Clara Bow: Discovering the It Girl (TV Movie 1999) Poster

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8/10
The real "It" girl
blanche-220 June 2006
Clara Bow personified flapper exuberance, beauty, and sexuality on the screen. This documentary, "Clara Bow: Discovering the It Girl" tells her personal and professional story with screen clips, photos, and interviews with family, friends, and biographer David Stenn.

Bow was an amazing looking woman - a Kewpie doll face, round, with huge, expressive eyes, a brilliant smile, and thick, luxurious hair. But that was only part of the package. She POPPED. While on the screen, you couldn't take your eyes off of her for one second. She exuded a flamboyance as well as a wide emotional range.

Like many people who seek the spotlight, Bow had a disorganized, lonely, and sad childhood. Eventually she found public life too difficult and retired - in fact, she developed such a violent distaste for it that when her husband, Rex Bell, ran for a government position, she attempted suicide.

Most fascinating about the documentary is the sound of Bow's lovely voice, not only in talkies, which she dreaded entering, but later, when she was living alone in Los Angeles. She taped herself reading Shakespeare and other works - obviously, the actress in her still needed to express herself in some way. The readings impressed her son, Rex Bell Jr., (though he said he and his brother would slip into another room when she started taping) who knew nothing of her work in films until later. On seeing her work, he said, "I saw all those expressions on her face - why, I had seen those every day of my life." He was in awe.

The only negative thing about this documentary is the voice-over by, of all people, Courtney Love. Apparently someone saw some sort of connection between her and Bow - I'm not exactly sure what that would be, but speaking is not Courtney Love's strong suit. First of all, in describing the life of this ebullient woman, Love does so in a dull tone and, worse, mumbles. A poor choice. Otherwise, a wonderful documentary on one of the greatest stars in film history.
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7/10
Great, but why Courtney?
Incalculacable5 February 2006
This is a genuinely good biography, but I agree with the rest of them: why Courtney Love as the narrator? She moves away from the microphone sometimes and you can't really hear her voice. But why would you want to anyway - it's emotionless and boring. She is hardly an 'It' girl either, so not really an appropriate choice. I think someone with more 'energy' to their voice would have been so much better... it really distracts you from the biography. Although this is very accurate and interesting, it is not as thorough as David Stenn's biography, Clara Bow: Runnin' Wild (an essential for every Clara fan!). So if you want the COMPLETE low-down on Clara, read the book, because this only skims the surface.
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Fantastic Documentary
Glampire1 December 2003
I just watched this last night, and I have to say that I was very impressed. I'm not going to go into a lengthy review here, but I'll just say that I previously did not know much about Clara Bow, but after watching this I am now fascinated. I also found Courtney Love to be an amazing narrator for the piece. Unlike some of the other comments here, I thought she really breathed life into the story of Ms Bow.

I would recommend this documentary to anyone who likes movies and is interested in learning of past stars.
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Good documentary, but read David Stenn's book
daryl4227 May 2002
This is a good look at Clara. It is a very brief overview of her life, particularly her private life. Too bad there are very few people left who knew her, the interviews are sparse and not totally satisfying. I would have liked to hear more from her son (and wonder why her other son wasn't interviewed).

David Stenn's book covers her life in much more detail. I appreciate the opportunity to see rare footage and clips from unavailable films, but to understand the story of her life, read the book.

There are many tragic lives and many sad stories in Hollywood. Clara Bow, in my estimation, is one of the saddest stories in Hollywood, a truly tragic life. We can be grateful that she was able to give us a few years of marvelous films.
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Perfect....except for one thing.
Shelly_Servo300019 August 2002
This is an engaging documentary of one of the most celebrated actresses on the history of the screen, Clara Bow. The snippets of movies not available to the viewing public is at once wonderful and sad, because unless we make a trip to MoMA, we won't be able to view most of these films. The only thing that makes this less than perfect is that Courtney Love is the narrator. She has an irritating voice, and sounds as if she's falling asleep during parts of the film. I'm sure that she was picked because she's considered an It girl of today, but why not get someone with real "oomph" and warmth to their voice, like Kate Hudson? Or someone with more voiceover experience, such as Glenn Close or Holly Hunter? Love's narration ruins an otherwise excellent documentary.
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Great
Michael_Elliott2 March 2008
Clara Bow: Discovering the It Girl (1999)

**** (out of 4)

Another excellent documentary from Turner Classic Movies. Outside seeing It, I'm really not too familiar with Bow. I was disappointed in that film but I could certainly see why Bow was the first sex symbol in the business. This documentary was a great step in learning more about her career and her life, although it's pretty damn depressing. It was rather amazing hearing all the gossip column stories that brought her career to an end including one story that she took on the USC football team!!! I had known she had an affair with Gary Cooper, which is talked about here and I also knew about her fling with Bela Lugosi. The stuff with Lugosi is also mentioned here and the story told is actually one I hadn't heard before. In the end I'm really looking forward to seeing some more of her work.
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Unbowed
tedg10 June 2003
Warning: Spoilers
Spoilers herein.

This TeeVee documentary is included in the DVD for `IT.' It is well produced and has a whole lot of welcome footage. It is worth watching if you know little about this phenomenon.

But in one of the most amazing missteps, it is narrated by Courtney Love. It is a misstep in part because she just doesn't know how to read well, but there is a greater discomfort.

Clara changed the world, and that's a fact, one of the most interesting stories in all filmdom. It was a matter - I think - of an extraordinary capacity to project a certain vitality which was easy to tag and sell.

Probably, there are three things that have to come together to create a social revolution:

-the `stuff' has got to be right. In this case it was a refreshing, sexy independence, a studied negation of coyness. Probably all her New York girlfriends were this way. That's society's part.

-There has to be a connection with society. Film already was inventing the new world, and I credit her with developing/exploiting the language that expressed the above. That's her part, and I think it had to with obsessive promiscuity and redheadedness as much as acting ability. She really isn't very pretty when she isn't posing her face, nor very alluring in terms of body shape.

-The third component is market forces. Somehow, the forces which bring things to the public must be satisfied - those that make it possible for us to receive it and that incentivize all the surrounding trades. Part of the equation is film as a product, but film is only a wrapper. The contents must be defined enough for them to know what they are selling and us to know what we are buying. The notion of `It' is vacuous, but it serves the purpose.

Which brings us to Ms Love. She's not the lead car in a train, like Clara was. She's one of the cars several thousand women back. What we needed was another redhead.

This documentary could have zeroed in on the promiscuity (whether exaggerated of not) as a key to what was being sold.

Or it could have focused in on Hollywood as a deliberate consumer of fresh energies, and her openness being both her success and doom. Or it could have dealt with her childhood sexual abuse and hereditary madness in a real way. All of these were touched on in a ginger, polite way. None was faced head on. None was dealt with as Calara would have.

Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 4: Has some interesting elements.
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