Bugs Bunny selling war bonds, Constance Bennett sharing her "Daily Beauty Rituals," James Dean expounding on safe driving, Shirley Temple pitching for the Red Cross and Bette Davis for the G.E. dishwasher. Not much of this is what most people have in mind as out-takes: those unusables spoiled by the star saying "God damn it" or "Jesus Christ" or something on those lines (though there are some of those here, too). Few would deny, anyway, that what we have here are Hollywood oddments. So much so, in fact, that they cry out for better identification: who? what? when? The viewer is left pretty much to flounder on his own, but he ought to be able to latch onto plenty of things to buoy him: Joan Crawford taking up the fight against children's cancer would be funny even without Mommie Dearest; and Hattie McDaniel accepting her Oscar is genuinely endearing, even though, to be so, she must go against the grain of the entire rest of the movie. No credits are given. (1983) — Duncan Shepherd
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