Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

The Notorious Bettie Page

 
Movies:

The Notorious Bettie Page

  • Director: Mary Harron
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Docudrama, Biopic
  • Themes: Sexual Awakening, Rise and Fall Stories, Women's Friendship
  • Main Cast: Gretchen Mol, Christopher Bauer, Jared Harris, Sarah Paulson, Cara Seymour
  • Release Year: 2005
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 90 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Celebrated and vilified in equal measure, the pinup goddess Bettie Page inspired a legion of followers -- and an indecency scandal -- by appearing in a series of nude, sado-masochistic, and/or revealing magazine spreads in the 1950s. An era later, writer/director Mary Harron casts a knowing eye upon the woman who indirectly gave birth to modern pornography in the biopic The Notorious Bettie Page. As a teen, Page (Gretchen Mol) is a smart, plucky girl with ambitions beyond her Tennessee roots. Suffering varying degrees of abuse from her father, her first husband, and suitors of dubious virtue, Page makes her way to New York City, where an amateur photographer discovers her lounging on the beach. It isn't long before images of the shapely brunette reach Irving and Paula Klaw (Chris Bauer and Lili Taylor), brother-and-sister entrepreneurs who publish illicit magazines dedicated primarily to men's fetishes. The casual nudist Page eventually finds herself acquiescing to their requests to don thigh-high boots, whips, and chains, which raise the ire of the smut-fearing senator Estes Kefauver (David Strathairn). The Notorious Bettie Page had its North American premiere at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide

Review

Two fascinating ironies lay at the core of bondage queen Bettie Page's life, which Mary Harron explores to varying degrees (and with corresponding levels of success) in her film The Notorious Bettie Page. The first involves the fact that this model began life by enduring tumultuous and shattering early years -- so shattering that they made her career as a pin-up queen something of a vacation. If this movie is to be believed, Page experienced: sexual abuse as a child, an abusive marriage, and a gang-rape in the back of a car by five or six young men, into which she was tricked by being propositioned for a casual date with a stranger. When Bettie gravitates toward nude modeling and light bondage photography, then, it hardly seems a traumatic experience given all that has come before. As well as she is treated by Irving Klaw and sister Paula, and later by photographer Bunny Yeager (three of the most affable characters in the film), one cannot blame Bettie for posing. Harron is using as a springboard the viewer's prejudicial assumption that nude modeling would be a demeaning and objectifying experience (the model as the photographer's object-of-seduction) and gradually defacing this assumption in Bettie's case. By creating tonally empathetic, kind, and considerate characters in the Klaws, their hired photographers, and Yeager, Harron is able to wisely draw a contrast between Bettie's torrid pre-modeling victimization and the easy-as-baby-food photo shoot experiences. And yet, even though Harron climbs inside of this irony, she doesn't go far enough; she remains so intent on retaining a light, gleefully amusing, and inoffensive tone from one end of the picture to another that it causes her to gloss over the nastiness of Bettie's early years. This is one film that could benefit, dramatically, from the gutsy decision to become crasser and more graphic, to make palpable for the audience the grimy filth and humiliation of Bettie's molestation, spousal abuse, and sexual assault, thus drawing an even more vivid contrast between these events and the modeling.

Harron evokes the second irony of Bettie's life story more effectively; it involves the film's revelation of Bettie's almost preadolescent naïveté toward S & M posing. By the film's end, we understand how bondage photography could mean "trying on silly costumes" for Bettie but simultaneously spell death for an innocent young man (as a father's testimony in one of the final court scenes reveals). On this level, the film benefits from a surprisingly apolitical and even-handed treatment of the Estes Kefauver-led senatorial "crackdown on smut." In the aforementioned court sequence, Harron explores the logic behind Senator Kefauver's crusade (the film brings the audience to its knees with the paternal confession), and the director courageously resists trashing Kefauver. Harron's treatment of Bettie's conversion to Christianity is similarly respectful (if clichéd). Unfortunately, the film suffers from a lack of a strong character arc throughout -- which is why Bettie's turn away from posing, at the end of the picture, retains such dramatic force; the omission of a better-defined transition throughout Bettie's life significantly drains the picture of dramatic power and momentum. Such is the film's greatest weakness. As for its strengths, Harron and lead Gretchen Mol somehow convey Page's innocence so thoroughly that the film's recreations of the Bunny Yeager nude stills come across as unadulterated celebrations of the female body -- so pure and unfettered that we feel an angel has disrobed before us, and find ourselves subconsciously overlooking Bettie's birthday suit. It is a mystifying accomplishment. (How did the filmmakers pull this off?) Equally admirable is cinematographer W. Mott Hupfel III's ability to somehow capture the look (in movie form) of old black-and-white '50s photographs and (in the film's Miami sequences) early Kodachrome snapshots, with their heightened primary colors. Overall, Harron has created an interesting if flawed work, and a worthy addition to the overlooked cinematic canon of obscure period biopics -- much as she did with her debut, 1996's I Shot Andy Warhol. But, in the final analysis, the film feels vapid and empty, like a hand reaching for something elusive and grasping only air. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

Cast

David Strathairn - Senator Estes Kefauver; Lili Taylor - Paula Klaw; Jonathan M. Woodward - Marvin; John Cullum - Preacher In Nashville; Matt McGrath - Nervous Man; Austin Pendleton - Teacher; Norman Reedus - Billy Neal; Dallas Roberts - Scotty; Victor Slezak - Preacher In Miami; Tara Subkoff - June; Kevin Carroll - Jerry Tibbs; Ann Dowd - Edna Page; Michael Gaston - Mr Gaughan; Jefferson Mays - Little John; Peter McRobbie - Gengel; Dan Snook - Mr Grimm; Greg Ainsworth - Man On Street; John Boyd - Jack; David Call - Guy 1 At Party; Geoffrey Cantor - Director At Audition; Max Casella - Howie; Alejandro Chaban - Armand; Jaymie Dornan - Young Jimmy Page; Teddy Eck - Charlie; Jack Gilpin - Roy Page; Dan Haft - Photographer 1; Lars Hanson - Detective Farrell; Daniel Haughey - Battle; Frank Hopf - Jack Kramer; Ed Jewett - Bookstore Owner; Aaron Lazar - Jake; Alexandra Leclair - Young Goldie; Heather Litteer - Model; Gary Lundy - Guy 2 At Party; Edmund Lyndeck - Father Egan; Marisa Malone - Drunken Woman At Party; Shelly Mars - Photographer 2; Christopher McCann - Dr Henry; Randy Miles - Photographer 3; Molly Moore - Young Bettie; Joe Mosso - Art; James J. Pollock - Court Official; Naelee Rae - Young Love; Alicia Sable - Goldie; Ean Sheehy - Director At Screen Test; Kohl Sudduth - Police Officer; Ashley Terrill - Marion; Hans Tester - Producer At Screen Test; Benjamin Walker - Jim; Michael Boydston-White - Choir Singer

Credit

Thomas Ambrose - Art Director, Kerry Barden - Casting, Billy Hopkins - Casting, Suzanne Smith - Casting, Dani Minnick - Consultant/advisor, Linda Burk - Consultant/advisor, Mark Suozzo - Conductor, Lori Keith Douglas - Co-producer, John Dunn - Costume Designer, Jonathan Starch - First Assistant Director, Mary Harron - Director, John Walsh - Second Unit Director, Tricia Cooke - Editor, Pamela Koffler - Executive Producer, John Wells - Executive Producer, Mary Harron - Executive Producer, Christine Vachon - Executive Producer, Guinevere Turner - Executive Producer, Jerry Decarlo - Hair Styles, Jeffrey Rebelo - Hair Styles, Tom Yeager - Location Manager, Fabio M. Arber - Location Manager, Mark Suozzo - Composer (Music Score), P.J. Bloom - Musical Direction/Supervision, Evelyne Noraz - Makeup, Michael Berg - Camera Operator, Gideon Ponte - Production Designer, Gordon Ponte - Production Designer, Mott Hupfel - Cinematographer, Pamela Koffler - Producer, Christine Vachon - Producer, Katie Roumel - Producer, Ashley A. Terrill - Research, Richard Foster - Research, Kevin Kropp - Set Designer, Mark Weber - Sound Mixer, Brian Miksis - Sound/Sound Designer, Wyatt Sprague - Sound/Sound Designer, Mike Russo - Stunts Coordinator, Lori Keith Douglas - Unit Production Manager, Mary Harron - Screenwriter, Guinevere Turner - Screenwriter, Michael Berg - Second Unit Director Of Photography, John F. Lyons - Associate Editor, Rusty Pouch - Gaffer, Timothy Berg - Gaffer, Mark Suozzo - Music Producer, Colin Cumberbatch - Post Production Supervisor, Elayne Keratsis - Production Supervisor, Hans Graffunder - Production Supervisor, Elizabeth Schlitten - Properties Master, Peter Waggoner - Re-Recording Mixer, Benjamin Cheah - Re-Recording Mixer, Ilene Pickus - Script Supervisor, Catherine Gore - Script Supervisor, Cindy Craig - Second Assistant Director, Kellie Jo Tackett - Second Assistant Director, Benjamin Cheah - Supervising Sound Editor, Pierre Rovira - Construction Coordinator, Gail Fitzgibbons - Costumes Supervisor, D. Michelle Johnson - Key Hairstylist, Nicki Lederman - Key Make-up, Whitney Willard - Production Accountant, Alexandra Mazur - Set Decorator, Big Film Design - Graphic Design, J. John Corbett - Graphic Design, Randall Balsmeyer - Title Design, Big Film Design - Title Design, J. John Corbett - Title Design

Similar Movies

Rated X; Insignificance; Ed Wood; Quiz Show; Good Night, and Good Luck.; La Chatte à Deux Têtes; Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus; The Jayne Mansfield Story
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: The Notorious Bettie Page
Top
The Notorious Bettie Page

Original poster
Directed by Mary Harron
Produced by Pamela Koffler
Katie Roumel
Christine Vachon
Written by Mary Harron
Guinevere Turner
Starring Gretchen Mol
Chris Bauer
Lili Taylor
Jared Harris
Music by Mark Suozzo
Cinematography W. Moff Hupfel III
Editing by Tricia Cooke
Distributed by Picturehouse
Release date(s) April 14, 2006
Running time 91 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Gross revenue $1,778,006 (Worldwide)

The Notorious Bettie Page is a 2005 American biographical film directed by Mary Harron. The screenplay by Harron and Guinevere Turner focuses on 1950s pinup and bondage model Bettie Page.

Contents

Plot

Bettie Page is an ambitious, naive, and devout young Christian girl who longs to leave Nashville, Tennessee following a childhood of sexual abuse, a failed wartime marriage, and a gang rape. In 1949 she departs for New York City, where she enrolls in an acting class. Amateur photographer Jerry Tibbs discovers her walking on the beach at Coney Island and she agrees to model for him. He suggests she restyle her hair with the bangs that would become her trademark.

Bettie becomes a favorite of nature photographers (including Bunny Yeager, who films her posing with two cheetahs), and she has no hesitation about removing her clothes for them if asked. Before long images of the shapely brunette reach brother-and-sister entrepreneurs Paula and Irving Klaw, who run a respectable business selling movie stills and memorabilia but also deal with fetish photos, magazines, and 8- and 16-millimeter films for additional income. Their top model Maxie takes Bettie under her wing, and she soons finds herself wearing leather corsets and thigh-high boots while wielding whips and chains for photographer John Willie, frequently at the request of Little John, a mild-mannered attorney with unusual tastes. Bettie is innocently unaware of the sexual nature of the images that rapidly are making her a star in the underground world of bondage aficionados.

Bettie is called to testify before a 1955 hearing, headed by Senator Estes Kefauver, investigating the effects of pornography on American youth. Though she waits patiently for twelve hours to answer the committees' questions, Kefauver (for reasons unknown) decides to not bring Bettie before the committee and dismisses her without an explanation.

When it becomes apparent casting directors are more interested in her notoriety than they are in any acting talent she might possess, Bettie heads to Miami Beach. Drifting along with limited career prospects and a nearly nonexistent social life, she stumbles upon a small church and embraces Jesus Christ during services. Although she insists she's not ashamed of anything she has done in her life, she appears happy to leave her past behind and return to her spiritual roots by preaching the word of the Lord on street corners.

Back in New York, Irving decides he and his sister need to burn their vast collection of photos and negatives in order to avoid potential prosecution. Paula unwillingly complies, but secretly saves the negatives of many of Bettie's pictures and movies, ensuring that Bettie's work will survive for future generations.

Production

In An Inside Look at the Pin-Up Queen of the Universe, a bonus feature on the DVD release of the film, producer Pamela Koffler and screenwriter/director Marry Harron discuss their decision to film most of the movie in black-and-white, which they felt not only perfectly captured the nostalgic mood of the period but also had a psychological impact on the audience. While writing the script, Harron knew she wanted to film the Miami scenes in color in order to provide a sharp contrast between Bettie's professional life and the escape she ultimately made from it. Cinematographer W. Moff Hupfel III used old color stock to approximate the cheerfully vivid hues of Technicolor common in 1950s films.

Actress/screenwriter Guinevere Turner, who cowrote the film with Mary Harron, was originally slated to star as Bettie Page but the role was given to Gretchen Mol when producers had difficulty raising money.[1]

The film premiered at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival and was shown at the Berlin International Film Festival and the South by Southwest Film Festival before going into limited release in the US on April 14, 2006. Opening on twenty screens, it grossed $143,131 in its opening weekend. It eventually earned $1,415,082 in the US and $362,924 in foreign markets for a total worldwide box office of $1,778,006. [2]

The film was released on DVD in the US on September 26, 2006.

Cast

Critical reception

Manohla Dargis of the New York Times observed "Until now, Ms. Mol has been best known for her premature designation several years ago as Hollywood's newest It Girl. The label seemed to plague her, and she all but faded from view despite promising turns in little-seen films. Maybe because she felt protected by her female director and female producers (six out of seven), or emboldened by the material, or maybe because she knows how beautiful her gently padded silhouette looks in the raw, Ms. Mol takes to this tricky role with the carefree expressivity you tend to see only in young children who have learned the joys of nudity, usually when their parents are throwing a dinner party. When she strips, Bettie soars". [3]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times said "The tone of the movie is subdued and reflective. It does not defend pornography, but regards it (in its 1950s incarnation) with subdued nostalgia for a more innocent time. There is a kind of sadness in the movie as we reflect that most of these women and the men they inflamed are now dead; their lust is like an old forgotten song". [4]

Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle stated the film "floats on the charm and the labors of its lead actress, Gretchen Mol, who single-handedly makes the picture worth seeing. She takes a character that is next door to a cipher and infuses her with innocence and mischief, wit and feeling, despite limited help from the script. Perhaps through intuition or through some careful study of Page's pinups, Mol has discovered a human being to play, and in the process has found her best screen showcase to date". Of Harron and Turner he said "They tell Page's story in a curiously uninflected way, revealing little, if any, point of view, and imposing no meaning or particular importance on this woman's life. This approach is far from a recipe for high drama, but it has the integrity of accuracy. The audience is introduced to Bettie because the audience is perhaps interested in Bettie or her career or her era. But there's no pretending that her life was all that fascinating, or that her contribution to culture was significant, or that her story contains a lesson worth receiving... There's enough here for a good after-movie argument, and that's more than can be said for most pictures". [5]

Peter Travers of Rolling Stone rated the film three out of four stars and commented "Any old sleaze could turn Bettie's life into a kinky S&M wallow, a cinematic stroke book. Not that there's anything wrong with that. It's just that director Mary Harron, who co-wrote the scrappy script with Guinevere Turner, doesn't do the expected. She's too sly for that, too subversively funny... [She] needed just the right actress to play Bettie. And she lucked out big time. Gretchen Mol is hot stuff in every sense of the term. She delivers the first performance by an actress this year that deserves serious Oscar consideration". [6]

Todd McCarthy of Variety called the film "a superficial look at the '50s sex icon [that] feels like it was researched via press clippings rather than attempting a fresh rethinking of its era and provocative subject". He added "Mary Harron's work here seems curiously uninvolved. There's no sense of any particular commitment to the leading character... [The] result is a strangely placid, unchallenging picture with no blood in its veins... Gretchen Mol is splendid to behold in every stage of dress or undress, but Harron and co-scenarist Guinevere Turner offer no clues as to what might be going on inside the dark-haired beauty's head and heart... Mol's Bettie is compliant, almost always open to any request and never disagreeable. But her lack of spine and inner turmoil make her a central figure of limited interest, that rare dramatic heroine with no ambition or goal". [7]

Awards and nominations

Gretchen Mol was nominated for the Satellite Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Drama but lost to Helen Mirren in The Queen.

See also

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Notorious Bettie Page" Read more