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Format: VHS May 1992 Rated PG Recording Mode: (unknown) 110 min. |
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Details

Movie Description Billy Wilder's knowing, deliberately old-fashioned homage to a bygone age of filmmaking, it stars William Holden as producer Barry Detweiler. In flashbacks, the producer recalls his efforts to coax aging movie queen Fedora (Marthe Keller) out of retirement, while attending her funeral. Not long before, he had tried to penetrate the phalanx of functionaries who protected the star at the Greek island villa of her friend, the Countess Sobryanski (Hildegard Knef) without success. When Barry accidentally bumped into the actress in town, looking amazingly well, she claimed that she was at the mercy of her caretakers, but asked him to send her his script. Following a series of frustratingly mixed signals from Fedora, she arrives one night at Barry's hotel in desperation, but is quickly seized and conjured away by her plastic surgeon Dr. Vandos (Jose Ferrer), and her chauffeur Kritos (Gottfried John). The next day, the producer returns to the villa, and is knocked unconscious by the chauffeur. Although his penultimate film, this is truly the director's farewell to moviemaking, an absorbing meditation on age, beauty, and the perils of practicing a profession of illusion.
Synopsis Billy Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond’s last great screenplay revisits the territory of SUNSET BOULEVARD by examining the relationship between an ambitious Hollywood hustler and a reclusive female star. Dutch tries to save his foundering career by seeking to lure Fedora off a Greek Island and out of retirement. The film is rich and mysterious, with an ingenious plot turn and a masterly sense of structure.
Film Notes Henry Fonda and Jose Ferrer make brief appearances as themselves.
Industry Reviews Included in the New York Times's "10 BEST FILMS OF 1979" New York Times - p.II:1 - Vincent Canby (12/30/1979)
"...A fabulous relic....A proud, passionate remembrance of the way movies used to be, and a bitter smile at what they have become..." New York Times - Janet Maslin (04/15/1979)
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