Netflix movie recommendations : Rebecca, una mujer inolvidable

rebecca

Netflix movie recommendations : Rebecca, una mujer inolvidable

rebecca
rebecca

Watching the movie Rebecca for the second time. I saw it on Netflix, so I watched it again.
What’s surprising is that Rebecca was already released in Mexico in the 1940s in a Spanish version on August 1, 1940. -> full version rebecca 1940
(I don’t know if it was the first release because I didn’t look closely.)
I’ve read Rebecca in books, seen it in musicals, and seen it in movies.
If you ask me which is better, I feel like I would have to write another blog post comparing just that.

Mrs. de Winter, Maxim (main male character), Mrs. Danvers
Faceless protagonist <Rebecca>
I am writing a review of this movie from the perspective of seeing the same movie twice.

‘When I watched the movie in 2020, I watched the movie while concentrating on <Who is the main character?>.
I enjoyed watching the movie while trying to guess what kind of person Rebecca, the faceless protagonist, was.
During this viewing, I already knew a bit about the main character.
I focused on the other main characters, “Madame de Winter” and “Maxim.”

Movie Review / Rebecca Historical background with people on the outside and people on the inside

It is revealed throughout the film that there were limits to the jobs and positions women could have.
Men work outside the house and meet people from the outside world, but women have to get permission from their husbands to meet people at home and even throw parties. Almost at the level of the king and queen of the Joseon Dynasty.
In that sense, the faceless protagonist Rebecca would have been a mutant of that era. I can understand Mrs. Danvers, who loved that look. She, who admires the woman who lives the life she herself could not live, also resembles the typical image of a woman living in that era.

Movie Review / Rebecca dependent woman

If you look at the poster of her film, you can see Maxim de Winter staring at her world (her empty space? haha), Madame de Winter, her Maxim de Winter, staring at her. To her, Maxim de Winter would be her whole world.
As Mrs. Van Hopper’s companion, she has lived a shadowy life. The place of dependence has shifted from Mrs. Vanhofer to a better(?) person named Maxim de Winter, and there is no independent life.

She was a person who did not live an <intended life> but a <given life>. She ended up in Manderley Manor, and the situation was like that, so all she could do was look like she didn’t know what to do and say, “I’m coming to you!” Or, “I’m going to run away from Mrs. Vanhoffer!” The will to live was not visible at all.

The first time she showed her will to live was when Maxim, her almost master, was imprisoned, and in order to save him, she began to judge, make decisions, and act independently. Thanks to him, she was able to save Maxim’s life.
Only after he was locked behind bars!!!! She began to make independent judgments. The key to living her independent life lay in her own mind, and Mrs. de Winter only became strong when her circumstances or her own dependents became helpless.

Movie Review / Rebecca  : Her MBTI (INFP to INTJ!)

At the beginning of the movie, I guess she was an INFP before she became Mrs. de Winter.
She is passive, gets caught up in her emotions(?), and has no planning skills. An emotional pacifist who does whatever Maxim tells him to do.
Ideal, but empathetic…

While holding the ball, hearing the truth about Rebecca’s death from Maxim,
Let Maxim be imprisoned!! It appears to change into Super T as it encounters various situations.
By becoming super T, she makes judgments and decisions rationally!! So he saves Maxim.
In the film, after the Manderley Mansion burns down, the two travel the world, and De Winter and Mrs. De Winter seem to be free.

The most impressive scene

<Wife Danvers suicide scene>
Dan Buss: You’ll stay with her husband, but you won’t be happy.
Mrs. de Winter: You will be happy.

Her view of Mrs Danvers looking at her
<You are a dependent person, and that is why you will be unhappy, unlike Rebecca, whom I love.>
But after Manderley Manor burns down, Mrs. de Winter becomes happy as she preserves her love for Maxime…

Everything in life seems to be right.

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