The story starts from the recollection of the heroine: the heroine is not Rebecca, but the companion of a noble/rich woman, so she can enter and exit luxury hotels (Prince Hotel), travel to Europe, and meet Devin, the owner of Mandeley Manor (Maxim), the two fell in love. Like a romantic novel, like a maid meets a prince. However, the prince had a marriage, and it seemed that he still loved her deeply. After finally leaving the mistress and returning to the castle with the prince, the gloomy housekeeper and sleepwalking prince seemed to wake up from a dream, and a happy life would not begin. .
In order to be officially accepted as the hostess of the manor, the hostess held a once-Rebecca iconic dance party and put on Rebecca's red dance clothes (why does Maxim hate Rebecca and still hang this painting?), in short, Maxim is very angry. , The marriage of the two officially appeared in crisis. At this time, a shipwreck was suddenly found on the beach, and the real Rebecca's body was salvaged.
Maxim explained the whole story, saying that it was not that he loved Rebecca so much as everyone thought, but that he hated her as a slut... and it was he who killed her personally. Under R's threat...
In the end, Maxim was almost imprisoned as a murderer. Fortunately, another turning point occurred-it turned out that R had a cancer before his death, instead of being pregnant, so he had a good reason to commit suicide.
The new adaptation gave the male and female protagonists more action, but Zhuyu was in front, and the performance seemed a bit stiff. Maxim was not as enthusiastic and loving as the heroine in the original. After arriving in Mandley, he turned into a stiff, and the heroine was not fragile enough, and was strong in the second half. After a little turning point, Hitchcock should grasp it well.
View more about Rebecca reviews