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  1. www.imdb.com › title › tt0032976Rebecca (1940) - IMDb

    Rebecca: Directed by Alfred Hitchcock. With Laurence Olivier, Joan Fontaine, George Sanders, Judith Anderson. A self-conscious woman juggles adjusting to her new role as an aristocrat's wife and avoiding being intimidated by his first wife's spectral presence.

  2. Oct 16, 2020 · Rebecca. “We can never go back again, that much is certain. The past is still close to us. The things we have tried to forget and put behind us would stir again, and that sense of fear, of furtive unrest, struggling at length to blind unreasoning panic—now mercifully stilled, thank God—might in some manner unforeseen become a living ...

  3. A young newlywed arrives at her husband's imposing family estate on a windswept English coast and finds herself battling the shadow of his first wife, Rebecca, whose legacy lives on in the house long after her death. After a whirlwind romance in Monte Carlo with handsome widower Maxim de Winter (Armie Hammer), a newly married young woman (Lily ...

  4. Oct 21, 2020 · Rebecca. Watch Rebecca with a subscription on Netflix. Ben Wheatley's Rebecca remake is ravishing to behold, but it never quite gets to the heart of the classic source material -- or truly ...

    • (234)
    • Drama, Romance, Mystery & Thriller
    • PG-13
  5. Oct 22, 2020 · First off, the setting is different—in the novel, Max tells the story back at the house. Here, the second Mrs. de Winter goes to find him drinking in Rebecca's boathouse. In this adaptation ...

  6. www.rottentomatoes.com › m › 1017293-rebeccaRebecca | Rotten Tomatoes

    Rebecca. Hitchcock's first American film (and his only Best Picture winner), Rebecca is a masterpiece of haunting atmosphere, Gothic thrills, and gripping suspense. Story of a young woman who ...

    • (107)
    • Mystery & Thriller
  7. Oct 16, 2020 · Netflix’s Rebecca is based on the 1938’s novel of the same name written by Daphne du Maurier, but it’s not its first cinematic adaptation, which leads me to the following shameful statement: I’ve never seen the famous Alfred Hitchcock’s version of this story (nor have I read the novel, but I firmly defend that this doesn’t matter).

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