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appalachiablue

(41,103 posts)
Wed Oct 21, 2020, 09:56 PM Oct 2020

Watch 'The Little Foxes': Bette Davis As 'Regina' Gilded Age Psycopath; Lillian Hellman Classic

'My streaming gem: why you should watch The Little Foxes.' By Rick Burin, The Guardian, Oct. 21, 2020. Latest in our series of writers highlighting underappreciated films is a captivating and prescient drama with a never-better Bette Davis.



She is imperious and stylish, with a laugh like an open threat and an aversion to mansplaining. She is Bette Davis’s Regina Hubbard Giddens: the sharpest, funniest person in the room. Unfortunately she’s also a psychopath who presages the next 79 years of rapacious capitalism, but then you can’t have everything. After the censorship clampdown of 1934, Hollywood didn’t make many radical films, but the odd one still snuck through: the progressive romcom Holiday; John Ford’s The Grapes of Wrath; and The Little Foxes, a visually astounding leftwing polemic that climaxes with the best horror sequence of its decade.

The film was adapted by socialist southerner Lillian Hellman from her hit play, and her politics run through it like the words through a stick of rock. Within seven years, she would be blacklisted as a subversive after telling the witch-hunters of the House Un-American Activities Committee: “I cannot and will not cut my conscience to fit this year’s fashions.”

The Little Foxes centres on the Hubbards, a nouveau riche family in the turn-of-the-century deep south. They’ve made their money exploiting black people and marrying into the aristocracy. But they want more. And to get it, Regina must lure home her ailing husband, Horace (Herbert Marshall), and either charm or strong-arm him into helping them fund a cotton mill.

It’s at this point you may be thinking that you’re not in the mood for an old, 116-minute film about the funding of a mill, especially when there’s a pandemic on. I would counter these concerns by asking if you would like to see Bette Davis bully a man while wearing a dead bird on her head. Regina is simply Davis’s most irresistible monster. It is a performance of startling physicality, full of inspired adornments: the way she acts down her nose at you, loftily readjusts that towering helmet of hair, or spreads out her arms to inhabit an entire sofa. But that is as much Regina’s performance as Davis’s, an exercise in self-possession, the trappings of a woman who refuses to be patronised...

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2020/oct/21/the-little-foxes-bette-davis-streaming



*WATCH* Trailer.

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Watch 'The Little Foxes': Bette Davis As 'Regina' Gilded Age Psycopath; Lillian Hellman Classic (Original Post) appalachiablue Oct 2020 OP
This Is One Of My All Time Favorite Movies Me. Oct 2020 #1
Great play/film, glad to see it getting more recognition appalachiablue Oct 2020 #2
I recall the character of the alcoholic and long suffering wife of BigmanPigman Oct 2020 #3
Birdie Hubbard (Patricia Collinge) m. for her $, abused by crooks. appalachiablue Oct 2020 #4

BigmanPigman

(51,567 posts)
3. I recall the character of the alcoholic and long suffering wife of
Wed Oct 21, 2020, 10:32 PM
Oct 2020

one of the lying, greedy brothers and thier son. She had to drink to deal with them. A small part but important in the big picture.

appalachiablue

(41,103 posts)
4. Birdie Hubbard (Patricia Collinge) m. for her $, abused by crooks.
Wed Oct 21, 2020, 10:39 PM
Oct 2020

(Wiki) The play's focus is Southerner Regina Hubbard Giddens, who struggles for wealth and freedom within the confines of an early 20th-century society where fathers considered only sons as their legal heirs. As a result of this practice, while her two avaricious brothers Benjamin and Oscar have wielded the family inheritance into two independently substantial fortunes, she's had to rely upon her manipulation of her cautious, timid, browbeaten husband, Horace. He's no businessman, just her financial support; although he's pliable enough for her ambition, that ambition has driven him into becoming merely the tool of her insatiable greed. He uses a wheelchair.

*> Her brother Oscar married Birdie, his much-maligned alcoholic wife, solely to acquire her family's plantation and cotton fields. Oscar now wants to join forces with his brother, Benjamin, to construct a cotton mill. They need an additional $75,000 and approach Regina, asking her to invest in the project. Oscar initially proposes marriage between his son Leo and Regina's daughter Alexandra—first cousins—as a means of getting Horace's money, but Horace and Alexandra are repulsed by the suggestion. Horace refuses when Regina asks him outright for the money, so Leo, a bank teller, is pressured into stealing Horace's railroad bonds from the bank's safe deposit box...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Little_Foxes

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