All About Eve (1950)

8.2/10
98/100

All About Eve Storyline

Stage star Margo Channing is friend to playwright Lloyd Richards and his wife Karen, in love with director Bill Simpson, and the idol of Eve Harrington. When Eve becomes Margo’s secretary-aide, she starts to dominate, sending Bill Margo’s birthday wishes and arranging a party for him, at which Margo explodes. Eve becomes Margo’s understudy and when Margo misses a performance, critic Addison DeWitt gives Eve rave reviews while making acerbic remarks about aging actresses like Margo. At Margo and Bill’s engagement party Eve tries to force Karen to get her the lead in Lloyd’s new play. Margo tells Lloyd she is going to retire. Eve gets the part but Addison announces to her that he knows the lies and schemes she used to get where she is.

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All About Eve Movie Reviews

A Magnificent Timeless Tale of Ambition, Manipulation and Betrayal – Certainly One of the Best Classics Ever

The ambitious Eve Harrington (Anne Baxter) gets close to the great and temperamental stage artist Margo Channing (Bette Davis) and her friends Karen Richards (Celeste Holm) and her husband, the play-writer Lloyd Richards (Hugh Marlowe); her boyfriend and director Bill Sampson (Gary Marrow); and the producer Max Fabian (Gregory Ratoff). Everybody, except the cynical critic Addison DeWitt (George Sanders), believe that Eve is only a naive, humble and simple obsessed fan of Margo and they try to help her. However, Eve is indeed a cynical and manipulative snake that uses the lives of Margo and her friends to reach her objectives in the theater business.

“All About Eve” is a magnificent timeless tale of ambition, manipulation and betrayal, and certainly one of the best classics ever. Everything perfectly works in this movie: the direction is very precise and tight; dialogs are very acid and intelligent; Bette Davis, Anne Baxter, George Sanders and Celeste Holm have awesome performances in very powerful characters; the dramatic story is amazingly good, showing what an evil person can plot to reach fame and success. I believe this movie will always be among my ten favorite movies ever. My vote is ten.

Title (Brazil): “A Malvada” (“The Wicked”)

Just Brilliant!

Brilliantly acted and cleverly characterized, with sparkling dialogue that mercilessly parries the gloss from the New York theater world’s highly sophisticated veneer, “All About Eve” is a scintillating comedy of manners that compels rapt attention for the whole of its 2¼ hours. We like George Sanders, pointing out Gregory Ratoff to his escort, Marilyn Monroe (whom the script describes as “a member of the Copacabana school of acting”), with the words: “There’s a real live producer, honey! Go and do yourself some good!” And the final scene, in which Sanders asks Barbara Bates, “Do you want some day to have an award like that of your own?” — “More than anything else in the world!” she answers. “Then you must ask Miss Harrington how to get one”, he replies. “Miss Harrington knows all about it!”

It is often complained of Mankiewicz’s work that it is too stagey and too talkative, that there is not sufficient movement. There is some justice in this charge in the consideration of such films as Five Fingers, The Quiet American, House of Strangers, and Dragonwyck; certainly Mankiewicz’s two spectacles, Guys and Dolls and Cleopatra, are much improved by sharp editing. But in his best films, The Late George Apley, A Letter to Three Wives, All About Eve, People Will Talk (which I regard as his masterpiece — it was too off-beat, unfortunately, for contemporary audiences or critics to appreciate), and The Barefoot Contessa, any trace of over- talkativeness is more than offset by the range and variety, the unusualness of the characters. Moreover, it is the characters themselves that determine the plot — not the fate or some external force.

Thus, in All About Eve, Margo Channing is the victim of her egocentricity, Sampson the victim of his own cynicism and Richards, the victim of his own ingenuousness. Eve Harrington is cunning and ruthless enough to exploit these traits in her climb to stardom. Besides Mankiewicz’s two awards, All About Eve also won statuettes for Best Picture, Best Supporting Actor (George Sanders), Best Costumes and Best Sound Recording. Also, producer Darryl Zanuck won the Thalberg Memorial Award for consistent high-quality production over the previous three years.

The film also won the New York Film Critics’ Citation for Best Picture, Best Direction and Best Actress (Bette Davis). Actually, I thought that Miss Davis’ performance, fine as it was, was overshadowed by Anne Baxter’s interpretation of the scheming Eve. To cover with a winning veneer of innocence a character that would not stop at blackmail or adultery to win stardom, cannot have been an easy assignment for a young actress; yet Miss Baxter brought it off flawlessly.

OTHER VIEWS: I’d had the general idea for All About Eve in mind for a long time. But I never had a middle, a second act. Then our New York office submitted a short story by Mary Orr called “The Wisdom of Eve” — later a radio script — and I had my second act. Incidentally, Zanuck deserves some credit for what happened. He was the only studio head in town with the courage and intelligence to try new things. I don’t think I could have made this picture on any other lot but 20th Century- Fox. — J.L.M.

Superb Acting And Dialogue

What a movie! It’s the cinematic ideal, the standard by which subsequent films are judged, at least in terms of acting and dialogue. Maybe the camera, which does nothing but sit there as the actors act, could have been made a little less static. But the story screams stage play, which implies lots of talk and not much “action”. The film doesn’t pretend to do all things. But what it does do, it does extremely well.

As Margo, Bette Davis gives what I would consider one of the best performances, if not the best performance, in any film I have ever seen. She truly becomes Margo, that “fixture of the theater”, so beloved yet so insecure. And as Eve, “the mousy one, with the trench coat and the funny hat”, breathy Anne Baxter proves adept at subtleties that allow her character to change gradually over time.

Then there’s George Sanders who effortlessly slips into the role of witty, urbane, pompous Addison DeWitt, columnist magnifico, a man whose high opinion of himself allows him to declare to us, as viewers, that he is “essential to the theater”. Celeste Holm and reliable Thelma Ritter give topnotch performances as well.

And the Mankiewicz script, which tells the story of a group of theater people, is heavy on dialogue, but it’s totally believable, as characters talk shop and interrelate, by means of suitable verbal conflict and subtle subtext. Even more than that, the dialogue is witty and clever, with tons of theatrical metaphors, like when Bill (Gary Merrill) angrily tells Margo: “And to intimate anything else doesn’t spell jealousy to me, it spells a paranoid insecurity that you should be ashamed of.” To which Margo just as angrily spits out: “Cut, print it, what happens in the next reel? Do I get dragged off screaming to the snake pits?”

One of my favorite scenes has several people sitting on a stairway at a party. A curvaceous but bird-brained Miss Casswell (Marilyn Monroe), “from the Copacabana school of acting”, desires another drink. “Oh waiter!”, she yells out. Addison schools her: “That isn’t a waiter, my dear; that’s a butler.” To which she fires back: “Well I can’t yell ‘Oh butler’, can I? Maybe somebody’s name is Butler”. Addison then concedes: “You have a point, an idiotic one, but a point.”

I’m not sure I really like the characters in this film. Generally, they’re self-absorbed, vain, haughty, and backbiting. They’re not all that likable. And that would be my only serious complaint.

Otherwise, “All About Eve” is a film that excels at great language and great acting. If ever there was a film that deserves the status of “classic”, this is surely it.