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Alice Adams

Alice Adams DVD Cover Information
Actor: Evelyn Venable, Frank Albertson, Fred MacMurray, Fred Stone, Katharine Hepburn
Director: George Stevens
Brand: Alice
Cinematographer: Robert De Grasse
Editor: Jane Loring
Producer: Pandro S. Berman
Writer: Booth Tarkington
Writer: Dorothy Yost
Writer: Jane Murfin
Writer: Mortimer Offner
DVD: Region Code 1
Audio: English (Unknown), Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono; English (Subtitled); Spanish (Subtitled); French (Subtitled); English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled
Picture Format: 1.33:1
Running Time: 99 minutes
DVD Release Date: 2003-01-07
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Studio: Turner Home Ent
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$23.51
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$12.00
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Movie Reviews of Alice Adams

Movie Review: Painful to Watch, for Various Reasons
Summary: 1 Stars

Hepburn at her youngest and most beautiful, but a film flawed by cliché, casting, and motive. The movie comes from a Tarkington book that had inexplicably won a Pulitzer prize and is a lame expose of small town class systems and social climbing - Tarkington's book became a screenplay with none of the bite or insight of Sinclair Lewis' work. As to the casting, everyone except Hepburn delivers a 2 dimensional 30's-ish performance except the father who falls perilously close to muggery and caricature. He is a cross between the cowardly lion and a Little Rascal's parent.

Hepburn herself plays a young woman who is increasingly hypocritical and a liar in pursuit of a young man. The dinner sequence, justly remembered in Hollywood, shows her as luminous, bright, and brittle. However, it's all like watching Jerry Lewis play the idiot doomed to fail - very, very painful. The final redemption, after Hepburn becomes an honest woman, is less than believable. We had no character development of the Fred MacMurray character, so when he does the right thing, its because it's a Hollywood ending.

Leonard Maltin rated this 3 ½ in his guide - shame on you Leonard!
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