Rebecca (1940)
TOMATOMETER
AUDIENCE SCORE
Critic Consensus: Hitchcock's first American film (and his only Best Picture winner), Rebecca is a masterpiece of haunting atmosphere, Gothic thrills, and gripping suspense.
Rebecca Videos
Rebecca Photos
Movie Info
Cast
as Maxim de Winter
as Mrs. de Winter
as Mrs. Danvers
as Favell
as Lacey
as Julyan
as Crawley
as Beatrice Lacy

as Robert

as Frith
as Mrs. Van Hopper
as Coroner
as Dr. Baker
as Chalcroft
as Tabbs

as Ben
as Man Outside Phone Booth
as Policeman

as Chauffeur
Critic Reviews for Rebecca
All Critics (48) | Top Critics (7) | Fresh (48) | Rotten (0) | DVD (13)
It is the finest job of direction accomplished by a master director and may justly be called Alfred Hitchcock's masterpiece.

This time Hitchcock does it all his way, does a splendid job and has a splendid cast to do it with.

One of the finest productional efforts of the past year.
Through its first two-thirds it is as perfect a myth of adolescence as any of the Disney films, documenting the childlike, nameless heroine's initiation into the adult mysteries of sex, death, and identity.
Hitchcock shows superb technical control and attends to his trademark motifs, from monstrous mother figures to the fetishisation of clothing.

An altogether brilliant film, haunting, suspenseful, handsome and handsomely played.

Audience Reviews for Rebecca
A stupendous film with an exceptional direction, a stunning art direction and cinematography, and excellent performances from Olivier, Fontaine and Anderson, even if the suspenseful plot seems to diverge a bit from its main course in a last third full of too many twists and turns.
Super Reviewer
This was the first film Hitchcock made after moving to the U.S. to further his film career. The subject matter for this assignment is an adaptation of Daphne du Maurier's eerie, gothic psychological chiller (with some romance moments) about an unnamed young woman who, after a short, whirlwind romance, marries a wealthy widower. They take up residence in his country estate Manderlay, and from there, the young woman starts to go mad, mostly because it seems that Manderlay is haunted by the spectre of her husband's first wife Rebecca. She died under mysterious circumstances, and most of the staff seem to obsessively prefer her over her replacement, especially the particularly rough and cruel Mrs. Danvers. The film is brimming with lots of great stuff, especially a wonderful score by Franz Waxman, some great art direction, set design, gorgeous cinematography, and some excellent atmosphere, mood, and tone. This is a fine gothic psychological mystery chiller. This was Hitchcock's only Oscar winning film (it took Best Picture in 1940), and it seems odd to me that not only did this get best picture, but that none of Hitchcock's work got any love from the Academy. To be fair, Foreign Correspondant was in competetion for the top prize with Rebecca the same year, but still, none of his great stuff from the late 50s-early 60s? I enjoyed this film, but honestly, as much as I dig Hitch's work, I don't thnk this is Best Picture material, and it's rather overrated in general. Oh sure, I enjoyed it, but it really doesn't come off as all that special. It also doesn't help that it only somewhat seems like a proper Hitch film, something reinforced by the fact that the man himself called it a "Selznick film" instead of one of his own. Where the acting is concerned, Joan Fontaine is decent as our protagonist, and Olivier is passable as our newlywedded widower, but I can't help but feel that he was holding back a bit. It's not a bad performance, but it should be a great one. The film does have one performance that really is quite brilliant, and that is the one given by Judith Anderson as Mrs. Danvers. She's the real scene stealer here. Everything about her performance and just her in general is awesome, from her voice and delivery to her mannerisms and facial expressions, especially her fiendishly eerie glare, this is one of the greatest creepy characters out there. All in all, a decent enough film, but far from great. Maybe had Hitch had more control this could have really been a mesmerizing spectacle instead of a compromised offering from the Master of Suspense. Straight (but solid) B.

Super Reviewer
This gothic tale has so many twists and turns, that more than 70 years later, it still has the capability to keep audiences on the edge of their seat.
Super Reviewer
Rebecca Quotes
Maxim de Winter: | And I should be making violent love to you behind a palm tree. |
Maxim de Winter: | It's gone forever, that funny young, lost look I loved won't ever come back. I killed that when I told you about Rebecca. It's gone. In a few hours, you've grown so much older. |
Mrs. de Winter: | How do you do? |
Mrs. Danvers: | How do you do.... I have everything in readiness for you... |
Mrs. Danvers: | How do you do.... I have everything in readiness for you. |
Mrs. de Winter: | Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again. |
Discussion Forum
Discuss Rebecca on our Movie forum!