7 Chilling Movies About The Dark Side Of Fame

Here are eight movies that will make you feel just a tiny bit bad for famous people (but not too bad). 

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Sunset Boulevard / Paramount Pictures

Here are eight movies that will make you feel just a tiny bit bad for famous people (but not too bad). 

Halloween season may be behind us, but the chills don’t have to end right away. One of the year’s biggest horror hits, Smile 2, isn’t just scaring viewers; it’s also excoriating the music industry. As the film’s protagonist, Skye Riley, attempts to fight off her supernatural illness, she also battles the extreme pressure of being a pop star. Whether her trusted inner circle realizes it or not, they often push her to her limit in an attempt to profit off of her fame. Such is the double-edged sword of stardom, says Smile 2, though with a bit more flair than standard dramas about fame. That said, here are eight more movies that will make you feel just a tiny bit bad for famous people (but not too bad). 

A Star is Born (2018)

Why We Should Stop Praising 'A Star is Born'
Warner Bros.

Hollywood executives love this movie so much that they’ve remade it four times. Indeed, there has been one A Star is Born movie for almost every new generation of the last century. In fact, there might even be another one in twenty years starring North West and the great great grandson of Marlon Brando. On the other hand, there’s a reason that A Star is Born is so enduring. Whether it’s a rock musical, a pop musical, or a streamlined fable about actors, it always turns a spotlight on the pitfalls of fame. Behind the glossy mansion and glittering makeup is a real human being, haunted by their own success.

Tár (2022)

Universal Pictures

If you can get past this movie’s suggestion that a classical music conductor could ever achieve the same heights of fame as, say, Ariana Grande, then you can start to enjoy it. But actually: There is a whole plot point about Lydia Tár getting canceled that begs the question, “Was she ever subscribed?” In any case, Tár manages to explore how fame and power can corrupt even the most sympathetic souls. Hannah Montana: The Movie, this is not. 

Ingrid Goes West (2017)

Neon

Influencers may not be the world-famous skinny legends they think they are, but at least some people might recognize them in public. Now, those people might not remember what the influencers’ names are, or which defective products they were promoting on TikTok, but they’ll at least go, “Huh, I know them from somewhere.” That said, there’s always at least one person who is unconditionally in love with the influencer they’re following – and in Ingrid Goes West, that person is Ingrid, as she goes west. In stalking her favorite influencer, Taylor Sloane (Elizabeth Olsen), Ingrid learns that influencers’ lives aren’t all they’re cracked up to be. Indeed, they’re total, tragic fabrications.

Blonde (2022)

Netflix

Marilyn, we didn’t deserve you. This borderline exploitative film about Marilyn Monroe will make you feel anew for a woman whom you’ve no doubt already felt for. Hollywood just simply can’t get enough of spinning tragedy out of this woman’s life. Still, Blonde takes things one step further thanks to the dazzling central performance of Ana de Armas as the tortured Norma Jean. 

All About Eve (1950)

20th Century Fox

Though set in the theater world, All About Eve feels more like what an episode of Real Housewives would feel like if it were directed by Martin Scorcese. You see, All About Eve is about a famous woman in 1950, and famous women were never allowed to be happy. Specifically, the movie chronicles the trials and tribulations of being an aging star in an industry that disrespects older women even to this day. It’s no wonder this movie snagged 14 Oscar nominations and won Best Picture. Hollywood loves exposing its own corruption, as long as it forgives itself immediately afterwards.

Judy 

20th Century Fox

Judy Garland is the ultimate victim of Hollywood – abused from a young age, misunderstood in young adulthood, and viciously rejected by those sworn to protect her. Judy pulls away each of those layers, and Renée Zellweger’s performance reveals the pain throbbing just behind Judy’s daily interactions. 

Sunset Boulevard (1950)

Paramount Pictures

Sunset Boulevard isn’t just a portrait of the iconically deluded Norma Desmond. It’s also a condemnation of the enablers, hangers-on, and power-hungry vampires around her. As Desmond leaves Hollywood ever more behind in the rear-view mirror, she must also contend with misogyny and ageism. This Hollywood does not slay.


About the author

Evan E. Lambert

Evan E. Lambert is a journalist, travel writer, and short fiction writer with bylines at Business Insider, BuzzFeed, Going, Mic, The Discoverer, Queerty, and many more. He splits his time between the U.S. and Peru and speaks fluent Spanglish.