Ex-Lady

Helen and Don

ā€œA piece of junkā€ is how Bette Davis described 1931ā€™s Ex-Lady in her 1962 autobiography. By the early 1960s a good chunk of Davis’s stock in trade was disdain but even so itā€™s a tall claim. The film was, among other things, the first to put Davisā€™s name above the title. Itā€™s a Hollywood ā€œproblem movieā€, the problem being the incompatibility of marriage and ā€œyoung modernsā€, as the film calls people like the progressive, independent illustrator character Davis plays, a woman who wants to carry on with life as it is ā€“ and not get married to Don (Gene Raymond), the advertising guy sheā€™s currently hooking up with for clandestine sex. Then he … Read more