This is a very suspenseful love movie. I have always been deeply suspicious of the sudden love of the male protagonist to the female protagonist. I use the hobby of tame wild animals to explain the subjugation of a beautiful female who is used to thieves and spend money for her. It's like throwing money, just like Jesus came to the world, in the eyes of others are crazy, so I have always suspected that the male protagonist will have any conspiracy. And I haven't figured out whether the father in the protagonist's mouth is the biological father or the father-in-law? If it's a real dad, why does the sister-in-law stay in his house and still behave like a master? If it is a father-in-law, how can he be so generous to the husband of his deceased daughter to remarry and still live together? I guess the male protagonist is also a liar who wants to make a big ticket with the female protagonist? o(╯□╰)o Well, I think too much, I think darker. Unexpectedly, it is the shadow of childhood + the romance of men conquering women. Why did the hostess's mother always dislike her daughter, causing her to lack maternal love since she was a child? In the end, admit that her daughter is the only person she has loved in her life? There seems to be no explanation in the film. The sister-in-law salivates to her brother-in-law, without cause or effect; the male protagonist's strong desire to conquer has no preparation, as if curing the female protagonist's mental illness is the only thing he cares about. There are many questions without answers, unlike other Hitchcock movie stories that are basically flawless.
The actor turned out to be Sean Connery, and I didn't recognize it at the time. The actress is Tippi Hedren, Dakota Johnson's grandmother. Among the many Hitchcock movies, so far, the actor I like Cary Grant the most. One of the things that all Hitchcock movies have in common is that the heroines are very beautiful.
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