Three Faces of Eve Dissociative Identity Disorder Peer Reviewed

1957 film past Nunnally Johnson

The Iii Faces of Eve
The Three Faces of Eve - 1957 - poster.png

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Nunnally Johnson
Screenplay by Nunnally Johnson
Based on The Three Faces of Eve: A Case of Multiple Personality
past Corbett H. Thigpen
Hervey Chiliad. Cleckley
Produced by Nunnally Johnson
Starring Joanne Woodward
David Wayne
Lee J. Cobb
Narrated by Alistair Cooke
Cinematography Stanley Cortez
Edited past Marjorie Fowler
Music by Robert Emmett Dolan
Distributed past 20th Century Fox

Release dates

  • September eighteen, 1957 (1957-09-18) (Augusta, Georgia)[i]

Running time

91 minutes
Country United states
Language English
Budget $965,000[2]
Box office $ane.4 1000000 (US rentals)[iii]

The Three Faces of Eve is a 1957 American mystery drama film presented in CinemaScope, based on the book of the same proper name almost the life of Chris Costner Sizemore, which was written by psychiatrists Corbett H. Thigpen and Hervey 1000. Cleckley, who too helped write the screenplay.[4] [5] Sizemore, besides known equally Eve White, was a woman they suggested might have dissociative identity disorder (then known as multiple personality disorder).[iv] [5] [6] Sizemore'southward identity was concealed in interviews virtually this film and was not revealed to the public until 1977. The film was directed by Nunnally Johnson.[7]

Joanne Woodward won the Academy Award for Best Actress, making her the first actress to win an Oscar for portraying three personalities (Eve White, Eve Blackness, and Jane). The Three Faces of Eve besides became the first film since 1936 to win the Best Actress award without getting nominated in another category after Bette Davis won for Dangerous (1935).[8]

Plot [edit]

In 1951, Eve White is a timid, self-effacing married woman and mother who has astringent and blinding headaches and occasional blackouts. Eve eventually goes to run across psychiatrist Dr. Luther, and while having a conversation, a "new personality", the wild, fun-loving Eve Black, emerges. Eve Black knows everything about Eve White, but Eve White is unaware of Eve Black.

Eve White is sent to a hospital for observation after Eve Black is institute strangling Eve White'southward daughter, Bonnie. When Eve White is released, her husband Ralph finds a task in some other state and leaves her in a boarding business firm, while Bonnie stays with Eve'due south parents. When Ralph returns, he tells her that he doesn't believe she has multiple personalities and tries to have her to Jacksonville, Florida, with him but she feels she isn't well enough to leave, and, afraid Eve Black will try to damage Bonnie again, refuses to go. Eve Blackness confronts Ralph at his motel, where he realizes Eve Black is existent, simply allows her to convince him to have her to Jacksonville. When Eve Black goes out dancing with some other homo, Ralph slaps her when she returns and ends upwards divorcing Eve White.

Dr. Luther considers both Eve White and Eve Blackness to be incomplete and inadequate personalities. The flick depicts Dr. Luther'south attempts to understand and bargain with these two faces of Eve. Under hypnosis at one session, a third personality emerges, the relatively stable Jane. Dr. Luther somewhen prompts her to call up a traumatic event in Eve's childhood. Her grandmother had died when she was vi, and co-ordinate to family custom, relatives were supposed to buss the dead person at the viewing, making it easier for them to let become. While Eve screams, her mother forces her to kiss the corpse. Apparently, Eve'south terror led to the creation of different personalities.

After discovering the trauma, Jane remembers her entire past. When Dr. Luther asks to speak with Eve White and Eve Black, Jane says they are gone. Jane marries a human being named Earl whom she met when she was Jane and reunites with her daughter Bonnie.

Cast [edit]

  • Joanne Woodward equally Eve White / Eve Black / Jane
    • Mimi Gibson as Eve - Historic period 8
  • David Wayne every bit Ralph White
  • Lee J. Cobb equally Physician Curtis Luther
  • Edwin Jerome as Doctor Francis Day
  • Alena Murray every bit Secretary
  • Nancy Kulp as Mrs. Black
  • Douglas Spencer equally Mr. Black
  • Terry Ann Ross as Bonnie White
  • Ken Scott equally Earl
  • Alistair Cooke as the narrator of the film

Original book [edit]

The book by Thigpen and Cleckley was rushed into publication, and the moving picture rights were immediately sold to managing director Nunnally Johnson in 1957, plain to capitalize on public interest in multiple personalities post-obit the publication of Shirley Jackson's 1954 novel The Bird's Nest, [9] which was besides made into a motion picture in 1957 titled Lizzie.

The real Eve [edit]

Chris Costner Sizemore has written at some length about her experiences as the real "Eve". In her 1958 volume The Final Face of Eve, she used the pseudonym Evelyn Lancaster. In her 1977 book I'm Eve, she revealed her true identity. She besides wrote a follow-up book, A Mind of My Own (1989).

Reception [edit]

Critics uniformly praised Joanne Woodward's performance, but opinions of other aspects of the film were more mixed. Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote that Woodward played her part "with superlative flexibility and emotional power", but that "when you come right downwardly to it, this is simply a melodramatic exercise—an exhibition of psychiatric hocus-pocus, without whatever indication of how or why. It makes for a adequately fetching mystery, although information technology is also verbose and also long."[x] Multifariousness wrote that the picture show was "oftentimes an intriguing and provocative movement pic" and that Woodward "fulfills her assignment excellently", only believed that the comedy elements "will undoubtedly confuse many viewers who won't quite be sure what emotions are suitable".[xi] Harrison's Reports called the film "a fascinating adult drama" and said that Woodward's operation was "of University Award caliber".[12] John McCarten of The New Yorker wrote that Woodward "does well in a role that is inevitably full of confusion", simply the motion-picture show "seems rather fantastic when it depicts the heroine going through her mental gyrations at top speed".[13] The Monthly Film Bulletin agreed, writing that Woodward "manages the triple part cleverly", just establish that the depiction of psychiatric treatment "all looks a good deal also easy, and in spite of Alistair Cooke'due south introductory assurances of authenticity 1 is always conscious of being given the case history in capsule form".[14]

The motion-picture show holds a score of 93% on the review-aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes based on 15 reviews.[15]

Accolades [edit]

Joanne Woodward won the University Laurels for Best Actress, and later went on to play Dr. Cornelia Wilbur in the film Sybil (1976). It was a reversal of roles for Woodward, who played the psychiatrist who diagnosed Sybil Dorsett (played past Emerge Field, who subsequently won an Primetime Emmy Honour for her portrayal) with multiple personality disorder and subsequently led her through handling.

See also [edit]

  • Listing of mental disorders in moving picture
  • Multiple Personality: Reality and Illusion – Fact-based docu-drama that delves into the lives of four women with multiple personality disorder including the life of Sizemore
  • Chris Costner Sizemore, the real-life woman on whom Eve is based.

References [edit]

  1. ^ "To Attend 'Eve' Bow". Motility Flick Daily: three. September ten, 1957. Retrieved June 28, 2018.
  2. ^ Solomon, Aubrey. Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History (The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series). Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1989. ISBN 978-0-8108-4244-1. p251
  3. ^ "Top Grosses of 1957", Variety, 8 January 1958: 30
  4. ^ a b Thigpen, Corbett H.; Cleckley, Hervey G. (1992). The Three Faces of Eve (Revised ed.). New York Metropolis: McGraw-Loma Educational activity. ISBN978-0911238518. [Translated into 27 languages]
  5. ^ a b Bliss 1986, p. 263.
  6. ^ Smith 2000, p. 244.
  7. ^ "The 3 Faces of Eve". Turner Archetype Movies. Atlanta: Turner Broadcasting System (Time Warner). Retrieved September 5, 2016.
  8. ^ "Unsafe". Retrieved July 4, 2019 – via www.IMDb.com.
  9. ^ Jackson, Shirley (1954). The Bird'southward Nest. New York: Farrar, Straus and Immature. OCLC 757989.
  10. ^ Crowther, Bosley (September 27, 1957). "Screen: 'iii Faces of Eve'". The New York Times: 16.
  11. ^ "The Three Faces of Eve". Variety: 6. August 21, 1957.
  12. ^ "'The Three Faces of Eve' with Joanne Woodward, Lee J. Cobb an David Wayne". Harrison'due south Reports: 135. August 24, 1957.
  13. ^ McCarten, John (October five, 1957). "The Current Cinema". The New Yorker: 145–146.
  14. ^ "The Three Faces of Eve". The Monthly Film Message. 24 (286): 137. November 1957.
  15. ^ "The Iii Faces of Eve". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved June 28, 2018.

Sources [edit]

  • Bliss, Eugene L. (1986). Multiple Personality, Allied Disorders and Hypnosis (1st ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Printing. p. 263. ISBN978-0195036589.
  • Smith, Susy (2000). ESP and Hypnosis. Bloomington, Indiana: iUniverse. p. 244. ISBN978-1583488478.

External links [edit]

  • The Iii Faces of Eve at IMDb
  • The Iii Faces of Eve at AllMovie
  • The Iii Faces of Eve at the TCM Movie Database
  • The 3 Faces of Eve at the American Motion picture Institute Itemize

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Three_Faces_of_Eve

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