Dark Victory (1939)

Movie · 1939 · Drama, Romance · 1h 44m · NR · English

Curator score: 7.8/10 (13.5K ratings)

I've crammed every minute so full of waste. And now there's so little time. I don't know what to do. I'm afraid!

Overview

Socialite Judith Traherne lives a lavish but emotionally empty life. Riding horses is one of her few joys, and her stable master is secretly in love with her. Told she has a brain tumor by her doctor, Frederick Steele, Judith becomes distraught. After she decides to have surgery to remove the tumor, Judith realizes she is in love with Dr. Steele, but more troubling medical news may sabotage her new relationship, and her second chance at life.

Ratings

Director

Edmund Goulding

Production

Warner Bros. Pictures, First National Pictures

Cast

Bette Davis, George Brent, Humphrey Bogart, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Ronald Reagan, Henry Travers, Cora Witherspoon, Dorothy Peterson, Virginia Brissac, Charles Richman, Herbert Rawlinson, Leonard Mudie, Fay Helm, Lottie Williams, Marian Alden, Wilda Bennett, Diane Bernard, Black Ace, Richard Bond, Sidney Bracey

Curator Review

Verdict

A classic star-driven melodrama that lives or dies on Bette Davis, and she makes it worth the trip. The story is very much of its era—lush, theatrical, and emotionally blunt—but the performance, romantic anguish, and fatalistic medical premise give it lasting appeal.

Best for

  • Bette Davis fans
  • classic Hollywood melodrama lovers
  • viewers who enjoy tragic romance
  • fans of emotionally heightened performances
  • pre-Code/Golden Age studio-era drama enthusiasts

Skip if

  • you want modern realism or subtle dialogue
  • you dislike old-fashioned melodrama
  • you need a tightly plotted medical drama
  • you prefer ensemble stories over star vehicles

Overview

Dark Victory is one of those old Hollywood vehicles that exists to give a great star room to burn through every register of emotion, and Bette Davis absolutely does. Judith Traherne begins as a privileged, restless socialite and becomes something far more moving once the film forces her to confront mortality, love, and the limits of control. The material is unabashedly melodramatic, but Davis gives it conviction and shape.

Worth noting

The romance is sincere, the medical stakes are unusually grim for a 1939 studio picture, and the ending lands with real force. Edmund Goulding keeps the film polished and efficient rather than especially ornate, so this is less about visual flourishes than about performance and feeling. That works in its favor: the movie becomes a showcase for Davis’s intensity, vulnerability, and wit.

Bottom line

If you respond to classic women’s pictures, tragic love stories, or the particular pleasure of watching a great actor elevate sturdy material, this is an easy recommendation. If you want emotional restraint or contemporary sensibility, it may feel too broad. But as a Golden Age tearjerker with genuine star power, it still earns its reputation.

Top Letterboxd reviews

phoebe 💫 (3.5★) · 325 likes

bette davis's eyes and aggressively homoerotic friendships carried the movie industry for like two decades, I said what I said

Marian (4★) · 209 likes

bette davis: dies me: queen of acting!!!!

frances (4★) · 135 likes

it should be illegal for one person to be THIS good at acting. like the material isn’t even that compelling! the story and cinematography are absolutely nothing to write home about, and yet, through sheer force of will, Ruth Elizabeth Davis has elevated this film to heights hitherto inaccessible to other, lesser actors. it goes without saying that i sobbed like a BITCH. i really don’t think anyone else could have embodied that role in a way that affected me so profoundly. she was one in a million, and she just singlehandedly & definitively proved why 1939 is the greatest year in american cinema

Tommy (3★) · 124 likes

Can you imagine your doctor lying to you about your diagnosis because he thinks you’re too hot to have cancer?

Josh Gillam (3.5★) · 120 likes

Life changes forever for wealthy socialite Judith Traherne (Bette Davis) after she’s diagnosed with a brain tumour, in Edmund Goulding’s iconic melodrama with George Brent, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Humphrey Bogart and Ronald Reagan. Davis said in an interview years later that Dark Victory was her favourite performance, and I can definitely see why: the role is a rich one that gives her a chance for a whole host of different emotions and registers, displaying the versatile star’s range in Judith’s ever-shifting… more

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Topics

classic Hollywood, melodrama, tragic romance, women's picture, Golden Age, illness drama, star vehicle, tearjerker, studio-era, emotional performance

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