Faye

2024

Biography / Documentary

2
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 94% · 31 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 81%
IMDb Rating 7.1/10 10 736 736

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Plot summary

Through honest reflection, complemented by insight from colleagues and friends, Faye Dunaway contextualizes her life and filmography, laying bare her struggles with mental health while confronting the double standards she was subjected to as a woman in Hollywood.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
July 14, 2024 at 08:48 AM

Top cast

Johnny Depp as Self - Actor, Arizona Dream
Joaquin Phoenix as Self - Actor / The Yards
Charlize Theron as Self - Actor, The Yards
Jack Nicholson as Self - Actor, Chinatown
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
828.69 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 30 min
Seeds 27
1.66 GB
1920*1080
English 5.1
NR
us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 30 min
Seeds 45

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by jimfinger-47793 8 / 10

Interesting, especially for Ms, Dunaway's (many) admirers.

Nicely edited overview of her key movies with some entertaining back story details - supplemented with objective commentary from family, friends, colleagues. Thankfully, not the typical lovefest parade of non-stop fawning praise, but a believable balance of commentary that sheds light on her great talent as well as predisposition to being a difficult personality. A particularly interesting debate on the merits (or to some, faults) with "Mommie Dearest," made all the more valuable by comments from her co stars in that controversial picture. Those who are not necessarily fans of Ms, Dunaway but have interest in the cinema of the 1970s should take a look.

Reviewed by blanbrn 9 / 10

Provocative and brash, blunt doc that tells the highs and lows of a legendary actress.

Faye Dunaway was one of my favorite actresses she always played each role in such a classy and elegant and very sexy way. This "HBO" doc called just plain "Faye" is a treat and delight for any of her fans, as Dunaway is interviewed and she reflects on her life and Florida upbringing till her journey thru stage into the studios, as she becomes a fine actress. The footage is vintage and it brings back memories for all film buffs and fans of Faye, as during the 70's she was the queen of the big screen. Certainly her highs were "Bonnie and Clyde", "Chinatown", and "Network" and Dunaway talks very frank about the good times of stardom. Yet the bad times were mentioned like her over the top choices when she did "Mommie Dearest", it proves that an acting life is not easy. On the revealing side of life is hearing from Faye's son Liam it was touching and memorable as they go thru old family photos. Along the way though Dunaway's life was no bed of roses as she dealt with mental health issues. Still thru it all this doc proves that pain and the ups and downs was what made Faye so super good and great, a must watch for any old film fan.

Reviewed by ozjosh03 6 / 10

Oh, Faye!

This is a slapdash, disingenuous, occasionally weird and ultimately unsatisfying portrait of Faye Dunaway. It is also, quite conspicuously, a partisan attempt to rehabilitate her reputation, which has suffered more than a few blows over the years. But if you're going to include that clip of Bette Davis telling Johnny Carson that Faye is the only actor in Hollywood she'd never work with again, then you really need to properly address the accusations of divadom at a monster level, to which this doco only fleetingly alludes. Faye's cover-all response to stories about her being difficult is that - news flash - she's bi-polar. Since this has never been mentioned before, it would seem to be a very late-life diagnosis, and Faye is curiously vague on the details. Nevertheless, she deploys being bi-polar like a get-out-of-jail-free card, as a means of not addressing or dismissing all those allegations of being difficult, unprofessional, unreasonable and infuriating. But since it's that behaviour that pretty much de-railed her career, this just leaves a giant hole in the story of her life. For this film to really change perceptions about Dunaway, it needed to delve deeper and demand a bit more of Faye. Okay, so she behaved badly because she was off-kilter; but how does she feel about that - about the consequences for her, and about the impact it had on others? It also has to be said that it's a strange and motley selection of friends and colleagues who have been curated to talk on Faye's behalf. There's Rutanya Alda, who has previously dished for anyone who asked about Faye in diva mode on Mommie Dearest. There's the always annoying Columbia film professor Annette Insdorf, who is as emphatic as she is vacuous. There are a few actors and studio execs you've never heard of. And Sharon Stone, who at least has some insight into what happens to actresses in Hollywood beyond 40. Other than Sharon, there's not much in the way of insight and illumination. At best, Faye is a reminder of what a magnetic and compelling actor Dunaway was in her prime. But the picture quickly goes blurry once we get into the What-happened-Faye? Years, post Network. In the end, we can only hope some future documentarian dares to tackle The Legend of Faye Dunaway with a clearer vision and significantly more guts.

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