The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939)
Facts
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The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex
DVD Price: You save 10%! As of Sep 5 2:59 EDT (details)
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| Directed by | Michael Curtiz and Chuck Jones |
| Cast | Bette Davis, Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, Donald Crisp, Alan Hale, Leo G Carroll, Henry Daniell, Nanette Fabray, Ralph Forbes, Forrester Harvey, Olivia De Havilland, Holmes Herbert, I Stanford Jolley, Doris Lloyd, Vincent Price, Henry Stephenson, John Sutton and Robert Warwick |
| Theatrical Release | November 11, 1939 |
| DVD Release | April 19, 2005 |
| Running Time | 106 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 012569522824 |
| Buy this item | $17.99 at Amazon.com As of Sep 5 2:59 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Warner Brothers, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), French (Dubbed - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono) Or 42 new from $7.36, 17 used from $6.06 |
About The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex
Bette Davis and Errol Flynn made The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex fascinatingly public striking sparks in this lavish Technicolor tale of the ill-fated love between the aging Elizabeth I and the dashing Earl of Essex. Thoroughly unglamorous here - eyes and hairline shaved face painted chalky white - double Academy AwardO winner* Davis exudes such intelligence energy and ardor that her romance with the decades-younger Essex (Flynn at the peak of his remarkable good looks and athletic verve) is completely believable. Based on Maxwell Anderson's play Elizabeth the Queen and directed by Michael Curtiz this nominee for five OscarsO** takes liberties with historical accuracy but none with dramatic impact. Long may these tempestuous titled lovers reign!Running Time: 106 min.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: TELEVISION/CLASSIC UPC: 012569522824 Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| 1939 Bette Davis' Professionalism Prevails Over Flynn's Personality |
It's not evident in her voice, mannerisms, or famous turquoise eyes that Davis knows the man with whom she's playing lovers is only a well-known personality, not a great actor. To date, I've never seen any other act like Davis' where she's tremulously expressing the tension & emotion of an HRH. Mastery of her eating mannerism is the kind of detail Davis intended to project, for example. Flynn's hollowness must have been like watching a fly in ointment.
He doesn't have to act to be a shallow, dashing, politically stupid Essex! Utterly reliant upon what was considered being handsome to gain access to social status, like the Earl, Flynn too misunderstood with whom, power wise, he was dealing until the end. To Essex & Flynn, any woman is a body, an object, that will acquiesce to the charms & looks of a man; upon demand. Disgruntled competitors of the court, for Essex & Flynn, are jealous viers for the affections of Elizabeth, or rather, their object--a 'something' they possess because they can. Naive Essex is too busy womanizing to be wary of how treacherous Cecil & Raleigh are becoming; clueless too of Elizabeth's political wherewithall.
Credit is due a tight script that provides its characters space to speak from their passions. Davis' HRH is cunningly intelligent. This Queen lacks 1 loyal equal of an ally. She's surrounded by power-hungry swarms of leeches. Her iron will to represent living, breathing, ordinary people provides the impetus to avoid & prevent others from starting wars. Though her stealth rule is assailed by the court's men who underestimate the equal power of women, Elizabeth I uses that common error to command respect, admiration & profound public loyalty from ordinary people--the majority of whom are women.
The aging HRH consistently seeks out a companion of impartial counsel from her court of self-servicing advisors. Hers is a lonely reign without any equal which embodies impartial loyalty to England's masses. Penelope (de Havilland) might have been closer to the Queen had she not envied her so. Essex's foolish dismissal of her serves Penelope like rocket fuel to destroy their relationship. It's too late when Penelope turns loyal to the HRH.
Credit the script again for many intimate exchanges between the HRH & Earl. Through them the Queen learns what are the Earl's true ambitions. As the script would have it, Elizabeth I not only sought truth but also drew it out of people. That saving grace is why she reigned long & so well. April 1, 2008
| Disappointing. |
| Royal entertainment |
With just a few bleak depictions of Essex's disastrous Irish campaign, there's not much in the way of swashbuckling: the emphasis here is on doomed romance between two people drawn to each other by the very things that keep them apart. Flynn's charismatic but egotistical and fatally overambitious Essex, whose popularity is never matched by the reality of his (under)achievements, is one of many thwarted suitors who attempted to wear the crown by wooing the woman while she was equally determined not to be ruled by weaker men. It's her power that appeals to him and his carefree short-sighted irresponsibility that attracts her, but though Davis' bitter Elizabeth may try to grab a few moments of happiness with him, she's all too aware that for her to surrender to a husband would be to abdicate all power and doom England to disastrous rule. The tragedy comes from the fact that he's all too aware of his own weaknesses, but too proud to conquer them or even to save himself when offered the chance - something of a change from the usual Errol Flynn hero. But then this is not exactly a typical Flynn film: for all his charm and bravado, Elizabeth is the real focus of the film. And while many of the Flynn film regulars are present and correct, most are playing very different roles. De Havilland is less-than-sympathetic for once as the lady-in-waiting taunting the queen over her lost youth, Alan Hale appears as Flynn's enemy rather than his sidekick for a change, while even Donald Crisp's usual onscreen integrity is discreetly tucked away lest it interfere with his own ambitions at court when the wind starts to change. Only Henry Daniell, in a virtual dress rehearsal for his role in The Sea Hawk, plays true to form as one of the plotters alongside Vincent Price's Walter Raleigh.
As history it's bunk, but as a doomed romance, complete with a memorably tragic final encounter, it's absolutely engrossing. Good extras on the DVD too, though it's a shame they could only find a black and white trailer for such a magnificent Technicolor film.
December 16, 2007
| The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex |
| Great historical drama and off-the-beaten track special features |
An overall wonderful print (only occasionally marred by a blurry, misaligned technicolor shot) is accompanied by some interesting special features. The oddest one is a short subject about a little kid who runs a kingdom about to be overthrown, until a Wild West show comes to town to save the day. There's also a rare serious-in-tone Warner Brothers cartoon from 1938 or so, depicting Porky Pig learning to appreciate our nation's history and what the words behind the "Pledge of Allegiance" mean. Interestingly, the words "under God" don't appear in Porky's (or Warner Brothers') version of the circa-1938 pledge. So, the belief in a separation between church and state DIDN'T start with modern-day "lefties"? Funny what you can learn from an old cartoon... talk about "out of the mouths of babes". July 16, 2007
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