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[ WHV Press Release: The Bette Davis Collection Volume 3 ]

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Old 01-07-2008, 05:28 PM   #1 of 4
Ronald Epstein
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WHV Press Release: The Bette Davis Collection Volume 3


More Fearless Roles…More Flawless Performances

THE BETTE DAVIS COLLECTION VOLUME 3

Six Fully Restored and New to DVD Titles from WHV April 1

Bonus Features Include New and Vintage Featurettes, Archival Radio Dramatizations, Select Commentaries and More

Burbank, Calif. January 7, 2007 – On April 1st Warner Home Video (WHV) marks the return of the incomparable First Lady of Warner Bros., Bette Davis, with the debut of The Bette Davis Collection Volume 3 honoring the legendary actress on what would have been her centennial birthday. The six-disc gift set will include six fully restored titles: In This Our Life; The Old Maid; All This, and Heaven Too; The Great Lie; Deception and Watch on the Rhine. The Collection also celebrates the success of Volumes 1 and 2 wherein these two previously released classic collections will now feature the same newly designed packaging being introduced with this latest release. The Bette Davis Collection Volume 3 will sell for $59.92 SRP.

“Warner Night at the Movies,” an innovative DVD experience developed by WHV, will be included with each classic Davis film. These are special selections that help recreate the authentic movie- going experience of the time, with attractions like newsreels, cartoons and trailers from the years each film was released. There are also new featurettes; archival radio dramatizations; select commentaries and more.

Often dubbed the “Fifth Warner Brother” for her confrontational, take-charge approach, Bette Davis earned an impressive 10 Oscar® nominations (winning twice for her roles in Dangerous and Jezebel) during the course of her legendary 60-year career. Davis was born Ruth Elizabeth Davis on April 5, 1908 in Lowell, Massachusetts and made her Broadway debut in 1929 in “Broken Dishes” before settling in Hollywood in 1931. Following a short stint with Universal, she signed a long-term contract with Warner Bros. where she made more than 50 films and was the studio’s most bankable asset for nearly two decades. Her breakthrough performance (and first Oscar nomination) in Of Human Bondage opened the studio’s (and Hollywood’s!) eyes to her immense talent and led to such classic films as Dark Victory; The Letter; Now, Voyager; The Little Foxes and All About Eve. Davis starred in more than 100 films; was the highest paid woman in America in 1942; became the first female honored with the American Film Institute’s Lifetime Achievement Award and was named the first woman president of the Motion Pictures Academy of Arts and Sciences.

About the Films

In This Our Life (1942)
Two-time Best Actress OscarÒ winners and lifelong friends Bette Davis and Olivia de Havilland square off as sisters (guess who’s the bad one) in In This Our Life, a must-see for fans of melodrama at its juiciest. Director John Huston, fresh from his The Maltese Falcon success, includes a cameo role for his father Walter, just as he did in Falcon. And Max Steiner’s powerful music underscores the film’s driving emotional force.

What Stanley Timberlake wants, she takes. So, on the eve of her marriage to another, she runs off with her sister’s husband, the first of many betrayals that lead to disaster…and to a compulsively watchable brew of deceit, racial bigotry, latent incest and violent death.

Special Features:
· Commentary by film historian Jeannine Basinger
· Warner Night at the Movies 1942 short subjects gallery:
o Vintage newsreel
o TechnicolorÒ patriotic short March On, America!
o TechnicolorÒ musical short Spanish Fiesta
· Classic cartoon Who’s Who in the Zoo
· Trailers of In This Our Life and 1942’s Desperate Journey
· Subtitles: English & Français (main feature only)

The Old Maid (1939)
Based on an Edith Wharton novel and Pulitzer Prize-winning play, The Old Maid tells the sad story of Charlotte, a woman whose circumstances force her to give up her illegitimate child and pose as the child’s “old maid” aunt, thereby facing a lifetime of maternal sacrifice. As Charlotte, Bette Davis gives one of her most nuanced performances, aging from wide-eyed girl to gray-haired martinet. Miriam Hopkins provides effective counterbalance with her portrayal of Charlotte’s effusive cousin, who raises the little girl. Two women, one child – and a brilliant example of melodrama as art.

Special Features:
· Warner Night at the Movies 1939 short subjects gallery:
o Vintage newsreel
o TechnicolorÒ historical short Lincoln in the White House
o Howard Hill sports short Sword Fishing
o Classic cartoons The Film Fan and Kristopher Kolumbus
o Trailers of The Old Maid and 1939’s Confessions of a Nazi Spy
· Subtitles: English & Français (main feature only)

All This, and Heaven Too (1940)
Bette Davis is at the height of her phenomenal screen career, with co-star Charles Boyer in their only film together. The plot is rich in mystery and grand emotion; a powerful period drama honored with three 1940 Academy Award ® nominations, including Best Picture.

From Rachel Field’s fact-based bestseller, the story follows Henriette (Davis), governess at the Paris home of the Duc de Praslin (Boyer) and his jealous wife (Barbara O’Neil). When governess and nobleman are drawn to each other, the Duchess erupts in fury…and meets a bloody fate. Soon Henriette and the Duc face a world eager to believe that the Duc murdered his wife. And that gentle Henriette was a willing accomplice.

Special Features:
· Commentary by The Women of Warner Bros. author Daniel Bubbeo.
· Warner Night at the Movies 1940 short subjects gallery:
o Vintage newsreel
o TechnicolorÒ patriotic short Meet the Fleet
o Classic cartoons Hollywood Daffy and Porky’s Last Stand
o Trailers of All This, and Heaven Too and 1940’s Dr. Ehrlich’s Magic Bullet
· Audio-only bonus: Radio show adaptation with the film’s stars
· Subtitles: English & Français (main feature only)

The Great Lie (1941)
Tempestuous, ambitious concert pianist Sandra Kovac (Mary Astor) shares a bond with down-to-earth Maggie Van Allen (Bette Davis) and her little boy Pete. Sandra’s chic New York friends can’t imagine what the two women have in common. What they don’t know is that Pete is actually Sandra’s son – and the son of the heroic aviator (George Brent) that both women love. Powerful emotions rage against a backdrop of powerful music in the film that earned Astor a 1941 Best Supporting Actress Oscar® for her stellar performance opposite the legendary star who always gives a tour-de-force performance. This story of a great passion, a great sacrifice…and a great lie showcases two great actresses.

Special Features:
· Warner Night at the Movies 1941 Short Subjects Gallery:
o Vintage newsreel
o Broadway Brevities short At the Stroke of Twelve
o OscarÒ-nominated TechnicolorÒ Sports Parade short Kings of the Turf
o Hollywood Novelty short Polo with the Stars
o Classic cartoon Porky’s Pooch
o Trailers of The Great Lie and 1941’s The Strawberry Blonde
· Subtitles: English & Français (main feature only)

Deception (1946)
The three stars (Bette Davis, Paul Henreid, Claude Rains) and director (Irving Rapper) of Now Voyager reunite for this glamorous, angst-ridden melodrama set to a thrilling Erich Wolfgang Korngold score. A favorite of Davis fans, Deception inspired one of the best-known reviews in movie history: “It’s like grand opera, only the people are thinner. I wouldn’t have missed it for the world” (Cecelia Ager, PM).

Based on Louis Verneuil’s 1928 play Jealousy, the film tells the story of pianist Christine Radcliffe separated from her great love, cellist Karel Novak by World War II. Unexpectedly reunited with him, Christine desperately strives to hide her wartime dalliance as the mistress of a wealthy, sadistic composer (Rains), with devastating results.

Special Features:
· Commentary by film historian Foster Hirsch
· Warner Night at the Movies 1946 short subjects gallery:
o Vintage newsreel
o OscarÒ-winning* TechnicolorÒ Sports Parade Short Facing Your Danger
o TechnicolorÒ Specials Short Movieland Magic
o Classic cartoon Mouse Menace
o Trailers of Deception and 1946’s A Stolen Life
· Subtitles: English & Français (main feature only)

Watch on the Rhine (1943)
Lillian Hellman’s 1941 stage hit (adapted by Dashiell Hammett) retains its emotional and intellectual power in this suspenseful movie awarded the New York Film Critics 1943 Best Picture prize, and lauded as ”a distinguished film, full of sense, power and beauty” by the NY Times. The praiseworthy film about standing up for what is right, at all odds, stars Paul Lukas repeating his Broadway triumph as Kurt Muller, a German underground leader who arrives with his family in Washington, DC and soon finds the tentacles of Nazi terror have a very long reach. Lukas’ passionate performance earned him an OscarÒ, beating out Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca and Gary Cooper in For Whom the Bell Tolls. Bette Davis, who took on the film because she believed in its importance, portrays Muller’s wife with ringing integrity. Lucile Watson as a socialite whose complacency is “shaken out of the magnolias” and George Colouris as a shady blackmailer also memorably reprise their stage roles. The film was nominated for 3 Academy Awards, ® including Best Picture.

Special Features:
· Career profile Bette Davis: A Basically Benevolent Volcano
· Commentary by film historian Bernard F. Dick
· Warner Night at the Movies 1943 short subjects gallery:
o TechnicolorÒ patriotic short March On, America!
o Musical short Ozzie Nelson and His Orchestra
o Classic cartoon The Wise Quacking Duck
o Trailers of Watch on the Rhine and 1943’s Mission to Moscow
· Subtitles: English & Français (main feature only)

THE BETTE DAVIS COLLECTION VOLUME 3
Street Date: April 1, 2008
Catalog/UPC #: 1000027249 // 85391187578
Collection: $59.92 SRP
All Films B&W; Not Rated
In This Our Life
Run Time: 97 Minutes
The Old Maid
Run Time: 95 minutes
All This, and Heaven Too
Run Time: 143 minutes

The Great Lie
Run Time: 107 minutes

Deception
Run Time: 112 minutes

Watch on the Rhine
Run Time: 114 minutes
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Old 01-07-2008, 08:42 PM   #2 of 4
Charles H
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Re: WHV Press Release: The Bette Davis Collection Volume 3


The inclusion of DECEPTION reminded me that this was a remake of JEALOUSY, a 1929 film that starred the legendary stage actress Jeanne Eagles. According to imdb that is a "lost" film, but at one time, it was mentioned that WB would be bringing out the 1929 Jeanne Eagles version of THE LETTER, but with one upgrade of the Davis THE LETTER, nothing has been heard about this since. DANGEROUS was inspired by the life of the real Jeanne Eagles.



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Old 01-08-2008, 10:53 AM   #3 of 4
Charles Ellis
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Re: WHV Press Release: The Bette Davis Collection Volume 3


At long last, All This And Heaven, Too! And as a cherry on the cake, the deliciously trashy In This Our Life- John Huston in Douglas Sirk territory as Bette chews the scenery and makes life hell for everyone onscreen. I was hoping for a documentary on the making of ATAHT (as Warners filmed it as its answer to GWTW, plus there's a lot of background history on Rachel Field and the murder that inspired the book and film), but I'm glad that Hollywood Daffy is included. OK, you animation buffs, maybe you can help me- is this the one where Bette is spoofed as she walks thru the Warners lot, declaring that she was indeed "all this and heaven, too!"?

Last edited by Charles Ellis : 01-08-2008 at 02:13 PM.
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Old 01-08-2008, 12:37 PM   #4 of 4
gunthertoody
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The Bette Davis Collection Volume 3 - Too Bad NO "It's Love I'm After"


Great set, but was really hoping for It's Love I'm After! Classicflix.com has the artwork.
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