Joan Fontaine Movies

Joan Fontaine in 1940's Rebecca
Joan Fontaine in 1940’s Rebecca

Want to know the best Joan Fontaine movies?  How about the worst Joan Fontaine movies?  Curious about Joan Fontaine box office grosses or which Joan Fontaine movie picked up the most Oscar® nominations? Need to know which Joan Fontaine movie got the best reviews from critics and audiences? Well you have come to the right place….because we have all of that information.

Joan Fontaine (1917-2013)  was a British-American Oscar® winning actress.  Fontaine is probably best remembered for being a very frightened lady in back to back Alfred Hitchcock movies: 1940’s Rebecca and 1941’s SuspicionHer IMDb page shows 71 acting credits from 1935-1994. This page will rank 39 Joan Fontaine movies from Best to Worst in six different sortable columns of information. Television shows, uncredited roles and 5 of her very early movies  were not included in the rankings.  To do well in our overall rankings a movie has to do well at the box office, get good reviews by critics, be liked by audiences and get some award recognition.

Drivel part of the page:  After not writing about an actress for 18 straight movie pages…this Joan Fontaine marks the second straight actress we have written about.  This Fontaine page comes from a request by Søren and FloraThe main sources used when it comes to finding the box office information came from end of the year Variety magazines, MGM ledgers, RKO ledgers and the books Joan Fontaine A Bio-Bibliograpy and No Bed Of Roses: An Autobiography (by Fontaine).

Joan Fontaine and Cary Grant in 1941's Suspicion
Joan Fontaine and Cary Grant in 1941’s Suspicion

Joan Fontaine Movies Can Be Ranked 6 Ways In This Table

The really cool thing about this table is that it is “user-sortable”. Rank the movies anyway you want.

  • Sort Joan Fontaine movies by co-stars of her movies
  • Sort Joan Fontaine movies by adjusted domestic box office grosses using current movie ticket cost (in millions)
  • Sort Joan Fontaine movies by yearly domestic box office rank
  • Sort Joan Fontaine movies by how they were received by critics and audiences.  60% rating or higher should indicate a good movie.
  • Sort by how many Oscar® nominations and how many Oscar® wins each Joan Fontaine movie received.
  • Sort Joan Fontaine movies by Ultimate Movie Ranking (UMR) Score.  UMR Score puts box office, reviews and awards into a mathematical equation and gives each movie a score.
 

Stats and Possibly Interesting Things From The Above Joan Fontaine Table

  1. Seventeen Joan Fontaine movie crossed the magical $100 million domestic gross mark.  That is a percentage of 43.59% of her movies listed. Frenchman’s Creek (1944) was her biggest box office hit.
  2. An average Joan Fontaine movie grosses $107.20 million in adjusted box office gross.
  3. Using RottenTomatoes.com’s 60% fresh meter.  29 of Joan Fontaine’s movies are rated as good movies…or 74.35% of her movies.  Rebecca (1940) is her highest rated movie while Flight to Tangier (1953) is her lowest rated movie.
  4. Thirteen Joan Fontaine movies received at least one Oscar® nomination in any category…..or 33.33% of her movies.
  5. Five Joan Fontaine movies won at least one Oscar® in any category…..or 12.82% of her movies.
  6. An average Ultimate Movie Ranking (UMR) Score is 39.86.  22 Joan Fontaine movie scored higher that average….or 37.28% of her movies. Rebecca (1940) got the the highest UMR Score while In Decameron Nights (1953) got the lowest UMR Score.
Joan Fontaine in 1948's Letter From An Unknown Woman ....got her great reviews but died at the box office
Joan Fontaine in 1948’s Letter From An Unknown Woman ….got her great reviews but died at the box office

Possibly Interesting Facts About Joan Fontaine

1.  Joan de Beauvoir de Havilland was born  in Tokyo, Japan in 1917 to English parents.  She took her stage name from her step-father, George Fontaine.

2.  Joan Fontaine older sister is two time Best Actress Oscar® winner, Olivia de Havilland.  Joan and Olivia are the first sisters to win Oscars® and the first ones to be Oscar®-nominated in the same year.Apparently Joan and Olivia had a lifelong feud.  You can read more about that here.

3.  Joan Fontaine and Olivia de Havilland never worked together….but they came close once.  They briefly thought about starring in a little movie called A Streetcar Named Desire (1951).  Olivia was going to play the Vivien Leigh role and Joan was going to play the Kim Hunter roe.

4.  Joan Fontaine was nominated for 3 Oscars®.  Her first nomination was for 1940’s Rebecca, 2nd nomination and only win was for 1941’s Suspicion, and her third nomination was for 1943’s The Constant Nymph.  Fontaine never received a Golden Globe® nomination.

5. Joan Fontaine had lots of interests away from Hollywood.  She was a licensed pilot, champion balloonist, expert horse rider, prize-winning tuna fisherman, a hole-in-one golfer, Cordon Bleu chef and licensed interior decorator.

6. Joan Fontaine was the last surviving cast member of George Cukor’s The Women (1939) until she passed away in December 2013.  The Women had over 130 roles in this movie, all played by women.

7.  Joan Fontaine was married four times and had one child….Debbie Dozier.

8.  Joan Fontaine was one of Fred Astaire’s many dance partners.  She however thought her movie with Astaire, A Damsel in Distress (1937) set her career back four years. At the premiere, a woman sitting behind her loudly exclaimed, “Isn’t she awful!” during Fontaine’s onscreen attempt at dancing.

9.  Joel Hirschhorn’s Rating The Movie Stars book (the inspiration for this website) rated every single Joan Fontaine performance on a 1 to 4 star basis.  These 8 Fontaine movies were deemed her very best performances.  Rebecca (1940), Suspicion (1941), The Constant Nymph (1943), The Affairs of Susan (1945), Letter From An Unknown Woman (1948), Something To Live For (1952), Until They Sail (1957) and Tender Is The Night (1962)

10. Check out Joan Fontaine‘s career compared to current and classic actors.  Most 100 Million Dollar Movies of All-Time.

The FIVE Fontaine movies that escaped us….1937’s A Million To One, 1937 The Man Who Found Himself, 1938’s Maid’s Night Out, 1938’s Blond Cheat and 1938’s The Duke of West Point.  Will keep searching for those box office numbers…but not thinking they will ever be found.

Want more stats? Coming right up…15 Joan Fontaine Adjusted Worldwide Box Office Grosses

  1. Born To Be Bad (1950) $71.70 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  2. Certain Smile, A (1958) $67.40 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  3. Constant Nymph, The (1943) $282.50 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  4. Damsel in Distress, A (1937) $190.00 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  5. From This Day Forward (1946) $152.10 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  6. Gunga Din (1939) $510.30 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  7. Ivanhoe (1952) $483.40 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  8. No More Ladies (1935) $163.10 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  9. Quality Street (1937) $42.60 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  10. Serenade (1956) $120.70 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  11. Sky Giant (1938) $65.20 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  12. Suspicion (1941) $244.40 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  13. Tender Is The Night (1962) $76.70 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  14. Until They Sail (1957) $61.00 million in adjusted worldwide box office
  15. Women, The (1939) $282.60 million in adjusted worldwide box office

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42 thoughts on “Joan Fontaine Movies

  1. Nicely done here on the “other” Joan, interesting details about her interests and hobbies. Think her LETTER FROM AN UNKNOWN WOMAN as good as REBECCA.

    1. Hey John. Thanks for sharing your thoughts on the “other” Joan. Glad you enjoyed reading our Possibly Interesting Facts. I will have to check out Letter From An Unknown Woman….topping Rebecca is a great shout out.

  2. Been a avid follower of Joan Fontaine’s film career for nearly 35 years…I can honestly say that she should have won the Oscar for Rebecca, also I believe she should have earned nominations for Jane Eyre and Letter from an Unknown Woman, winning for the latter……She was one of the brightest and biggest stars of the forties.
    By 1944 she even eclipsed her sister in popularity….By 1947-48, she was Universal’s biggest star.

    1. Hey Chris. Sorry for the massive massive delay in commenting back. Not sure how this one got by me…sometimes it takes a few days…but not normally almost 3 years. Great comment on Joan. I will have to watch Letter From An Unknown Woman…a movie that seems to have universal love. Good points about how high her star was in the 1940s. Good stuff.

  3. 1 When I first started paying attention to movies in the 1950s and 1960s Joan Fontaine was past her top star days and was normally supporting the likes of Liz and Robert Taylor in Ivanhoe, Mario Lanza in Serenade and Jennifer Jones in Tender is the Night or else she was in B movies like The Bigamist and Flight to Tangier. Therefore whilst I was always aware of Rebecca it was not until I was ‘educated’ by a combination of your stats and Steve’s posters that it fully registered with me how important a star Joan was in the 1940s as the lead female in hits like Suspicion, Frenchman’s Creek, The Constant Nymph, Jane Eyre, The Affairs of Susan You gotta Stay Happy and Blood on my Hands [aka Kiss the Blood off My Hands] the last two of which which she was billed above even James Stewart. and Burt Lancaster respively.

    2 Accordingly she clearly deserves this page and its update. I loved the little black and white miniature stills especially the one of Joan in the stylish hat. As usual the WW grosses got my close attention and for nostalgic reasons I was particularly interested in those for A Certain Smile and Serenade which was one of Mario Lanza’s handful of films. The WW gross for Gunga Din was large for those days but Wikipedia whilst acknowledging its massive popularity says that that film cost so much to produce that it actually lost money, so sorry Cary Grant fans ! Anyway the overall foreign ratio of the 15 WW grosses was better than usual being 40 % of total instead of the normal 35%. .

    1. Hey Bob.
      1. Glad Steve and I were able to help you see the glory of Joan Fontaine. But..you are correct…by the time the 1950s and 1960s her glory days were well behind her.
      2. I am sure if I had a graph on her career…the curse of 39 got her….as she only had one $100 million hit after she turned 40….and you could argue she made that movie when she was still 39.
      3. Glad you like the photo we picked.
      4. Lately I have been trying to make sure I include all of the worldwide grosses I have…when I do the updates….so good to know you are enjoying them….still wish I could get them to fit better in the table…..one day….one day. 🙂

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