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Name of Film:
The Notorious Bettie Page
Our Rating:
MPAA Rated R (for nudity, sexual content and some language.) Runtime: 1 hr 40 minutes.
The Notorious Bettie Page attempts to cover an important chapter in American culture through the story of the famed pinup model. Unfortunately, this pedestrian-paced biopic only skims the surface of Bettie Page's life, leaving us with some historical inaccuracies and many opportunities missed to address a larger picture.
Instead, director Mary Harron (I Shot Andy Warhol) and writer Guinevere Turner (Go Fish, The L Word) deliver a loving, whimsical story of an innocent woman who eventually realizes there can be a cost for achieving fame and notoriety. Their script only lightly touches on how the century's greatest pinup queen fit into the changing sexual mores of the 1950s. This was the decade when the Kinsey Report and Playboy turned the country on its sexually repressed ear.
The film opens and ends with the 1955 Kefauver Senate hearings that tried to link fetish magazines with juvenile delinquency. Page (Gretchen Mol) is stilling in a hallway, waiting to be called as a witness, as she recalls in flashback the events of the previous six years.
She remembers her religious roots in Tennessee, and a brutal gang rape that causes her to leave town and seek her fortune in New York. Eventually she lands a job as a model while taking acting classes. Her magazine photos draw the attention of Irving and Paula Klaw (Chris Bauer and Lili Taylor) a brother-sister team who specialized in in fetish photos and bondage films for a growing underground market of wealthy clients.
Page agrees to star in many of these productions, telling a male friend
Page is advised to leave on a long vacation to Florida, where she meets photographer Bunny Yeager, who brings out the beauty of the model to another series of men's magazines and nudie postcards. Yeager narrates:
At the end, after hearing a man testify before Kefauver about the death of his son after reading one of her magazines stories, Bettie abandons her career, returns to Tennessee, and becomes a lay preacher. Years later, when a man recognizes her after a service, she tells him she was not ashamed of her photos.
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Review by Gary Mussell, SCNA Film Critic
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