Bette Davis is miscast


I liked this movie, but more for the story than the performances. The story is excellent and the characters are varied and interesting. But Charles Coburn as the rich uncle was just not able to be convincing as giggling while his niece Bette Davis tickles him. And Bette Davis should have left this role to somebody else.

For a start, Davis is too strong a personality for the role. Especially in the scenes with her rich uncle, she needs to be childlike, kittenish. She just does not look natural jumping onto the couch with him with her legs curled up beneath her. She brings off the manipulative side of the character, but not the baby, the spoiled brat who never grew up.

Second--I hope this doesn't offend Davis fans too much--she's just not good-looking enough for the part. Her teeth are particularly noticeable in this film, but in general what was needed was an actress whose femininity made it believable that the two men would fall so easily under her spell, even after her betrayals. We needed a Stanley who could melt our hearts, a soft Stanley, not one who barked at her men, a selfish little vixen who pouted and wheedled and was an expert at the you-big-brute brand of flattery, one whose indifference to others arises not from defiance and strength but from thoughtlessness, carelessness, childishness. We needed Vivien Leigh from Gone With the Wind, not an offshoot of Davis in All About Eve.

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On the other hand, Davis with those large, luminous, expressive eyes is someone you're always wanting to watch, regardless of whether the character she's playing is good or evil. The film works at that level.

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I have to disagree with you. I was so shocked - throughout the whole movie - by Bette's character. I know she plays mean in many movies but I was really taken aback by this character. I was very happy at the film's conclusion. That said, I thought Bette was perfectly cast. Not for one second did I believe I was watching Bette Davis. I was watching this wretched woman (who never portrays herself as a baby although some of the characters think she is) tear apart the lives of everyone she knows. I had never seen Charles Coburn in a drama before either so I was somewhat surprised by him and his character. I would've been interested to understand why Coburn preferred Stanley to Roy but that was not really touched in the screenplay. Nor was the reason Peter went with Stanley - except that he was dumb and blind to her 'wicked ways'.

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