IMDb >
Rosemary's Baby (1968)
Watch It
Adquirir en Amazon
Rent it at
blockbuster.com
Discutir en los foros More at IMDb Pro Add to My Movies Update Data
blockbuster.com
BETA
Discutir en los foros More at IMDb Pro Add to My Movies Update Data
Enlaces
Principales Enlaces
trailers and videosreparto y equipo completostrivialidadesofficial sitesfrases célebresRevisión
información principalinformación combinadareparto y equipo completoscréditos de compañíastv schedulePremios y críticas
comentarios de los usuarioscríticas externascríticas de grupos de usuariosawardsCalificacionesparents guiderecomendacionesforoArgumento y citas
argumentoplot synopsispalabras clave del argumentosinopsis Amazon.comfrases célebresCosas divertidas
trivialidadespifiastemas musicalescréditos extravagantesotras versionesenlaces entre películaspreguntas frecuentesOtro tipo de información
enlaces a productostaquilla/negociofechas de estrenolugares de rodajeespecificaciones técnicasLaserdiscDVDlecturas relacionadasNoticieroMaterial promocional
frases comerciales trailers and videos carteles y enlaces photo galleryEnlaces externos
enlaces a cinesofficial sitesmisceláneosfotografíassound clipsvideo clipsRosemary's Baby (1968) Más información en IMDbPro »
| Fotos (ver todos los 66 | slideshow) | Videos |
Revisión
Calificación de los usuarios:
Fecha de Lanzamiento:
12 junio 1968 (USA) másFrase comercial:
Pray for Rosemary's BabyPlot:
A young couple move into a new apartment, only to be surrounded by peculiar neighbors and occurrences. When the wife becomes mysteriously pregnant, paranoia over the safety of her unborn child begins controlling her life. full summary | full synopsisPremios:
Won Oscar. Another 11 wins & 9 nominations másComentarios de los usuarios:
Reassuring to fine it's every bit as good as its staunchest champions would have you believe másReparto
(Descripción general del reparto)| Mia Farrow | ... | Rosemary Woodhouse | |
| John Cassavetes | ... | Guy Woodhouse | |
| Ruth Gordon | ... | Minnie Castevet | |
| Sidney Blackmer | ... | Roman Castevet | |
| Maurice Evans | ... | Edward 'Hutch' Hutchins | |
| Ralph Bellamy | ... | Dr. Abraham Sapirstein | |
| Victoria Vetri | ... | Terry Gionoffrio (as Angela Dorian) | |
| Patsy Kelly | ... | Laura-Louise McBirney | |
| Elisha Cook Jr. | ... | Mr. Nicklas (as Elisha Cook) | |
| Emmaline Henry | ... | Elise Dunstan | |
| Charles Grodin | ... | Dr. C.C. Hill | |
| Hanna Landy | ... | Grace Cardiff | |
| Phil Leeds | ... | Dr. Shand (as Philip Leeds) | |
| D'Urville Martin | ... | Diego | |
| Hope Summers | ... | Mrs. Gilmore |
Más detalles
Parents Guide:
View content advisory for parentsDuración:
136 minPaís:
USAIdioma:
InglésColor:
Color (Technicolor)Relación de Aspecto:
1.85 : 1 másSonido:
MonoClasificación:
Spain:18 (DVD rating) | Portugal:M/16 | Canada:18+ (Quebec) | South Korea:18 | Brazil:14 | India:A | Argentina:18 | Australia:M | Canada:18A | Finland:K-16 | Ireland:18 | Netherlands:16 | Norway:15 (re-rating) | Norway:16 (original rating) | Singapore:M18 | Sweden:15 | UK:18 (video rating) | UK:X (original rating) (cut) | USA:Approved | USA:R (re-rating) | West Germany:16Locaciones de Filmación:
Dakota Hotel - 1 West 72nd St. at Central Park West, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA másCosas divertidas
Trivialidades:
Ira Levin felt Rosemary's Baby is "the single most faithful adaptation of a novel ever to come out of Hollywood." William Castle speculated the reasons for this were because it was the first time Roman Polanski had ever adapted another writer's work. Unaware he had the freedom to improvise on the book. másErrores:
Errores que Revelan: When Rosemary and Guy come back from dinner at the Castevet's and they are in the bedroom, Guy untucks his shirt twice. másCitas:
[First lines]Mr. Nicklas: Are you a doctor?
Rosemary Woodhouse: He is an actor.
Mr. Nicklas: Oh! An actor! We're very popular with actors! Have I seen you in anything?
Guy Woodhouse: Well, I did "Hamlet" a while back, didn't I, Liz? Then we did "The Sandpiper"...
Rosemary Woodhouse: He's joking. He was in "Luther" and "Nobody Loves an Albatross" and a lot of TV plays and commercials.
Mr. Nicklas: That's where the money is, right? The commercials.
Guy Woodhouse: And the artistic thrill too!
más
Banda de Sonido:
Lullaby máspreguntas frecuentes
Why does Rosemary trust a quack like Dr. Sapirstein?Did the Church of Satan leader Anton LeVay play the devil?
A Note Regarding Spoilers
más
más
Foros
Discutir película con otros usuarios en Foro de IMDb para Rosemary's Baby (1968) másRecomendaciones
Si disfrutó este título, nuestra base de datos también recomienda:
Mostrar más recomendaciones
|
|
|
|
|
| The Omen | The Omen | The Exorcist | The Kite Runner | Village of the Damned |
|
IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
|
IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
|
IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
|
IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
|
IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
|
Enlaces Relacionados
| Reparto y Personal Completos | Créditos de la compañía | Críticas externas |
| Las 250 películas principales de IMDb | IMDb Horror section | IMDb USA section |
| Add this title to MyMovies |













Why aren't the horror directors of today as careful with their scripts as Polanski was? Not that this is really horror. Horror as we know it came into being with the slasher flicks of the late 1970s and early 1980s; "Rosemary's Baby" is rather the kind of thing that the term "dark fantasy" was coined to describe, by people of taste who noticed that the word "horror" promised audiences something distinctly unpleasant and nasty.
The film's construction is marvellous. Things start slow - one beat, so to speak, to a bar - and gradually pick up speed so that by the end we are nervously tapping out semiquavers with our feet. Polanski also understands the gentle art of hint-dropping. Many events are filed away as tiny puzzles to be solved later, and they ARE solved later; others we don't attach any particular significance to at the time Polanski invites us to re-interpret in retrospect, AND chooses the right moment to let us do so. And then, at the end, AFTER we've worked everything out, he presents us with a surprise - a delightful, gratuitous twist which nothing had prepared us for, which we couldn't have guessed, yet which doesn't cancel out the story as we'd understood it. (Alas, many people know what this surprise is in advance. I, for one. Yet this foreknowledge did nothing to spoil my enjoyment: a sure sign of superb construction.)
All in all, a film that tempts you to rank it with the best ever made - which is more, but not much more, than it deserves - simply because it's perfect. Everything went right. Rosemary is a wonderfully sympathetic heroine, powerless without being passive, largely ignorant of what's going on around her without being at all stupid, and Mia Farrow makes you care deeply about her. The cinematography is pellucid; the art direction is subtly right; there's also a fine, odd yet tuneful, musical score. I can't believe I waited so long to see this.