, her presence is overbearing. Her performance is excellent, but sometimes veers very close to going over-the-top. Ernest Borgnine, Debbie Reynolds, and Barry Fitzgerald hold their own in Davis' presence.

I believe, due to the presence of Bette Davis, the film should have been altered to focus more on her character. Reworked, this could have been Davis' "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" You really have to pay attention to get what the film is really about - there is one instance where Davis' own wedding is explained. There should be more about both Davis's dwelling on the past, and Borgnine's hopes for the future.

******* The Catered Affair (1956) Richard Brooks ~ Bette Davis, Ernest Borgnine, Debbie Reynolds
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