The Star Movie Review
The Star Review
"The Star" Overview

Rating: NR
1952
Cast and Crew
Director : Stuart HeislerProducer : Bert E. Friedlob
Screenwiter : Katherine Albert,Dale Eunson
Starring : Bette Davis,Sterling Hayden,Natalie Wood,Warner Anderson
Poor Margaret Elliot: A broke actress, past her prime, desperately holding on
to her former glory. Were it not for Sunset Boulevard's appearance only two
years earlier, people might actually have remembered The Star, a role for which
Bette Davis earned an Oscar nomination but which now stands as a barely
memorable and largely cliched performance.
The Star is a straight-up shot at a washed-up has-been. Her star years behind
her, Davis's Elliot tries to fight her way back to the screen, failing to
realize she's no longer a sexy vamp (Davis was 44 at the time) and nobody cares
about her Oscar (here Davis is seen clutching one of her real statuettes) any
more. It ultimately falls to old flame Barry Lester (Sterling Hayden in a
remarkably soft and surprisingly quiet performance) to coax her back into
reality, though his big idea -- that she should become a salesperson at Saks
Fifth Avenue -- comes off as a little bit insulting.
Ultimately, Elliot does get another shot on the silver screen, but it's a
disaster. Believe it or not, Saks is looking pretty sweet!
It's a shame that Elliot's character doesn't grow much aside from wringing her
hands and learning some hard lessons about failure. The fact that she's a petty
has-been that squandered all her money doesn't really endear her to us or make
us feel sorry for her plight. Now if she'd gone on a murderous rampage or
degenerated into porn, well, that would've been another story.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



