Film Review
Alfred Hitchcock's extraordinarily busy and successful career in Hollywood began auspiciously
with this atmospheric, and at times viscerally chilling, psychological
drama, closely adapted from Daphne Du Maurier's well-known novel of the same title.
Hitchcock had only just directed another adaptation of a Du Maurier
novel -
Jamaica Inn -
in England, and it is interesting to compare the style of the two
films.
Rebecca clearly has the better production values, but it is also a more worthy film in
less tangible ways. Hitchcock's use of mood and suspense is much more
subtle, the characters far better developed, the emotions more keenly
felt. (Significantly, it sticks much more closely to the original plot.)
The film has many elements and themes that will come to
dominate much of the director's subsequent work - latent mental
disorder, transference (one individual assuming characteristics of
another) and, of course, Hitchcock's deep distrust (and fear) of
powerful women.
Hollywood boss David O. Selznick had high hopes when he signed
Hitchcock up for a seven year contract, expecting that their first
collaboration,
Rebecca, would
achieve the status of Selznick's other big production at the time,
Gone with the Wind
(1939). As it turned out, Hitchcock didn't particularly warm to Selznick and he made
just three films for him, preferring to be loaned out to the other
major Hollywood studios.
The great Laurence Olivier heads an impressive cast of entirely British
actors, which includes George Sanders as the thoroughly slimy Jack
Favell and Judith Anderson as the sinister Mrs Danvers, one of
Hitchcock's recurring matriarchal villains. As the film's unnamed
heroine, Joan Fontaine does an excellent job of conveying the anxiety
of a young innocent who finds herself enmeshed in a suspenseful,
emotionally fraught tale of murder, romance and intrigue.
Partly on account of Selznick's mass publicising of the film,
Rebecca proved to be a great
success and secured Hitchcock's reputation in Hollywood from the
outset. The film was nominated for ten Oscars and won two, for
the Best Picture (Hitchcock's only win in this category) and Best
Cinematography (Black and White). This is cited as the first
American film to use deep focus photography, of the kind that Orson
Welles later employed in
Citizen Kane
(1941) and which became one of the essential ingredients of classic
film noir. The high contrast cinematography and lavish
gothic sets are what give
Rebecca its
haunting dreamlike quality and make it one of Hitchcock's most
compelling and disturbing films.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
Mr. & Mrs. Smith (1941)
Film Synopsis
Whilst in Monte Carlo, working as a paid companion to a wealthy
American woman, a young English girl falls under the spell of an
aristocratic widower, Maximilian de Winter. After a whirlwind
romance, de Winter marries the girl and takes her back to his vast
Cornish estate, Manderley. There, the new Mrs de Winter receives
a lukewarm reception from the servants, particularly the aloof Mrs
Danvers. The latter finds her a poor substitute for de Winter's
first wife, who died a year ago in mysterious circumstances...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.