Film Review

Miller 2022-04-19 09:01:28

At the beginning of the film Rosemary's Baby. The background music is really creepy and give people a suspenseful atmosphere to let audience feel more attractive. There are many plots only have the view of Rosemary. There also has a part of view when there is an angle through the keyhole. When Rosemary talk to all the person in the lobby room, it used the low angle, high angle and the angle to look around all the people. This film uses these different angles to show which people control this whole scene and it also can express the emotion of characters. The mise-en-scene of this film use shadow, light and acting to express the thinking and personality of each character. In the movie Rosemary's baby showed that the people always against her is like the pressure groups of the society. Rosemary's baby uses the part of view to lead people's attraction.

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Extended Reading
  • Alexzander 2022-03-22 09:01:21

    Revisit. If you want to make a movie and become a master, it is not enough to rely on hard work and enthusiasm. In the end, it is talent. Polanski is one of the few people with a supernatural talent for film.

  • Leopold 2021-10-22 14:42:16

    #重看#Jumping the bridge section, the pale and rugged shape, and the surrounding indifferent hostility, almost exactly the same as "Strange Tenants", sinking into despair, and losing confidence in humans, so Polanski enjoys the development of such themes; there is no blood. Chilled upper body, ignored the swords and guns, panicked in panic, murdered invisible, and disappeared between talking and laughing; I found out that her husband is Cassavetes after rewatching, and Mia Farrow performed very well in this film.

Rosemary's Baby quotes

  • Roman Castevet: To 1966! The year One.

  • [First lines]

    Mr. Nicklas: Are you a doctor?

    Guy Woodhouse: Yes. Yes.

    Rosemary Woodhouse: He's an actor.

    Mr. Nicklas: Oh, an actor. We're very popular with actors. Have I, uh, seen you in anything?

    Guy Woodhouse: Well ,let's see, I-I did "Hamlet" a while back, didn't I, Liz? And then we did "The, uh, The Sandpiper" and then...

    Rosemary Woodhouse: He's joking. He was in "Luther" and "Nobody Loves an Albatross" and a lot of television plays and commercials.

    Mr. Nicklas: Well, that's where the money is, isn't it? Commercials?

    Guy Woodhouse: And the artistic thrills, too!