Real and unreal nightmare

Kareem 2022-04-23 07:01:26

Produced by Paramount in 1968, it is a classic of modern horror movies. The film tells the story of a young couple who rents an old house in New York at a cheap price, but the house has horrific rumors of suicide, cannibalism, witchcraft and so on. The neighbors are an eccentric old couple whose adopted daughter committed suicide but behaved indifferently. One day, the husband said that he wanted to have a child, and Rosemary had a nightmare that night, dreaming that she was raped by an ugly monster. Soon, Mary was really pregnant. The old couple next door took care of her very enthusiastically and gave her some weird herbs. Her husband also took great care of her. As everyone knows, this is just the beginning of the nightmare.
This is a film about sexual repression, religious beliefs and incestuous desires. Rosemary's various hysteria and hallucinations in the film are expressed in the form of dreams and the strangeness of the film. In fact, there is no definite plot in the movie to show that Mary is pregnant with the devil's child, nor does it deny that the child is not the crystallization of Mary and her husband, which makes the audience wonder whether Mary is the victim of the wizards or a wizard. one of them?
The film was born in Paramount in the United States, which made it well received in Hollywood. The portrayal of each actor's characters is very good, especially the portrayal of Mary's characters is particularly delicate. She has no job, has few friends, and her husband loves his career more than her. , life is extremely autistic and lonely, sexual repression and strange imaginings make her crazy. Such a character image can't help but make people boldly speculate that maybe the whole movie is just a nightmare she imagined.
Digression: Mia Farrow (Woody Allen's one-time muse) is so pitiful that she's a saucy beauty

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Extended Reading

Rosemary's Baby quotes

  • Rosemary Woodhouse: Pain, begone, I will have no more of thee!

  • Rosemary Woodhouse: Oh, God. Oh, God.

    Laura-Louise McBirney: Oh, shut up with your "Oh, Gods" or we'll kill you, milk or no milk!