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ADDRESSING - AND UNDRESSING - BETTIE PAGE.


Byline: Bob Strauss Film Critic

Pornography of the 1950s looks quaint by today's ... um, we can't exactly call them standards, can we? But you know what I mean.

Except, perhaps, for the still alluring work of Bettie Page. A busty bust·y  
adj. bust·i·er, bust·i·est
Full-bosomed.

Adj. 1. busty - (of a woman's body) having a large bosom and pleasing curves; "Hollywood seems full of curvaceous blondes"; "a curvy young woman in a tight
 brunette who posed for then-taboo full-frontal photos, modeled fetish getups and made slap-and-tickle all-girl stag films, Page remains to this day a venerated cult figure in certain circles. The most highly paid contemporary porn stars aren't any sexier.

But even though she exposed herself like no other woman of her time, Page retains an air of unknowability. Still alive but semi-reclusive, she has refused to have her picture taken for many years, and that's only added to her mystique.

And while the new biopic bi·o·pic  
n.
A film or television biography, often with fictionalized episodes.


biopic
Noun

Informal a film based on the life of a famous person [bio(graphical) + pic(ture)]
 "The Notorious Bettie Page" bends over as backward as some of its subject's most gymnastic poses to make the fantasy figure seem approachable, it really doesn't tell us a lot about who she actually may have been.

This doesn't seem to be a failure on the parts of director Mary Harron and her screenwriting partner, Guinevere Turner, who last of "American Psycho." It's more like they purposely wanted to keep the movie - which, after all, touches on such dark subjects as spousal abuse, gang rape and government censorship - psychologically superficial. Not unlike pornography, in its way, only with a cheeky undercurrent of cultural criticism from a whip-smart, feminist perspective.

As for the icon herself, Gretchen Mol looks improbably accurate (the lithe LITHE - Object-oriented with extensible syntax.

"LITHE: A Language Combining a Flexible Syntax and Classes", D. Sandberg, Conf Rec 9th Ann ACM Sym POPL, ACM 1982, pp.142-145.
, fair-featured actress and Page don't really resemble one another at all), exhibits no fear (while showing everything else) and creates an utterly beguiling personality (to the extent that it's been written for her, anyway). It's a great performance for one designed with very little going on inside - and far and away Mol's best screen work to date.

A smart, Bible-believing Tennessee gal, Page ended up in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 in the early '50s with dreams of becoming an actress. Despite traumatic past experiences with males, she dubiously maintained a cheerful disposition - according to the movie, anyway - and found much more creative fulfillment posing for "photo club" enthusiasts and the sibling pornographers Irving and Paula Klaw (Chris Bauer and Lili Taylor, often hilarious in their pervy pragmatism) than in the absurd Method acting classes she was taking.

Of course, the '50s were a time of repression, too, and the Klaws, Page and their pals eventually got hauled before a congressional committee. In a bit of amusing casting irony, David Strathairn, last seen battling Joe McCarthy in the black-and-white "Good Night, and Good Luck," plays another witch-hunting '50s senator, Estes Kefauver, in this mostly black-and- white production.

Harron uses splashy splash·y  
adj. splash·i·er, splash·i·est
1. Making or likely to make splashes.

2. Covered with splashes of color.

3. Showy; ostentatious. See Synonyms at showy.
 color in some sequences, primarily keyed by which old Bettie photos were made at the time of the scene, but also to approximate various looks of the era and evoke a psychological state or emotional mood.

The film concludes soon after Page's decision, at the end of the decade, to stop showing off the body she was so justifiably and unashamedly un·a·shamed  
adj.
Feeling or showing no remorse, shame, or embarrassment:



una·sham
 proud of and start doing the Lord's work. It does not go into the broken marriages, violent outbursts and institutionalization Institutionalization

The gradual domination of financial markets by institutional investors, as opposed to individual investors. This process has occurred throughout the industrialized world.
 that came later in her life. That, of course, would ruin the pretty, lascivious las·civ·i·ous  
adj.
1. Given to or expressing lust; lecherous.

2. Exciting sexual desires; salacious.



[Middle English, from Late Latin lasc
 picture the movie is determined to paint, but I'm not sure that's something Harron deserves criticism for. Certainly, the urge to objectify ob·jec·ti·fy  
tr.v. ob·jec·ti·fied, ob·jec·ti·fy·ing, ob·jec·ti·fies
1. To present or regard as an object: "Because we have objectified animals, we are able to treat them impersonally" 
 women that has fueled the porn business since cave-painting times is implicitly teased throughout "The Notorious Bettie Page." That's not a bad move for a film that's explicit about so much else.

Bob Strauss, (818) 713-3670

bob.strauss(at)dailynews.com

THE NOTORIOUS BETTIE PAGE - Three stars

(R: nudity, language, adult situations)

Starring: Gretchen Mol, Chris Bauer, Lili Taylor, Jared Harris, David Strathairn.

Director: Mary Harron.

Running time: 1 hr. 31 min.

Playing: Selected theaters.

In a nutshell: Mol gives a lively performance and performs a magnificent transformation as the 1950s nudie
  • Nudie Jeans
  • Bobbie Nudie, fashion designer
  • Nudie Cohn, fashion designer born as Nuta Kotlyarenko
 queen Page. Not much of a psychological study, but the movie manages to mix creepy/porny fun, feminist skepticism and anti-censorship attitudes in a uniquely lighthearted way.

CAPTION(S):

photo

Photo:

Gretchen Mol dons a Bettie Page wig to play the pinup pin·up  
n.
1.
a. A picture, especially of a sexually attractive person, that is displayed on a wall.

b. A person considered a suitable model for such a picture.

2.
 icon, clothed clothe  
tr.v. clothed or clad , cloth·ing, clothes
1. To put clothes on; dress.

2. To provide clothes for.

3. To cover as if with clothing.
 and otherwise.
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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Apr 14, 2006
Words:698
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