Dark Victory (Restored and Remastered Edition)
List Price: Usually ships in 24 hours
Add to Cart
Compare New & Used Prices From All Available Merchants:
Starring: Bette Davis
Rated: NR (Not Rated)
Type: DVD
Directed By: Edmund Goulding
Studio: Warner Home Video
Release Date: 2005-06-14
Running Time: 104 minutes
Bette Davis?s bravura, moving-but-never-morbid performance as Judith Traherne, a dying heiress determined to find happiness in her few remaining months, remains a three-hankie classic. But that success would never have happened if Davis hadn?t pestered studio brass to buy Dark Victory?s story rights. Jack Warner finally did so skeptically. Who wants to see a dame go blind? he asked. Almost everyone: Dark Victory was Davis? biggest box-office hit yet and garnered Academy Award nominations for 1939?s Best Picture, Actress and Original Score (Max Steiner).

total reviews 50

all eyes on Davis
Dark Victory is Bette Davis's show. She makes the movie worth watching. Her performance is so mesmerizing that sometimes it even distracts the viewer from the actual character she's playing; you're busy watching all the nuances of her acting while forgetting about everything else.
Davis plays Judith Traherne, a carefree and vivacious young heiress. She lives on an estate with her best friend, Anne (Geraldine Fitzgerald), and employs a stable hand named Michael (Humphrey Bogart) to look after her horses. Yet even at the start of the movie there are signs of trouble, such as headaches and double vision. Though Judith doesn't want to think about these symptoms or let them dictate her life, she's eventually persuaded to see a specialist, Dr. Steele (George Brent).
Davis plays Judith in a clever, vibrant, strong-willed way, and the performance doesn't feel cloying or melodramatic. Geraldine Fitzgerald also does well as the best friend, Anne. Though it's not a dazzling role, Fitzgerald still asserts her presence on the screen and conveys strong emotion without excessive displays or hysterics.
Compared to Davis and Fitzgerald, the male actors in the movie just don't measure up. As Dr. Steele, Brent is really bland; he's not compelling as a romantic lead or as a brilliant doctor and scientist. As the stable hand, Humphrey Bogart made me laugh; he didn't look at all like he was enjoying himself, and his acting and accent were stilted. Still, it was fun to see him in a role that came before his more famous and talented portrayals of Sam Spade, Rick Blaine, and Fred C. Dobbs. Lastly, there's Ronald Reagan (the first time I ever saw him in a movie!) He doesn't do much - he plays a smiling young socialite who saunters around with a drink in his hand; it was funny seeing him like this, young and silly.
Dark Victory is all about Bette Davis, who puts in a terrific performance and works well with the moving storyline of a young woman trying to get the most out of life before her imminent death.

Moving
Wonderful, moving film. Not Bogie's best, but still decent. One of Davis' best performances.

"I think I'll have a large order of prognosis negative!"
Based on a play by George Emerson Brewer Jr. and Bertram Bloch, DARK VICTORY provided Bette Davis with one of her last great performances of the 1930s, capping off a banner decade that had seen her win Academy Awards for "Dangerous" and "Jezebel".
In DARK VICTORY, Davis is millionaire heiress Judith Traherne, plagued with crippling headaches and eyesight problems that are later diagnosed as symptoms of an incurable brain cancer. Judy will eventually lose her vision altogether before peacefully slipping away, but until that day comes she'll spend the remainder of her life happily married, and surrounded by good friends. Davis provides a stirring portrait of courage under fire in this inspirational and moving romantic drama. In lesser hands the character of Judith would have come across as wildly melodramatic, but Davis cuts through the treacle and delivers a sympathetic yet practical performance.
Davis is surrouded in DARK VICTORY by one of her strongest ensemble casts, including frequent co-star George Brent as Dr. Frederick Steele, and Geraldine Fitzgerald as steadfast best friend Ann. Warner contract players Humphrey Bogart and Ronald Reagan can also be enjoyed in several scenes. In that legendary year of 1939, DARK VICTORY was unfortunately forgotten in the midst of "Gone with the Wind" and "The Wizard of Oz", but has since gone on to demonstrate it's endurance as one of the great Bette Davis classics.
The DVD of DARK VICTORY (newly-restored and remastered in a flawless digital print) also includes a Making-Of featurette "1939 - Tough Competition for Dark Victory", audio commentary with James Ursini and Paul Clinton, and the original trailer. (Single-sided, dual-layer disc).

Reacquaint yourself with an old classic that feels anything but old
There's not much left to say about "Dark Victory", so I'll only add that the film's sentiment and tears come not only as a result of the tragedy we're seeing onscreen, but the frequent examples of characters reaching out to help each other, to give thanks to one another, and other expressions of humanity. I always liked that about this movie, that it chokes us up not just over the... well, darker things going on, but also because of how it very effectively shows us humanity at its best. Recently watching the movie again, I was reminded of how great it is.
Warner Home Video's DVD of "Dark Victory" features pristine picture and sound, and a nice collection of interesting, illuminating extra features.

Dark Victory
Based on Casey Robinson's stage drama, which starred Tallulah Bankhead, this Oscar-nominated weepie about a dying socialite trying to find happiness in the remaining months of her life scored with audiences in 1939. It's not hard to see why: the luminous Davis is superb, convincingly transforming herself from a bossy, devil-may-care horse breeder into a down-to-earth, spiritually humble human being. Humphrey Bogart does a sprightly turn as an Irish stable hand (yes, it's true), and watch for Ronald Reagan, who's terrific as Judith's suitor, Alec Hamin. If you're in the mood for a good cry, "Dark Victory" is your ticket to tearful bliss.
Learning Through Digital Media
©2005 Copyright Learningfromdvds.com Educational DVDs
Cart