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The Great Lie
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Directed by Edmund Goulding
The Great Lie is Soap Opera Deluxe from Bette Davis' peak period at Warner Bros. Davis plays a socialite who is madly in love with playboy aviator George Brent. Brilliant but bitchy concert pianist Mary Astor (who won a well-deserved Academy Award for her chain-smoking histrionics) is also in love with Brent, going so far as to marry him in a secret ceremony. When it appears that the marriage may be invalid, Astor is too devoted to her art to take the necessary corrective steps, so Brent returns to Davis, who is too proud to be picked up on the rebound. While flying an important government mission, Brent disappears and is presumed killed. Davis meets Astor, who had been impregnated by Brent before the question of their marriage's validity came up. Since her first marriage had been in secret, Astor is terrified that her career will be ruined by the sudden appearance of an unexplained child, so Davis, out of love for Brent, agrees to claim the baby as her own. When Brent, who of course has not been killed after all, resurfaces, Astor demands that the child be returned to her, hoping that the child will forever bind Brent to her. Davis tells Brent the whole sad story, whereupon our long-absent hero declares his love for Davis and his willingness to give up the child to Astor. At the last moment, Astor returns the kid to Davis and Brent, and the film ends on a splendiferous musical chord courtesy of overworked Warner Bros. composer Max Steiner. In lesser hands, The Great Lie would have been outrageous hokum, but somehow Bette Davis and Mary Astor (and, to a lesser extent, George Brent) make you want to believe that the story has some resemblance to Real Life. The film was based on the novel January Heights by Polan Blanks, which was not governed by Hollywood censorship and thus didn't have to bend over backwards to "legitimize" the baby in the story. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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"Folks in the current economy just haven’t warmed to the whole Blu-ray concept just yet. So while they are still commercially viable (even though they are waning in popularity), there are still a number of special edition DVDs funneling into the market. As the holiday approaches, it can be confusing for consumers as they toggle between ch " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
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Despite star Bette Davis's initial reluctance about the soap opera screenplay, she and co-star Mary Astor turned The Great Lie (1941) into a deliciously outrageous yet emotionally involving woman's melodrama. Bowing to the content restrictions of the Production Code while preserving the original novel's central struggle over George Brent's aviator Pete between Maggie, Davis's genteel Southern heiress, and Sandra, Astor's bitchy concert pianist, screenwriter Lenore Coffee justified Sandra's impregnation with a mistaken marriage. Allegedly displeased with the scripted interplay between Maggie and Sandra, Davis worked with Astor to devise a relationship that seethes with witty jealousy, yet reaches a twisted sisterhood in the central sequences in which Maggie looks after the pregnant Sandra as they await the birth in desert isolation. Smoothly directed by Edmund Goulding with the high style afforded Davis's Warner Bros. star vehicles, Davis has her signature moments of sweetness, grief, and steely strength, yet she also steps back to let Astor strut her histrionic stuff as the Tchaikovsky-playing, brandy-swilling diva. A box office success, The Great Lie earned Astor a much-deserved Supporting Actress Oscar. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
 

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