Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte with Bette Davis: DVD Cover
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Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte Director: Robert Aldrich Cast: Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland, Joseph Cotten, Agnes Moorehead

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  • DVD Release Date: 08/09/2005
  • Original Release: 1965
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 2,776

Viewer Rating: (5 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Performances" See All

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DVD - Black & White$19.99

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Features

Closed Caption; Commentary by film historian Glenn Erickson; Theatrical trailers; TV spots; Widescreen format (1.66:1); Audio: English stereo, English mono; Subtitles: English, Spanish

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Scene Index

Side #1 --
1. Directive [4:41]
2. Broken Heart [2:44]
3. Hand and Head [2:15]
4. Bloody Dress [1:55]
5. Initiation [2:38]
6. Main Titles [:26]
7. Demolition [1:55]
8. Ten Days Left [4:45]
9. Cousin Miriam [3:55]
10. Homecoming [4:09]
11. Dinner Company [:52]
12. Gratitude [3:41]
13. Regrets [2:42]
14. Mysteries [4:45]
15. Mrs. Mayhew [3:35]
16. Hate Mail [:59]
17. Sealed Envelope [3:29]
18. In the Dark [1:50]
19. The Music Box [3:41]
20. Over the Edge [3:13]
21. Up to No Good [1:33]
22. Conspiracy [5:17]
23. Velma [5:57]
24. Senior Partner [1:43]
25. Hush...Hush [5:26]
26. Sweet Charlotte [5:22]
27. Murder [3:56]
28. Disposal [5:39]
29. Apparition [1:24]
30. Celebration [3:36]
31. Supposing [3:04]
32. End Titles [5:52]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Hoping to make lightning strike twice in the same place, director Robert Aldrich re-teamed legendary screen divas Bette Davis and Joan Crawford -- whom he had paired two years earlier in What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? -- in this similarly themed 1964 shocker. Crawford became ill, forcing Aldrich to replace her with Olivia de Havilland, but the substitution didn't hurt the film, a profoundly creepy entry in the Southern Gothic subgenre. Davis stars as the mentally ill mistress of a decaying Louisiana plantation, a woman still haunted by the bizarre and brutal murder of her married lover many years before. De Havilland portrays her levelheaded cousin, a forward-thinking woman who tries to soothe her relative's pain. The superb supporting cast, made up almost entirely of veterans of Hollywood's Golden Age, includes Joseph Cotten (as de Havilland's gentleman friend), Agnes Moorehead, Mary Astor, and Cecil Kellaway. But acting honors go to La Davis for her characterization of the erstwhile southern belle, now a haggard harridan in overdone makeup and outlandish attire. She doesn't just chew the scenery -- she swallows it whole. Her over-the-top histrionics, in fact, make de Havilland's carefully modulated performance all the more effective. Contributing immeasurably to the atmosphere is Joseph Biroc's starkly lit camerawork, which immediately establishes a mood of unease that Aldrich's direction helps sustain throughout. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

Loved it!by loulouTX

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July 13, 2009: This is a classic! Always good to watch.

Charlotte is still sweet more than 40 years laterby Faustulusdiaboli

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July 06, 2009: CHARLOTTE is a great old Southern gothic performed by seasoned actors -- Agnes Moorhead holds her own any day against Davis and deHavilland, and Joseph Cotton, so suave and genteel, is a great villain; still, it's Davis and deHavilland who hold up the story in all its twists. William Faulkner this isn't, but it's still a great old romp in haunted Dixie for a rainy night or a lazy afternoon.


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