Discusión Valley of the Dolls

I suppose the easiest way to find out would be to read the book, or at least the book's wikipedia summary. But I'd rather treat the film as a standalone work.

HUGE SPOILERS BELOW

At the end, Neely has a great climactic moment in the alley, relapsing hard on alcohol & pills, completely alone & desperate, calling out the names of all the people who are long gone from her life, calling on god, then finally calling out her own name (ironically). She collapses and we hear the sound of a bell tolling as the scene ends.

Symbolically it's a death scene. The tolling bell makes that clear. But do you suppose she literally dies in the alley?

Either way I thought it was pretty amazing. Both Sharon Tate (Jennifer) and Patty Duke (Neely) gave incredible performances especially in their final scenes.

7 respuestas (en la página 1 de 1)

Jump to last post

From a 2016 interview:

"Susann hated the film adaptation starring Barbara Parkins, Sharon Tate, and Patty Duke. She called the movie “a piece of shit.”

https://www.flavorwire.com/587459/15-things-you-didnt-know-about-jacqueline-susanns-valley-of-the-dolls

Here is an interesting YT video of Judy Garland on the set of VOTD (plus other things):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ecpPm084PZE

Here is an article about her involvement in the movie. She was originally hired to play Helen Lawson.

https://www.thejudyroom.com/filmography/valley-of-the-dolls/

@bratface said:

"Susann hated the film adaptation starring Barbara Parkins, Sharon Tate, and Patty Duke. She called the movie “a piece of shit.”

Well she certainly earned the trashing she got from Kirk & Spock in Star Trek IV.

Kirk: "You mean the profanity? That's simply the way they talk here. Nobody pays attention to you unless you swear every other word. You'll find it in all the literature of the period."

Spock: "For example?"

Kirk: "Oh, the collected works of Jacqueline Susann. The novels of Harold Robbins...."

Spock: "Ah, the Giants."

😂

Actually the biggest reason why I don’t want to read the book is that I’ve heard it’s trash. But the film is surprisingly elegant, jarringly offset by disturbing elements that leave things to the viewer’s imagination (such as Neely’s final scene).

@rooprect said:

@bratface said:

"Susann hated the film adaptation starring Barbara Parkins, Sharon Tate, and Patty Duke. She called the movie “a piece of shit.”

Well she certainly earned the trashing she got from Kirk & Spock in Star Trek IV.

Kirk: "You mean the profanity? That's simply the way they talk here. Nobody pays attention to you unless you swear every other word. You'll find it in all the literature of the period."

Spock: "For example?"

Kirk: "Oh, the collected works of Jacqueline Susann. The novels of Harold Robbins...."

Spock: "Ah, the Giants."

😂

Actually the biggest reason why I don’t want to read the book is that I’ve heard it’s trash. But the film is surprisingly elegant, jarringly offset by disturbing elements that leave things to the viewer’s imagination (such as Neely’s final scene).

Don't bother reading the book, it is very trashy (also, there are differences, especially the ending).

@bratface said:

Don't bother reading the book, it is very trashy (also, there are differences, especially the ending).

Yup I'll definitely pass on the book. I think the movie evolved into something much better. Sure it's over the top, but it has a unique style...like it can't decide if it wants to be a gritty drama, a musical, a Gone With the Wind epic, or a cheese fest.

Also like you pointed out above, there was a ton of real life drama behind the scenes, and I think that adds to the movie's appeal. It's sad about Judy Garland getting canned, but I'm glad they got a tougher actress to play the dragon lady Helen Lawson. According to this documentary (around the 12 min mark), Judy flipped out & locked herself in her dressing room until everyone left, just like Neely's character in the movie. She just couldn't handle it.

Backstory of Valley of the Dolls

@rooprect said:

@bratface said:

Don't bother reading the book, it is very trashy (also, there are differences, especially the ending).

Yup I'll definitely pass on the book. I think the movie evolved into something much better. Sure it's over the top, but it has a unique style...like it can't decide if it wants to be a gritty drama, a musical, a Gone With the Wind epic, or a cheese fest.

Also like you pointed out above, there was a ton of real life drama behind the scenes, and I think that adds to the movie's appeal. It's sad about Judy Garland getting canned, but I'm glad they got a tougher actress to play the dragon lady Helen Lawson. According to this documentary (around the 12 min mark), Judy flipped out & locked herself in her dressing room until everyone left, just like Neely's character in the movie. She just couldn't handle it.

Backstory of Valley of the Dolls

I read some of an interview with Patty Duke yesterday, where she said that TPTB kept Judy waiting for hours in her dressing before calling her for her scenes knowing full well she would be plastered by then.

@bratface said:

I read some of an interview with Patty Duke yesterday, where she said that TPTB kept Judy waiting for hours in her dressing before calling her for her scenes knowing full well she would be plastered by then.

You inspired me to take a deep dive. I watched the film again with the commentary track (Barbara Parkins "Anne" & gossip columnist Ted Casablanca). They both agreed that Judy got a raw deal. Barbara Parkins went as far as to say Judy's finished scenes were oscar-worthy. Judy's singing scene, she said, was amazing. Her replacement Susan Hayward had to be dubbed.

In the end, according to Barbara Parkins, Judy just couldn't handle the story being so close to her real life. The drinking is what did her in. So if that's true about them purposely getting her liquored up to fail, that's the lowest blow I've ever heard on a movie set.

@rooprect said:

@bratface said:

I read some of an interview with Patty Duke yesterday, where she said that TPTB kept Judy waiting for hours in her dressing before calling her for her scenes knowing full well she would be plastered by then.

You inspired me to take a deep dive. I watched the film again with the commentary track (Barbara Parkins "Anne" & gossip columnist Ted Casablanca). They both agreed that Judy got a raw deal. Barbara Parkins went as far as to say Judy's finished scenes were oscar-worthy. Judy's singing scene, she said, was amazing. Her replacement Susan Hayward had to be dubbed.

In the end, according to Barbara Parkins, Judy just couldn't handle the story being so close to her real life. The drinking is what did her in. So if that's true about them purposely getting her liquored up to fail, that's the lowest blow I've ever heard on a movie set.

Here are two links that include what Duke had said about the TPTB (director + others), in the one I read she had said that they kept her waiting from six thirty am to 4 pm before they called her to the set:

https://www.grunge.com/787877/what-happened-to-judy-garlands-role-in-valley-of-the-dolls/

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/judy-garland-valley-of-the-dolls_n_4445247

¿No encuentras una película o serie? Inicia sesión para crearla:

Global

s centrar la barra de búsqueda
p abrir menú de perfil
esc cierra una ventana abierta
? abrir la ventana de atajos del teclado

En las páginas multimedia

b retrocede (o a padre cuando sea aplicable)
e ir a la página de edición

En las páginas de temporada de televisión

(flecha derecha) ir a la temporada siguiente
(flecha izquierda) ir a la temporada anterior

En las páginas de episodio de televisión

(flecha derecha) ir al episodio siguiente
(flecha izquierda) ir al episodio anterior

En todas las páginas de imágenes

a abrir la ventana de añadir imagen

En todas las páginas de edición

t abrir la sección de traducción
ctrl+ s enviar formulario

En las páginas de discusión

n crear nueva discusión
w cambiar el estado de visualización
p cambiar público/privado
c cambiar cerrar/abrir
a abrir actividad
r responder a la discusión
l ir a la última respuesta
ctrl+ enter enviar tu mensaje
(flecha derecha) página siguiente
(flecha izquierda) página anterior

Configuraciones

¿Quieres puntuar o añadir este elemento a una lista?

Iniciar sesión