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Rebecca (1940)

 Rebecca (1940)
type
TVTItem
 Rebecca (1940)
label
Rebecca (1940)
 Rebecca (1940)
page
Rebecca1940
 Rebecca (1940)
comment
Rebecca is Alfred Hitchcock's 1940 film adaptation of the novel of the same name. It was his first American project and starred Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine in the leading roles.Brooding, wealthy widower Maxim de Winter (Olivier) remarries to a younger woman (Fontaine) and takes her to his estate, Manderley. The second Mrs. de Winter, though loving towards her husband, is out of sorts with the housekeeper Mrs. Danverse (Judith Anderson) and disturbed with her husband's seeming obsession with his first wife Rebecca. Eventually, the secrets of Manderley come to light...
 Rebecca (1940)
fetched
2024-05-04T22:25:59Z
 Rebecca (1940)
parsed
2024-05-04T22:25:59Z
 Rebecca (1940)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Rebecca (1940) / int_12336d7d
type
Table Space
 Rebecca (1940) / int_12336d7d
comment
Table Space: In the film, the table isn't quite as oversized as some examples, but the not-so-happy newlyweds do sit on opposite ends.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_12336d7d
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1.0
 Rebecca (1940) / int_12336d7d
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 Rebecca (1940)
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Rebecca (1940) / int_12336d7d
 Rebecca (1940) / int_127fc252
type
Creator Cameo
 Rebecca (1940) / int_127fc252
comment
Creator Cameo: Alfred Hitchcock makes one of his signature cameos when he walks past Favell and the constable while they talk. There's about three minutes left in the film at that point, making it the latest Hitchcock cameo in any of his films.note After a while, he started to place his cameos very early in films, so the audience wouldn't spend all their time looking for him instead of paying attention to the story.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_127fc252
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 Rebecca (1940)
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Rebecca (1940) / int_127fc252
 Rebecca (1940) / int_16364a29
type
Evil Sounds Deep
 Rebecca (1940) / int_16364a29
comment
Evil Sounds Deep: George Sanders playing the role in the 1940 film adds his deep voice to the antagonistic Jack Favell.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_16364a29
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1.0
 Rebecca (1940) / int_16364a29
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 Rebecca (1940)
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Rebecca (1940) / int_16364a29
 Rebecca (1940) / int_1f250372
type
I Need a Freaking Drink
 Rebecca (1940) / int_1f250372
comment
I Need a Freaking Drink: Jack Favell, who was visibly crushed and devastated when he learned from Dr. Baker that Rebecca had terminal cancer, which also let Maxim off the hook for her death, says "I wish I had a drink."
 Rebecca (1940) / int_1f250372
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 Rebecca (1940)
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Rebecca (1940) / int_1f250372
 Rebecca (1940) / int_20f689e9
type
Adaptational Villainy
 Rebecca (1940) / int_20f689e9
comment
Adaptational Villainy: A consequence of the elimination of Maxim's murder of Rebecca in the Hitchcock film is that Jack Favell's persecution of Maxim is now based completely on a falsehood. To his credit though, he seems to be as shocked as anyone when the truth is revealed - it seems that he genuinely thought that Maxim had killed Rebecca.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_20f689e9
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Rebecca (1940) / int_20f689e9
 Rebecca (1940) / int_3f45f1e6
type
Adaptational Heroism
 Rebecca (1940) / int_3f45f1e6
comment
Adaptational Heroism: For Maxim. The film eliminates his murder of Rebecca, by necessity of the Hays Code. By extension, this removes the potentially psychotic element from his wife's decision to help him, helping to make her more sympathetic and heroic after The Reveal.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_3f45f1e6
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 Rebecca (1940)
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Rebecca (1940) / int_3f45f1e6
 Rebecca (1940) / int_48c99e19
type
Death by Adaptation
 Rebecca (1940) / int_48c99e19
comment
Death by Adaptation: Mrs. Danvers in the film. In the novel she escaped the burning house, but the Hays Code wouldn't allow her to survive. The musical takes this further and shows that this is a suicide.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_48c99e19
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Rebecca (1940) / int_48c99e19
 Rebecca (1940) / int_4b2c373
type
Impractically Fancy Outfit
 Rebecca (1940) / int_4b2c373
comment
Impractically Fancy Outfit: Played with. The heroine, having just married former widower Maxim, is desperate to prove herself a Proper Lady (and not an Inadequate Inheritor to the titular Rebecca). Hoping to appear elegant and tasteful, she buys a fancy party dress from a fashion magazine... but quickly learns that it's completely out of place for a quiet evening at home, Big Fancy House and Fiction 500-status be damned.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_4b2c373
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Rebecca (1940) / int_4b2c373
 Rebecca (1940) / int_4e7c4536
type
Wham Line
 Rebecca (1940) / int_4e7c4536
comment
Wham Line: The big reveal of the truth of Maxim and Rebecca's marriage.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_4e7c4536
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 Rebecca (1940) / int_4e7c4536
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Rebecca (1940) / int_4e7c4536
 Rebecca (1940) / int_4f84cdef
type
Smug Snake
 Rebecca (1940) / int_4f84cdef
comment
Smug Snake: Slimy, conceited, amoral, constantly-smirking Jack Favell, as played by George Sanders, is one of the smuggest snakes in media history. His getting sucker punched by Maxim at the climax is very satisfying.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_4f84cdef
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Rebecca (1940) / int_4f84cdef
 Rebecca (1940) / int_70bdac19
type
Honest John's Dealership
 Rebecca (1940) / int_70bdac19
comment
Honest John's Dealership: This version of Favell is a "motor car salesman", which suits his sleazy personality (presumably he tries to hustle wealthy customers to buy luxury cars, which again is perfectly in character for him).
 Rebecca (1940) / int_70bdac19
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Rebecca (1940) / int_70bdac19
 Rebecca (1940) / int_73d4b01a
type
In Case You Forgot Who Wrote It
 Rebecca (1940) / int_73d4b01a
comment
In Case You Forgot Who Wrote It: At the beginning:
 Rebecca (1940) / int_73d4b01a
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Rebecca (1940) / int_73d4b01a
 Rebecca (1940) / int_7b07e9f
type
Prim and Proper Bun
 Rebecca (1940) / int_7b07e9f
comment
Prim and Proper Bun: Mrs. Danvers always wears her hair in a tight bun, befitting her stern persona. It's not the usual type however, as she wears it in a plaited bun.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_7b07e9f
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Rebecca (1940) / int_7b07e9f
 Rebecca (1940) / int_b406648
type
Singing in the Shower
 Rebecca (1940) / int_b406648
comment
Singing in the Shower: Maxim is heard singing in his shower at the Monte Carlo hotel. It prevents him from hearing an important phone call.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_b406648
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 Rebecca (1940) / int_b406648
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Rebecca (1940) / int_b406648
 Rebecca (1940) / int_ca69cb4d
type
Adaptational Karma
 Rebecca (1940) / int_ca69cb4d
comment
Adaptational Karma: In the book, Mrs. Danvers escapes Manderly after she burns it to the ground. The film — by order of the Hays Code — shows her dying in the fire.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_ca69cb4d
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Rebecca (1940) / int_ca69cb4d
 Rebecca (1940) / int_e2ccee25
type
Animal Motifs
 Rebecca (1940) / int_e2ccee25
comment
Animal Motifs: The animal favoured by the nameless heroine is the lap-dog, Jasper. Rebecca, however, is regularly mentioned in conjunction with horses. The second Mrs. de Winter is meek, mild, and childish, always eager to please and desperate for her husband's approval, to the point where she is almost pathetic. Rebecca, however, is wild and dangerous and too powerful for Max De Winter to keep control of — especially since the horses mentioned alongside her are crazy with pain, as Rebecca whips them into a frenzy.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_e2ccee25
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Rebecca (1940) / int_e2ccee25
 Rebecca (1940) / int_fbd285b7
type
Comically Missing the Point
 Rebecca (1940) / int_fbd285b7
comment
Comically Missing the Point: The heroine completely misses that Maxim is trying to propose to her.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_fbd285b7
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Rebecca (1940) / int_fbd285b7
 Rebecca (1940) / int_fd0925ef
type
Bitch Alert
 Rebecca (1940) / int_fd0925ef
comment
Bitch Alert: The famous Establishing Character Moment for Mrs. Danvers, as she enters the room, sweeps out in front of the rest of the servants and walks toward the camera, with a fearsome, sour expression of disapproval on her face. Before Danvers even says one word you know the second Mrs. de Winter is going to have a major ordeal on her hands. Rather fittingly, the trope namer was dressed to resemble Mrs Danvers.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_fd0925ef
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Rebecca (1940) / int_fd0925ef
 Rebecca (1940) / int_fd497706
type
Accidental Murder
 Rebecca (1940) / int_fd497706
comment
Accidental Murder: Maxim accidentally killed Rebecca; he got angry and pushed her, and she fell and struck her head. This is a deviation from the original novel, where he shot her, very much on purpose. She rather had it coming, to the point of taunting him into doing it.
 Rebecca (1940) / int_fd497706
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ItemName
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Rebecca (1940)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Isaac Asimov Presents: Great Science Fiction Stories of 1940
processingUnknown
Rebecca (1940)
 Rebecca (1940)
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Accidental Murder / int_ffa3bf5
 Rebecca (1940)
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Death by Falling Over / int_ffa3bf5
 Rebecca (1940)
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Film Noir Index / int_ffa3bf5
 Films of the 1940s
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Rebecca (1940)
 Grande Dame
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Rebecca (1940)
 Impractically Fancy Outfit
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Rebecca (1940)
 Intimate Hair Brushing
processingUnknown
Rebecca (1940)
 Makeover Fail
processingUnknown
Rebecca (1940)
 Protagonist Title Fallacy
processingUnknown
Rebecca (1940)
 Rebecca (1940)
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Psychological Thriller / int_ffa3bf5
 Rebecca (1940)
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Secondary Character Title / int_ffa3bf5
 Table Space
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Rebecca (1940)
 Thanatos Gambit
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Rebecca (1940)
 Rebecca (1940)
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The Foreign Subtitle / int_ffa3bf5
 The Angry Beavers
processingUnknown
Rebecca (1940)