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Current status - Released
Total runtime - 130 mins.
Release date - 23-03-1940
Release year - 1940
Genres - Drama, Mystery, Romance, Thriller
Overall ratings and scores for Rebecca:
Happiness Score - 7.9/10, World Popularity Score - 12.31/100, IMDB Score - 8.1, Metascore - 86, Internet Movie Database - 8.1/10, Rotten Tomatoes - 100%, Metacritic - 86/100, .
Rebecca movie has Total Global Votes - 1190, Total IMD Votes - 131,845
Rebecca Movie Introduction: Movie Rebecca, release year 1940 is written by Daphne Du Maurier, Robert E. Sherwood, Joan Harrison and directed by Alfred Hitchcock. The leading star-cast in this movie are Laurence Olivier, Joan Fontaine, George Sanders along with the other stars and crew members.
Trailers, Clips, Featurettes and Behind the Scenes
Movie overview and plot by Anagha Shashank
Movie in-short: 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.
Movie story-line: Story of a young woman who marries a fascinating widower only to find out that she must live in the shadow of his former wife, Rebecca, who died mysteriously several years earlier. The young wife must come to grips with the terrible secret of her handsome, cold husband, Max De Winter. She must also deal with the jealous, obsessed Mrs. Danvers, the housekeeper, who will not accept her as the mistress of the house.
Movie synopsis: A shy lady's companion, staying in Monte Carlo with her stuffy employer, meets the wealthy Maxim de Winter (Sir Laurence Olivier). She and Max fall in love, marry, and return to Manderley, his large country estate in Cornwall. Max is still troubled by the death of his first wife, Rebecca, in a boating accident the year before. The second Mrs. de Winter (Joan Fontaine) clashes with the housekeeper, Mrs. Danvers (Dame Judith Anderson), and discovers that Rebecca still has a strange hold on everyone at Manderley.
Highlights - Rebecca (1940)
Total budget - $1,288,000.00
Total revenue - $6,000,000.00
Produced by - Selznick International PicturesUnited Artists
Produced in - United States of America
Available languages - English (English), French (Français),
Homepage URL -
Awards won / Nominations - Won 2 Oscars. 7 wins & 10 nominations total
Certificate(s) - GR : 13 GB : PG GB : PG AR : e 12 MX : U NL : 16 DE : 16 ES : PG AU : NR AU : NR AU : NR
Lead Actors, Writer(s), Director(s) of Rebecca (1940)
Lead Actors - Laurence Olivier, Joan Fontaine, George Sanders
Writer(s) - Daphne Du Maurier, Robert E. Sherwood, Joan Harrison
Director(s) - Alfred Hitchcock
Frequently Asked Questions(FAQ) about Rebecca (1940)
What is the release date of Rebecca (1940)?
Release date of Rebecca (1940) is 23-03-1940.
What is the total runtime of Rebecca (1940) in minutes?
Total runtime of Rebecca (1940) in minutes is 130 min.
What is the budget consumed to produce Rebecca (1940) movie?
The budget consumed to produce Rebecca (1940) movie is around $1,288,000.00.
How much revenue is expected from movie Rebecca (1940)?
Expected revenue from movie movie Rebecca (1940) is around $6,000,000.00.
What is the pupularity of Rebecca (1940)?
Worldwide pupularity of Rebecca (1940) movie is 12.31%.
What is the name of the production company of film Rebecca (1940)?
Production company of film Rebecca (1940) is/are Selznick International Pictures, United Artists, .
Which country the film Rebecca (1940) is produced in?
Film production country for the film Rebecca (1940) is United States of America, .
Which language the film Rebecca (1940) is produced in?
Film Rebecca (1940) is produced in English (English), French (Français), language(s).
Which Genre the film Rebecca (1940) belongs to?
Movie Rebecca (1940) is categorized under Drama, Mystery, Romance genre(s).
Who are the lead actors of the film Rebecca (1940)?
Lead actors of the film Rebecca (1940) are Laurence Olivier, Joan Fontaine, George Sanders.
Who is the writer of the film Rebecca (1940)?
The writer(s) of the film Rebecca (1940) is/are Daphne Du Maurier, Robert E. Sherwood, Joan Harrison.
Who is the director of the film Rebecca (1940)?
The director(s) of the film Rebecca (1940) is/are Alfred Hitchcock.
Which awards, nominations and recognitions are won by Rebecca (1940) movie?
Movie Rebecca (1940) has Won 2 Oscars. 7 wins & 10 nominations total awards and nomination in it's profile.
What is the story of Rebecca (1940) in-short?
Short plot of movie Rebecca (1940): 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..
What is the full story of Rebecca (1940) movie?
Full plot of movie Rebecca (1940): A shy lady's companion, staying in Monte Carlo with her stuffy employer, meets the wealthy Maxim de Winter (Sir Laurence Olivier). She and Max fall in love, marry, and return to Manderley, his large country estate in Cornwall. Max is still troubled by the death of his first wife, Rebecca, in a boating accident the year before. The second Mrs. de Winter (Joan Fontaine) clashes with the housekeeper, Mrs. Danvers (Dame Judith Anderson), and discovers that Rebecca still has a strange hold on everyone at Manderley..
Where to find full details of Rebecca (1940) movie?
You can find the full details of movie Rebecca (1940) at https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0032976
Where to stream or watch movie Rebecca (1940) online?
You can stream or watch online movie Rebecca (1940) on QubitTV, NetMovies, Looke, Oldflix, Filmin, Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Video, U-NEXT, Watcha, More TV, .
List of full Starcast and crew members of Rebecca (1940)
Full Starcast:
Name: Laurence Olivier
Character: 'Maxim' de Winter
Name: Joan Fontaine
Character: Mrs. de Winter (2nd)
Name: George Sanders
Character: Jack Favell
Name: Judith Anderson
Character: Mrs. Danvers
Name: Nigel Bruce
Character: Major Giles Lacy
Name: Reginald Denny
Character: Frank Crawley
Name: C. Aubrey Smith
Character: Colonel Julyan
Name: Gladys Cooper
Character: Beatrice Lacy
Name: Florence Bates
Character: Edythe Van Hopper
Name: Melville Cooper
Character: Coroner
Name: Leo G. Carroll
Character: Dr. Baker
Name: Leonard Carey
Character: Ben
Name: Lumsden Hare
Character: Tabbs
Name: Edward Fielding
Character: Frith
Name: Philip Winter
Character: Robert
Name: Forrester Harvey
Character: Chalcroft
Name: Billy Bevan
Character: Policeman (uncredited)
Name: Gino Corrado
Character: Manager of Princesse Hotel (uncredited)
Name: Egon Brecher
Character: Hotel Desk Clerk (uncredited)
Name: Alfred Hitchcock
Character: Man Outside Phone Booth (uncredited)
Name: Leyland Hodgson
Character: Mullen (uncredited)
Name: Alphonse Martell
Character: Hotel Headwaiter (uncredited)
Name: William H. O'Brien
Character: Hotel Waiter (uncredited)
Name: Ronald R. Rondell
Character: Hotel Dining Room Guest (uncredited)
Name: Phyllis Woodward
Character: Little Girl (uncredited)
Crew Members:
Name: Irving Rosenberg
Department: Camera
Job/Role: Camera Operator
Name: Alfred Hitchcock
Department: Directing
Job/Role: Director
Name: Daphne du Maurier
Department: Writing
Job/Role: Novel
Name: Philip MacDonald
Department: Writing
Job/Role: Adaptation
Name: David O. Selznick
Department: Production
Job/Role: Producer
Name: Franz Waxman
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Original Music Composer
Name: Franz Waxman
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Orchestrator
Name: W. Donn Hayes
Department: Editing
Job/Role: Editor
Name: George Barnes
Department: Camera
Job/Role: Director of Photography
Name: Jack Cosgrove
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Special Effects
Name: Lyle R. Wheeler
Department: Art
Job/Role: Art Direction
Name: Arthur Johns
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Sound Designer
Name: Jack Noyes
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Sound Designer
Name: Robert E. Sherwood
Department: Writing
Job/Role: Screenplay
Name: Joseph B. Platt
Department: Art
Job/Role: Interior Designer
Name: Leonid Raab
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Orchestrator
Name: Hugo Friedhofer
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Orchestrator
Name: Lloyd Knechtel
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Second Unit Cinematographer
Name: Archie Stout
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Second Unit Cinematographer
Name: Vincent J. Farrar
Department: Camera
Job/Role: Camera Operator
Name: Arthur E. Arling
Department: Camera
Job/Role: Camera Operator
Name: Hans Sommer
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Music
Name: Joan Harrison
Department: Writing
Job/Role: Screenplay
Name: Eric Stacey
Department: Directing
Job/Role: Assistant Director
Name: Louis Forbes
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Music
Name: D. Ross Lederman
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Second Unit
Name: Ellis W. Carter
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Second Unit Cinematographer
Name: Hal C. Kern
Department: Editing
Job/Role: Supervising Film Editor
Name: Russell Birdwell
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Unit Publicist
Name: Michael Hogan
Department: Writing
Job/Role: Adaptation
Name: Joseph Nussbaum
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Music
Name: Robert Russell Bennett
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Music
Name: Edmond F. Bernoudy
Department: Directing
Job/Role: Assistant Director
Name: Monte Westmore
Department: Costume & Make-Up
Job/Role: Makeup Artist
Name: Paul Marquardt
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Orchestrator
Name: Adele Cannon
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Script
Name: Albert Simpson
Department: Visual Effects
Job/Role: Matte Painter
Reviews Section
A good movie and interesting plot but the characters are a little bit exaggerated and the outcome is quite expectable.
A poor "lady's companion", so self-effacing that we are never given her name (Joan Fontaine), suddenly finds her life changed when a moody widower, Maxim de Winter (Laurence Olivier), proposes to marry her and take her to his splendid estate of Manderley. It seems like a fairy-tale turned true, but it is not. On reaching Manderley, the new Mrs. de Winter (still unnamed) finds herself out of place, as Maxim seems to drift away and the hostile housekeeper Mrs. Danvers (Judith Anderson) repeatedly tells her that she will never live up to the standard set by Maxim's first wife Rebecca. What was Rebecca really like? The perfect English lady, or a hypocrite who dazzled the people around her? Where do Maxim's affections really lie? The questions not only create a great movie mystery, but a portrait of an unequal marriage between an arrogant aristocrat and a neurotically dependent young wife.
Absolutely perfect Gothic Thriller that has many imitators but few of equal quality. With "Rebecca" about to hit the Broadway stage (as a musical!), I thought it was time to write my review of perhaps my favorite Hitchcock film. I recall the first time I saw this on TV almost 30 years ago on the late show, I had set my VCR to tape it, but woke up to start watching a bit of it, and stayed up all night to watch it all. That's how good a film it is. Daphne Du Maurier's tale of a shy companion who shocks her employer by winning the most desired wealthy widow in England is gripping, suspenseful, and filled with innuendo. Joan Fontaine never gave a more lovely performance as the awkward bride who leaves her hysterically selfish employer (Florence Bates) to marry the brooding Maxim De Winter (Laurence Olivier) and finds animosity from the darkly dressed Mrs. Danver (Judith Anderson) who resents her intrusion because of her devotion to Maxim's late wife, Rebecca. The mystery of how Rebecca died and what kind of woman she really was is explored, and with the intrusion of scoundrel George Sanders and some well-meaning advice from Maxim's toothy sister (Gladys Cooper), the new Mrs. De Winter (her first name is never revealed) finds out more than she bargained for. If you thought Olivier's Heathcliff in "Wuthering Heights" was dark and somewhat depressing, wait until you meet his more civilized Maxim. Joan Fontaine's bride is as far from Merle Oberon's "wild and sweet" Cathy as you can find, but as far as Gothic tales of brooding men and their lost souls go, the two movies make a perfect double feature. Samuel Goldwyn and David Selznick were Hollywood's most famous independent producers, so sometimes their careers are compared. They share many of the same players, and in the case of these two films, the same photographer (Gregg Toland). Fontaine and Olivier work well on screen together, even though they apparently did not share a close working relationship. It is, however, the supporting players who are the shining stars. Anderson's Mrs. Danvers is a role we've already seen on screen (usually played by Gale Sondergaard), but being Anderson's second film (and first in 7 years), there was a lot of curiosity surrounding her considering her reputation as one of Broadway's hottest dramatic actresses. Mrs. Danvers isn't a one dimensional evil housekeeper; You understand her affection for the late Rebecca from the very beginning, and in every movement Anderson makes, you cannot take your eyes off of her. I can't praise her highly enough. Sanders' suave villain (who playfully calls Mrs. Danvers "Danny") is extremely likable and almost equal in stealing away the attention of the leads. Gladys Cooper and Nigel Bruce add on a delightful "pip pip" quality to their eccentric characters, while in her brief time on screen, Florence Bates is hysterically funny, putting out a cigarette in her cold cream, and coolly telling Fontaine how she can never truly be a "great lady". Every moment here is a classic movie memory, from the opening narration to Fontaine's first vision of De Winter, and then, the rainy ride down to where Fontaine sees Mandalay for the first time. The light first quarter darkens the moment we see Anderson pop into view as Mrs. Danvers. A cold pause, then "How Do You Do" reveals the tension, and from there, everything is set. Anderson explodes in two scenes-the first where she finds the hiding Fontaine in Rebecca's old room, and later, when Fontaine confronts Anderson after discovering her treachery. The film sags just a bit with the discovery of a body that might be Rebecca's, but that is minor. C. Aubrey Smith is memorable in his small role as Maxim's attorney. The final shot will live on in your memory, just as Mandalay lived on in the second Mrs. De Winter's. While "Rebecca" won Best Film at that year's Academy Awards, many film historians prefer the message drama "The Grapes of Wrath" as the better film. I find the two rank very close, and also quibble over between the choice of Jane Darwell for Supporting Actress over Anderson's Mrs. Danvers. A big mistake was not nominating Sanders. A BBC version years later is also very good, a bit more faithful to the novel, and benefits from Diana Rigg as a more approachable Mrs. Danvers and a very diva-ish performance by Faye Dunaway in the Florence Bates role.
Do you think the dead come back and watch the living? Rebecca is directed by Alfred Hitchcock and adapted to screen play from the Daphne du Maurier novel of the same name. It stars Laurence Olvier, Joan Fontaine and Judith Anderson. Cinematography is by George Barnes and music scored by Franz Waxman. After meeting and marrying 'Maxim' de Winter (Olivier), the Second Mrs. de Winter (Fontaine), finds life at his English estate, Manderley, far from comfortable because the servants and the house serve to remind her of the first Mrs. de Winter, whose death remains a source of mystery. What did happen to the first lady of the house? Can this newly married couple survive the oppressive cloud that looms large over the mansion? A Gothic emotional near masterpiece, Alfred Hitchcock's first American film may seem a bit too serviceable at times, something he was also aware of himself, but the production values are high and the story is played out supremely well. Within the story we can find Hitchcock's now famous trait of mistrusting Women, but in the main it stays the tragic tale of one young woman living in the ominous shadow of the previous Mrs. De Winter. Mood is often set as foreboding, with the director understanding the psychological pangs of the source material once the action switches to the de Winter home of Manderley. It arguably is a touch too long, and the restraint of Hitchcock, down to producer David O. Selznick overseeing things, stops it being a bit more unnerving than it should be. For Manderley the mansion here is one of the finest put on the screen, this is because Hitchcock and brilliant cinematographer George Barnes manage to make it bold & beautiful one minute, and then the next scene it comes off as a monolithic nightmare. It's wonderful case of the surroundings playing the extra character for maximum effect. Laurence Olivier is impressive, even if we would learn later on that this is the sort of performance he could do in his sleep. The supporting cast do great work as well, especially as regards the cold and terrifying turn from Judith Anderson as Mrs. Danvers. However, to me this will always be Joan Fontaine's show, she nails it perfectly, the new Mrs. De Winter wants to do right but can't seem to so for doing wrong, she infuriates at times, yet the next minute you just want to hold her, for she's so vulnerable, but beautifully so, it's a brilliant performance in a brilliant film. The ending is a switheroo from the novel, and it almost derails the success the film has achieved up to that point. And looking at it now it's hard not to curse the Production Code for enforcing a big change to what was revealed in du Maurier's wonderful novel. But the film has survived the "appeasing" ending to stand the test of time for all the ages. It won the Academy Award for Best Picture, and Barnes also won for Best Black & White Cinematography, it was nominated for a further nine awards, including Best Director, Best Actor, Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress. No nomination for Waxman, sadly, but his score is worthy of a mention for the evocative strains that sit nicely with the tone of the story. Rebecca, a hauntingly beautiful picture that's acted and produced with consummate skill. 9.5/10
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