Bette Davis
27 titles
Filmography
27 results

Jimmy the Gent
(1934)Academy Award winners James Cagney and Bette Davis star as a less-than-scrupulous private detective and the woman he loves--who has just left him for an even less scrupulous employer. Jimmy Corrigan (Gagney) is jealous when his operative and sweatheart, Joan Martin (Davis), goes to work for Charles Wallingham (Alan Dinehart) because Wallingham seems to have much more class than Corrigan. But Co...
Fashions of 1934
(1934)Caught in Paris, a fashion thief and his helpers put on a show.

Where Love Has Gone
(1964)After a divorced woman’s lover is found stabbed to death, the woman’s teenage daughter is brought in to stand trial for the crime.

The Rich Are Always with Us
(1932)The richest woman in the world (Ruth Chatterton) has everything money can buy. But with her heart torn between her faithless husband and an ardent writer (George Brent), she can't have the one thing every woman wants: happiness. Herbert Hoover was still President and the Depression was at its most depressing when this delicious wallow in uptown romance hit the Bijou, featuring an electric performance by young Bette Davis as a society girl also enamored of the writer. This wasn't the end of Davis' relationship with Brent. They would make 11 films together, including Jezebel and Dark Victory. It wasn't the end of the Chatterton-Brent relationship, either: the on-screen lovers married soon after the film opened.

Burnt Offerings
(1976)When a family rents an isolated country mansion for the summer, they find themselves surrounded by an evil presence that feeds on human suffering.

Joan Crawford: Always the Star
(1996)Guts, determination and hard work lift a young woman out of brutal poverty into Academy Award-winning stardom as one of its highest paid actresses.

Wicked Stepmother
(1989)Transforming into a cigarette smoking black cat is just one of Bette Davis' evil tricks in this campy, fun-filled brew that mixes magic with mayhem and costars Barbara Carrera as Davis' doting daughter.