Whatever Happened Baby Jane? (1962) Queer Film A+

Whatever Happened to Baby Jane
DIRECTOR: Robert Aldrich
BOTTOM LINE: Early Fame: In 1917, Baby Jane Hudson is a spoiled vaudeville child star, adored by audiences. Her sister Blanche grows up overshadowed but later becomes a successful Hollywood actress. Blanche is left paralyzed after a mysterious car accident. Jane, now washed-up and mentally unstable, lives with her in a decaying Hollywood mansion, clinging to delusions of a comeback. Jane psychologically and physically abuses Blanche—locking her in rooms, serving grotesque meals, and sabotaging her attempts to reach the outside world. Blanche reveals that she was actually responsible for her own accident, not Jane. This confession comes too late, as Jane’s madness has already spiraled beyond control. On the beach in Santa Monica, Jane dances childishly while police arrive, leaving Blanche near death. The haunting ending underscores Jane’s complete detachment from reality.

DAVIS AND CRAWFORD ARE SPECTACULAR!

Thanks to Lukas Heller’s superb adaptation of the Henry Farrell novel, Robert Aldrich’s masterpiece works as both drama and camp. Both of Hollywood’s grandes dames, Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, are in top form, with Davis getting the showier role of Baby Jane.  However, Miss Crawford also performs superbly as Blanche. She is the eye at the center of Bette’s hurricane.
Gay actor Victor Buono is perfection as Bette’s date Edwin Flagg, who sees something he shouldn’t, leading to Davis’s famous pronouncement, “He hates me.” Cheers to Australian actress Marjorie Bennett, who plays his mother, Dehlia Flagg – she is straight out of a John Waters movie. “Baby Jane” is gay sensibility incarnate. Every Davis line is immortal, but some of my favorites are:

“You mean all this time we could have been friends,”

Because you didn’t eat your din-din,”

“But you are Blanche, you are in that chair!”

The great movie score is by Frank De Vol.

CINEMATOGRAPHY

Ernest Haller

Warner Bros.

STREAMING: Amazon Prime and Apple TV+

https://thebrownees.net/my-54-all-time-favorite-horror-movies/ https://thebrownees.net/my-75-all-time-favorite-original-movie-scores/
Seventy Queer Films Made Under the Hays Code (1934-1967)
https://thebrownees.net/seventy-queer-films-of-the-new-hollywood-1967-1981
https://thebrownees.net/the-great-cinematographers-of-hollywoods-golden-age/

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