Spellbound Comments

  • Ada 2022-03-29 09:01:03

    Watching Hitchcock for the first time... My feeling is mainly to admire the atmosphere he created with the light and the soundtrack. As for this reasoning, I don't think it's acceptable to solve the case on the basis of a dream made up by an amnesiac, so that any evidence can be made up...whatever you want to...

  • Seamus 2022-03-29 09:01:03

    That fat paper named Hitchcock is enough for you! Don't be embarrassed by your rotten movies that are in vain! What era are you making now? Do you treat your audience as idiots? Your stupid shit is nothing new, your ridiculous suspense can be seen through at a glance. Look at the rough picture, look at the poor special effects. Don't rely on the old and sell the old here, and learn how to make movies from the current directors and...

  • Orin 2022-03-29 09:01:03

    The film is excellent, but it overstates the psychoanalysis and does not show much to do with Freud in the film. Bergman is worthy of a peerless beauty, but he couldn't like Peck since he was a child. He always felt that he was melancholy but had no...

  • Eloy 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    Sure enough, the hypnotism movie hypnotized me.// The two dreams I often had when I was a child were, standing on the back seat of my father's bicycle at night, and the path was full of orangutans and monkeys traversing the green road; I stood on my balcony and found the downstairs surrounded beasts such as lions and tigers, trapped at...

  • Cristina 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    A woman can be a psychiatrist before a relationship, but a psychopath after a relationship. Bergman is very beautiful~ The dream is very Dali at first glance, and the information is really...

  • Elmo 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    Hitchcock cites Freud's work of psychoanalysis, which is also the pioneering work of similar psychological films, and is very representative. The "open heart door" symbolizes the lens and the surreal dream created by Dalí are the highlights of the film. The plot is general, there is a far-fetched suspicion. In addition, I am very happy that this film, as Hitchcock's first film after World War II, finally did not have the Axis of Evil and the...

  • Jamey 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    It turns out that this kind of story mode can be traced all the way back to the black and white era of 1945, and Bergman and Pike are really enduring. Black and white film with great score...

  • Angel 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    Knife and fork scratching the tablecloth as the first time to reveal the suspense point, it is a bit...

  • Lexie 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    I'm now more and more intuitive about where I'm most likely to find Hitchcock's figure. . The foundation of this story is that Parker is so handsome that Bergman fell in love with him and found him innocent within a day. Other psychoanalytic dream analysis or detective reasoning are based on this....

  • Icie 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    so blind. Psychoanalysis must have been very fashionable back then, but it was misused as a gimmick and misused for granted. Parker's acting is a vase, and he only does four things from start to finish: wide-eyed dazed, wide-eyed in fear, flirting with Bergman, and fainting when not flirting. Love is still inexplicable. At first sight of "fascinated" love, female characters finally have a little bit of initiative and action, but when they touch a man, they are still desperate and lose their...

Extended Reading

Spellbound quotes

  • Dr. Fleurot: It's rather like embracing a textbook.

    Constance Petersen: But why do you do it, then?

    Dr. Fleurot: Because you're not a textbook.

  • Dr. Murchison: The old must make way for the new, especially when the old is suspected of senility.