MovieChat Forums > Rebecca (1940) Discussion > Moments of greatness, but...

Moments of greatness, but...


First of all, this picture, the first of Hitch's projects in America, has a great foreboding mood, a fabulous sense of art direction (no wonder Welles was inspired by it for Xanadu in Citizen Kane), and Judith Anderson makes a creepy, delicious villianness. But I think overall this Best Picture of 1940 is over-rated and shows Hitch's discomfort under the strictures of David O. Selznick. For one, I never believed for a minute that Laurence Olivier ever had any deep feelings for Joan Fontaine. She seemed like a trophy wife married just for the purpose of being molded into a fixture of Manderley itself. Plus, the picture feels desperately cut in half, and not in a good way. Just as Gone with the Wind, Selznick's triumph from the year before, obviously appears to be made with at least 3 directors, Rebecca feels like someone else is at the controls the minute Olivier reveals his true feelings for his former wife. Then the previously ominous mood where Fontaine was practically engulfed by the mansion is dispensed with and the 'plot' takes over, with a different pace and altogether different feel. Hitch showed much greater control and consistent style while in Britain with such films as The Lady Vanishes and Sabotage, among others, not to mention brilliant dashes of black humour, something in which this studio-dominated picture is deeply lacking. Rebecca was a good way to get his feet wet in Hollywood, but Hitch would show much greater skill as an 'auteur' later on once he obtained greater control and got Dsvid O. out from behind his shoulder.

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I have heard there was a certain amount of friction between Hitchcock and Selznick, and cannot argue that projects often suffer when done by committee rather than one strong single visionary, but in this case I am glad Selznick was there and was passionate about it and kept Hitchcock from ruining the story.

I have heard that Hitchcock basically didn't want to do someone else's story, or at least not their way. He completely rewrote the story, and when Selznick saw it, he rejected it, saying that the original story that he (Selznick) liked, bought, and paid good money for, was the story they were going to produce. He felt so strongly about this that the film actually refers to itself as a 'picturization' (if memory serves correctly) of the celebrated novel.

I have never understood the logic of taking a story known and loved by millions, and changing it into a fundamentally different story. The excuse is usually given that it was necessary to butcher the story because film is a different medium. Baloney. Yes, film is a different medium, but this doesn't excuse the kinds of changes typically made, which don't save any time or have anything else to do with adapting to that medium. It is simply pride on the part of the writer, producer, director, or whoever. It is an attitude that says "I can write a better story than this or that renowned novelist", "I can improve this masterpiece", or simply "I want my fingerprints on this story".

I agree that the performances by Olivier and Fontaine seem somewhat stiff. I find the character of Favell, in contrast, to be far more credible and interesting, and brilliantly played by George Sanders. I do not know, but can only surmise that these top-notch professionals gave exactly the performances that the director wanted, otherwise they would have given something different.

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That's exactly how I felt. Loved the first half, the quiet and subtle desperation and alienation of the main character, the ominous tone. Then the screenwriter can't figure out how to resolve that particular conflict and voila, a midway shift into bad soap opera that completely invalidates all the drama leading up to it.

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"It was night. I could tell because it was getting dark."

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Precisely!

Perhaps the buildup in the first half is so well done that the second half can't possibly deliver on its promises.

If it weren't for Joan Fontaine, I wouldn't want to watch this movie again.

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The "fabulous sense of art direction" essentially sold me on the movie as a whole. The cinematography and the sets, as well as the lighting, are as good as any movie I've watched, and the actors are beautiful (except Mrs. Danvers).

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I didn't know this was Hitchcock's first American film.

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