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All About Eve- Studio Classics [DVD] [1950]
 
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All About Eve- Studio Classics [DVD] [1950]

 Universal, suitable for all   DVD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (29 customer reviews)
Price: £4.99 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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All About Eve- Studio Classics [DVD] [1950] + Sunset Boulevard [DVD] [1950]


Product details

  • Format: PAL
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: U
  • Studio: Twentieth Century Fox
  • DVD Release Date: 18 April 2005
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (29 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0007P8KUU
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 4,639 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review

Alfred Hitchcock famously observed that movies should be more than just picture postcards of people talking. Sometimes, though, dialogue is all that's needed. Joseph L. Mankiewicz's immaculately scripted All About Eve is a case in point. There are no special effects (unless one considers Marilyn Monroe's wiggle or a scene in which a car breaks down). What the movie offers instead is some of the most coruscating one-liners ever committed to celluloid.

The top-name cast certainly know how to put Mankiewicz's words across. Anne Baxter is all doe-eyed charm as Eve, the ruthless aspiring actress who passes herself off as a little girl lost. George Sanders (eminent character actor and the voice of Shere Khan the tiger in The Jungle Book) shows his customary mellowness of sneer as Addison De Witt, theatre critic and professional cynic ("a venomous foot louse" as he's characterised) who helps push Eve up the greasy pole toward success, if not happiness. Best of all is Bette Davis, a soured but still resplendent stage diva, who takes Eve under her wing. ("I'll admit I've seen better days but I'm still not to be had for the price of a cocktail--like a salted peanut", she tells her lover.) The plotting and double-dealing on the screen, described in Sam Staggs' All About All About Eve: The Complete Behind-the-Scenes Story of the Bitchiest Film Ever Made, were matched by what went on behind the scenes. Davis heartily loathed fellow actress Celeste Holm who--ironically enough--plays her best friend. She fell in love with another co-star, the handsome, good-looking Gary Merrill, whom she later married. Backstage dramas are often self-indulgent and stagy affairs, but this one dazzles. --Geoffrey Macnab



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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
28 of 29 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
This is one incredible film, that's for sure. Everything about the film - script, acting, story - all of it - comes together to make the kind of film that doesn't come along very often. The movie was single-handidly responsible for restoring Bette Davis' career to it's finest hour after years of bum roles she was forced to play by Warner Bros. Davis plays her role flawlessly and to perfection. The film was a also a career-defining role for young starlet of the time Anne Baxter who is also outstanding as the ruthlessly ambitious Eve. In addition, even the iconic Marilyn Monroe makes a show-stopping enterance in a role that gave her the first glimpses of recognition and which would lead her onto more important roles. This movie is one of those films you simply must see. It's a must-watch for anyone studying Cinema or the Media in general because it was such an important step foward and it really was a very groundbreaking movie. And the best part? It still holds up today! You'll be totally absorbed throughout and be totally amazed by everything from acting, to script to storyline. Oustanding.
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30 of 32 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Apparently Bette Davis was absolutely devastated that she didn't win a third best actress Oscar for her role as Margo Channing, the aging grand dame of the New York stage. It's one of the great ironies of movie history, because in All About Eve, Bette gives what many regard as her finest and most towering performance.

However, it's not only Davis that anchors this remarkable film, but the biting performances of all the cast. The performances, combined with the witty, acerbic dialogue, and the gorgeous production design, leave absolutely no room for doubt that All About Eve is one of the best Hollywood films ever made.

The modest plot - which is merely a framework for showcasing the characters agendas and highlighting the script's glittering dialogue - revolves around the journey of Eve Harrington (Anne Baxter) as she climbs from struggling Broadway actress to scintillating star. The story is told in flashback from an awards ceremony for Eve wherein various participants tell us in confidence about the guest of honor.

As the camera pans on their faces and we listen to a voice over by one of the participants, we soon learn that Eve has shrewdly and cunningly manipulated her friends and colleagues to suit her own needs while ruthlessly climbing to the top of her profession. The woman she chooses as her mentor, and whom she later double-crosses, is Margo Channing (Davis), a neurotically successful stage actress who has recently entered her forties and has become concerned about her advancing age.

Eve intially presents herself to Margo as a devoted fan who insinuates herself into the lives of the theater people she meets and soon becomes Margo's personal assistant, then her understudy. But Eve is hiding a shady past, and from the outset it's obvious that she's not all that she seems to be. Her demure, and self-effacing behaviour hides the fact that she secretly longs to take Margo's place on the stage and in her bed with Margo's boyfriend and director Bill Sampson (Gary Merrill).

Unaware of the depth of Eve's deviousness and the extent of her machinations, theatre critic Addison DeWitt (George Sanders) and the wife of playwright Lloyd Richards (Hugh Marlowe), Karen (Celeste Holm) unwittingly assist in the young girl's rise to the top. Eventually, everyone wises up to Eve's duplicity, but not before she's left a web of betrayal and cold-hearted deceitfulness behind her.

Although the plot revolves around Eve, the real star of the movie is Margo. Margo is insecure at turning forty in a profession where forty is considered positively ancient and where most actresses begin to lose their ability to play pretty young things. The actress is fraught with neurosis: she convinces herself that Bill is going to leave her for a younger woman, and that Lloyd is going to start offering the choice parts in his plays to younger women. It's only the kindly Karen that keeps her grounded and on track.

Margo is demanding, egotistical, and popularity obsessed, but she's also enormously talented and has devoted her life to the theater, not even having time for marriage. She's an insecure, jittery, and anxious mess, and Ms. Davis plays her to the hilt. By contrast Baxter, complete with a doll-like, almost angelic face plays Eve with a competent sweet self-confidence.

Eve's a naive young woman who starts at the bottom of the show business ladder, as a devoted, heartsick and star struck fan. She expects to be handed the world of acting on a silver plater every day the way she was on her opening night. When she doesn't get it, she schemes and manipulates, eventually alienating anyone who ever cared about her.

It's probably a bit if a stretch to call All About Eve the greatest movie ever made. However, the film is certainly one of the wittiest, most devastatingly clever, most adult, and most erudite motion pictures ever made. The film is also a very dark and cynical social satire that effectively explores, with a type of intellectual and literate grandiosoty, the insecurities of aging, and the results of unchecked ambition.The script is arguably the best-written script ever to come out of the classical Hollywood system.

But All About Eve is perhaps most memorable for the soaring, self-mocking, and fearless performance by Ms. Davis, and the almost equally memorable performances by the rest of the ensemble - including a very young and sexy looking Marilyn Monroe. All About Eve stands as a testament to screen writing of the highest caliber and quality, and the ensuing satire remains as entertaining today, and as mordantly relevant as ever. Mike Leonard July 05.

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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Essential viewing 19 Mar 2007
Format:DVD
Surely one of the best films ever made? Should be compulsory viewing (it's certainly compulsive viewing). It amazes me that you can get this classic piece of cinema for less than a fiver, when they charge more than twice as much for the largely forgettable and disposable trash pumped out of Hollywood studios these days.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Bette at her best
This was one of the watersheds of one of the most extraordinary careers in Hollywood. Just when everyone had written her off she came back with a Bette no one had met before! Read more
Published 7 months ago by Mr. A. Campbell-walter
All about Blu-ray
"All About Eve", starring the divine Bette Davis, is one of my all-time favourite movies and this Blu-ray release is amazing! Read more
Published 9 months ago by Dennis Alexis Hellström
Fasten Your Safety Belts!
All About Eve is a 1950 drama film based on the 1946 short story "The Wisdom of Eve", by Mary Orr, it stars Bette Davis as Margo Channing, an aging Broadway star and Anne Baxter... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Grahame
"...There Isn't Another Like You...There Couldn't Be..."
*** THIS REVIEW IS FOR THE 2011 'BLU RAY' REISSUE VERSION ***

On 23 February 2006, 20th Century Fox issued their new "Cinema Reserve" Series on DVD in the UK. Read more
Published 15 months ago by Mark Barry, Reckless Records, London
Great Movie, but....
the blu-ray isnt worth the extra cost to the DVD Version. I love, love, love this movie, its superb it really is! Read more
Published 15 months ago by Tinksjane
One of the best ever
Very intelligent and keenly observed movie with peerless performances from George Sanders and Anne Baxter. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Movie Fan from Portugal
All that is worst about Hollywood
Patronizing, dumbed down, arrogant nonsense with a boring script and boring actors who over act with as much subtlety as a brick.

Bette Davis = Miss Over Rated.
Published 19 months ago by MrViewer
Classic movie
This is a perfect example of it's genre, if you like the period for either historical or artistic reasons this if for you. Read more
Published 19 months ago by Kaiserdad
acid wit
Is there is ANY body out there who has not seen this movie? well, in the unlikely event that there are,be prepared for a treat. Read more
Published 22 months ago by R. Poole
A true classic!
This has to be one of my favourite all time films. It was the first Bette Davis film I had seen but it certainly won't be the last! Read more
Published on 21 May 2010 by Lauranna
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