Download Our App XoStream

Becky Sharp

1935

Action / Drama / Romance / War

9
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled30%
IMDb Rating5.9101118

technicolor

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Cedric Hardwicke Photo
Cedric Hardwicke as Marquis of Steyne
Billie Burke Photo
Billie Burke as Lady Bareacres
Will Geer Photo
Will Geer as Spectator
Miriam Hopkins Photo
Miriam Hopkins as Becky Sharp
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
711.6 MB
988*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 24 min
P/S ...
1.36 GB
1472*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 24 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by MartinHafer6 / 10

Historically important...but probably not much interest to the average viewer.

BECKY SHARP is set during the Napoleonic era. When the film begins, Becky is leaving finishing school and the headmistress is thrilled to see her go. Becky, for her part, feels the same and unlike the demure ladies of the time, she tells the headmistress where she can put her school!! But, like a cat, she lands on her feet—being taken in by a rich classmate. After wrangling this invitation to stay with this rich lady, Becky then works hard to snag a rich husband. Instead, she does manage to marry a minor member of the gentry—but he cannot afford the rich ways of his new wife. Eventually, he tires of her whore-like ways and divorces her.

Becky, now broke, is forced to work in the lower quarters of society. But, once again, she manages to find a rich guy (Nigel Bruce) to bail her out and once again she begins scheming her way to the top. And, by the end of the film, Becky hasn't learned any lesson about life other than "look out for number one"! This film is the Thackery novel "Vanity Fair" and it's been made several times. What makes this one of some importance is that this was the first full-length film made in Three-Color Technicolor—the first true color process for movies. While Two-Color movies had been made since the early 1920s, they lacked full color as the color strips were blue-green and orange-red—resulting in a film that tended to actually look more orange and green than anything else (though there were a few exceptions where the colors actually looked pretty good—such as in the color segment in THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA). Despite the major technical improvement with BECKY SHARP, it, too, looked rather muddy and orange. This is NOT due to the age of the print, as people at the time commented on its rather limited color palate. But, the process was roughly that of future full-color films and it is the first of its kind.

The story features the shallow but scheming Becky (Miriam Hopkins) working her way through society in order to further her great ambitions. To do so, she lies and plots continuously and she's quite good at it! However entertaining this is, it is also the biggest problem with the film. Because Becky is generally a selfish jerk (though not always so),it's hard to care about her and the film rests mostly on its costumes and full-color. As for Hopkins' acting, it's one of her best performances—though it is a tad two-dimensional—mostly due to the writing, not her acting. Had they made Becky either MORE evil and conniving (like Bette Davis in JEZEBEL or THE LETTER) or LESS, it would have improved the film immensely.

Overall, a rather forgettable costumer whose sole reason to watch it is the use of Three-Color film. Other than that, fans of Miriam Hopkins (both of them) might want to see it, as it's among her best performances—mostly because it doesn't call for a lot of restraint or subtlety.

Reviewed by bkoganbing7 / 10

Rising above your class

Miriam Hopkins gives a spirited and possibly career performance in the title role of Becky Sharp based on William Makepeace Thackerey's novel Vanity Fair. The film comes by way of Langdon Mitchell's play based on Vanity Fair with the change in title. It ran on Broadway in 1899 for 116 performance.

And what a cast it had back in 1899. Mrs. Mary Madden Fiske was Becky, Maurice Barrymore was her luckless gambling fool of a husband, the part that Alan Mowbray has here and as the aristocratic rake that Hopkins is ready to give all to to square Mowbray's debts is played by Cedric Hardwicke in the film. On Broadway the role originated with Tyrone Power, Sr.

Thackerey's novel was a critique of the class system in Great Britain, but really offers no solutions. It's also a story of how much more difficult it was to be a woman and poor with so many fewer options open to them.

Becky Sharp is such a woman. She's been given a good education, attending school with the rich aristocratic Frances Dee. By education I mean finishing school. How she got there we're not sure, but having been exposed to how the other half lives she wants to be part of it.

Her friend Frances Dee invites her to live with her family and Hopkins starts seizing her opportunities. The rest of the story is about what happens to her and the various schemes she concocts. She's not afraid to use sex to obtain what she wants, riches and respectability.

Besides those I've already mentioned there's a really nice performance by Nigel Bruce as Frances Dee's Colonel Blimp like brother. In the end he proves to be Hopkins's salvation.

As a film Becky Sharp has come down in history to us as the first film using the modern technicolor process. It was a novelty, but as a story it definitely has merit.

And it is so much better than the version with Myrna Loy updated to the Roaring Twenties that came out under the original title of Vanity Fair a few years earlier.

Reviewed by lee_eisenberg8 / 10

socially climbing an unpleasant way

I should admit that I've never read William Makepeace Thackeray's "Vanity Fair". I understand that it's basically a satire on British high society in the 19th century. So, Rouben Mamoulian's "Becky Sharp" is my first exposure to it. Miriam Hopkins plays the amoral title character, scheming her way into the world of England's rich people during and after the Napoleonic Wars, only to see her plans backfire on her. I thought that the most impressive scene was the ball that gets interrupted by cannons firing. It's not a masterpiece, but still worth seeing.

PS: Billie Burke (Lady Bareacres) played Glinda in "The Wizard of Oz", and Nigel Bruce (Joseph Sedley) played Watson in the Sherlock Holmes movies starring Basil Rathbone.

Read more IMDb reviews