That saxophone "scream" when she sees the eyes of the baby, really gave me goosebumps when i first saw the movie and it still does everytime i watch this scene.
@@marciloni12 yes, I agree, and it was one of the worst decisions ever made in the 2014 tv remake with Zoe Saldana, to actually show the baby! We can only imagine what kind of monster 1968 Rosemary eventually accepted as her flesh-and-blood son. Since we get short glimpses of the devil's ugly scaly body and demonic eyes (he actually seems to look a lot like an ork from Peter Jackson's LOTR) during the black mass rape scene, we can imagine that the resulting baby must've inherited at least a few of his father's ugly features. Only a mother could love such a little monster. I blame the crying, lo!! The baby totally sounds like any other newborn who wants to be comforted. And you can almost see how Rosemary's motherly instincts start to kick in - despite the baby's looks. However, the 2014 baby is shown in full detail - and he is actually a gorgeous baby with beautiful bright blue eyes which are striking but not the least bit scary or demonic. If babies fathered by the devil himself look like that, he could start a profitable side business as a sperm donor😄. The decision to actually show a perfectly normal beautiful baby causes the iconic lines "What have you done to his eyes??" - "He has his father's eyes!" to fall totally flat. The end is absolutely anticlimactic in the remake. I wonder what they were thinking! Maybe the underlying idea was to eliminate the supernatural element. The eyes of the baby of the 1968 movie make it pretty clear that in the reality of that particular movie the devil actually exists. However, the remake leaves it open if the devil exists, since all terrible happenings could've been caused solely by the machinations of evil humans. The blue-eyed stranger who apparently fathered the baby could well be just an ordinary man with evil intentions. It would have been much more effective and scary if - like in the original version - the baby's looks had remained a secret. While it's truly astonishing that Mia Farrow's Rosemary ultimately accepted her demonic son, it's not surprising at all that Zoe Saldana's Rosemary decides to love her beautiful baby. After all, there's no reason for her to suspect that the baby was really the son of the devil.
One of the most brilliant decisions ever to be put to film is Polanski's decision NOT to show the baby. Our own imaginations are 1000x worse than any visual. And he knew that. Genius.
I love the way the camera pans around her as she turns to everyone in the room. It helps the viewer feel the same chaos and just as frantic as Rosemary.
Dissent That's not only my favorite scene from this movie but it is the only scary scene in this movie. It makes your imagination run with her expression.
+Dissent I love the reaction she gives to seeing the baby. It makes your imagination run wild. You feel her disgust and horror. I don't think she was overacting. This is a very extreme ending and situation. Her acting was perfect for this extreme scene.
This whole scene is great acting, and great cinematogrophy. The music plus "his power is stronger than stronger! His might will last longer than longer!" Truly harrowing
This scene actually feels like a dream sequence, with the suspension of logic you sometimes get in dreams - a woman strides into a living room with a knife and is hardly noticed.
I absolutely love how the old lady explains the situation so plainly and matter of fact in that thick accent while everyone else is shouting religiously. She's hysterical.
Minnie's personality never changed when the truth was finally revealed. Often, horror films have characters present as more sinister when their true evil is revealed, not with Minnie (Ruth Gordon's character). She remained funny, catty, and nosey from start to end! 🎉
The 60s 70s horror movies are the scariest because they use subtle psychological horror unlike the in your face CGI/makeup that modern horror movies use.
chaoticdays Exactly! Movies like this are not only classic to the genre but classics as a whole. A lot of directors knew how to direct a good horror film given the a great cast and screenplay such as this, and The Exorcist, The Omen, and sorta Amityville Horror with Margot Kidder and John Brolin(obviously have been hoaxed AF but still made a creepy ass movie) Anyway, right on for the comment I completely agree with you LoL
Slashers were the beginning of the end. The only ones that were worth a damn were the original Nightmare and MAYBE the first Friday and Texas Chainsaw (haven't seen them so can't offer an opinion). Scream was as well because it was silly and at least tried to kill the vanquish the genre. Hellraiser was actually good from what I remember, but IDK objective quality. The last good horror movie I've seen, chronologically speaking, was the Babadook (hyped, yes, but good nonetheless). The last good American ones were The Ring series and the adaptation to Silent Hill. The latter was directed by a Frenchman who was such a huge fan of the games he wanted to adapt it as soon as the first one came out. After everyone got sick of torture porn and fake found footage after One Missed Called killed J-Horror, it seems like they're going back to (fake, bad) religious horror and zombies. Zombies are definitely partiality due to the Walking Dead, and demons and witches and shit, IDK, maybe just their lack of creativity in general. Or Supernatural (the show), or American Horror Story, or their disturbing fondness for occult and demonic imagery as a whole. Whatever their reasoning, MOST big horror movies nowadays are nothing more than porn, and the really bad kind that leaves wanting to take a shower and watch feel good Disney movies at that. The only good horror left is in the written media, online, or in video game form.
Yeah, a bunch of people shouting "Hail Satan" as they explain that she fave birth to the devil's child is real subtle horror. There were some really bad horror movies from the 60s too, but we remember the good ones. Sure, a lot of modern horror films are bad, but honestly the genre is as good now as its ever been. If you think modern horror movies are all jump scares and CGI, then you need to look harder! There are some amazing horror films being released today, and the genre has learned a lot over the past 50 years.
This scene really disturbed me! This film really made me terrified of cults. The fact that they didn’t show the baby made this scene so much more horrifying!
The true horror of this film was at the end. When we hoped and prayed that Rosemary kills the baby and ends it all. But she pets the baby and accepts to be his mother. Throughout the film it was only us and Rosemary against the mysteries and unknown vicious plots. But at the end it's just us. Left alone.
In the book, she intends to grab the baby, throw it out the window, and jump out after it. Then she reasons that it's partly human, so she'll bring the issue to the Vatican and let them deal with it. As for herself, she knows she's defeated. Sad really.
+Novin Sadighi That's really well put. After seeing that Rosemary MAY accept the baby, it's the audience left holding the bag. We, the audience, have been betrayed. Great way of putting that!
+Novin Sadighi The *true* horror was when in real life Sharon Tate and her baby were murdered bestially soon after the premiere of this movie - a strange case of life imitates art? Who knows...
TheNightmareReaper Hmm, I'm not sure how you got that ending. In the sequel by Ira Levin, the baby grows into a man of 33 (sound familiar to anyone else?!) and kills off humanity. I don't really consider that 'somewhat good.' But then again, maybe you've got a point and humanity should be killed off!
Dave Glo Jeez! I read the sequel a long time ago and never made the age 33 connection to the death of a certain prominent historical religious figure who shall remain nameless. How could I have missed that?Thank you!!
+Starguard ! Apparently, Dubrovnik is a city in Croatia. My guess is it was a reference to her vacation fantasies that she had during the movie. Or when Roman went traveling near the end of the movie. I don't remember where he went, maybe he went to Dubrovnik.
well, Dubrovnik is one of the cities Roman said he traveled to...and I think that's where he said he and Ruth Gordon were going when they left town when Rosemary was ready to give birth. In fact, he was lying about leaving NYC...he'd never miss the birth of the Baby. So I guess she's being ironic--calling him on his lie. It's a funny tension-releaving bit in a very intense scene
All they do is celebrating the birth of their lord and savior. You know, normal behavior. They´re not terrifying, but simply humble observants to the new age. Hail Satan!
@@spaceace4387 Just to let you know, I´m playing a character here. In this story they are truly some evil people trying to bring on the end times of humanity. I wrote my original comment while I was drunk and I tend to get into character as an "actual" satanist when I´m in that mood. Hope that clears things out for you and I hope I didn´t scare you too much.
though I wouldn't consider this movie "scary," it leaves you with an unsettling feeling for a while that is difficult to shake off. Am I the only one who feels this way?
Mia Farrow's reaction to her baby's looks is not only the scariest part in this film (and the only scary part really) it's also a horrifying means of making people pair their imagination with the movie's intentions.
Yes, very scary moment. But I'd say getting raped by the devil in front of a coven of old folks might rate right up there as very creepy! Also when she's first pregnant and gets very sick - her doctor is a satanist too; any other doctor would've said, uh, honey, you got a beast inside there! No wonder you're feeling under the weather!
Like all movies, Rosemary's Baby is not meant to be seen just in one clip on RUclips. After watching the whole film in its entirety, this scene is horrifying.
Nah, not really. Saw this movie when I was 13 and thought this scene was hilarious. I know it’s a product of its time, but Mia’s overacting killed it. “Noooooo! It can’t beeeee!”
@@HauntFreak13 the movie is scarier than the majority of supernatural horror movies produced today and it also talks about how women are seen by society.
“What have you done to it? What have you done to its eyes?!” That line always haunts me, and Rosemary’s wide-eyed terror upon seeing her baby only adds to the horror.
I once heard a female critic say that in the 1970's there were 2 movies that would make you terrified to be a woman. The Stepford Wives & Rosemary's Baby.
All honesty? The Exorcist didn't scare me much. Didn't see it until I was 17, and while it started the reliance on demons and gore and exorcisms to scare people, oversaturation of the same types of movies made it less scary, even though I still liked it. But this? Jesus, the story buildup and pure suspense was utterly nerve-shredding. I love this movie to pieces.
Imagine being nine years old when the movie came out and sister took me to watch it and, irresponsibly enough, the entrance was allowed. I can’t watch horror movies since then.
Carlos Velasquez One of the key differences between this film and "The Exorcist" is that "Rosemary's Baby" suggestively toys with the idea of demonic worship, whereas "The Exorcist" is more "in your face" about it, as it deals rather with possession than worship.
The look of pure terror in Mia Farrows eyes is more blood chilling than any demon baby's eyes could be. The choice not to show us the baby and instead only her reaction is a brilliant decision. Horror is more about the things we don't see and can't properly rationalise.
If producer William Castle (known for his gimmicky "horror movies" of the 50's and 60's like The Tingler, the OG Thirteen Ghosts and House on Haunted Hill) had his way, we would've seen the baby. The director fought tooth and nail against it. Say what you will about the director but he at least made the right call here.
The popularity of that beautiful name plummeted abruptly after this movie and never really recovered it's former glory. It is a very pretty female name.
I thought it was interesting that the movie talked about the significance of herbs in Satanic rituals, while rosemary itself is a kind of herb. As if she was specifically grown just like the herbs in her apartment.
Not sure how this plays out, but I heard that her recent ex-husband Frank Sinatra, who was furious at her for continuing to work after their marriage (he had the divorce papers served to her on the movie set), used his "influence" in Hollywood to prevent Mia from even being nominated.
I know this a movie. I know he was an actor. But, good God.. I absolutely LOATHED that POS character Guy Woodhouse. I wanted to kiss his face with a rake..or an ice pick. So, in all fairness, I must absolutely commend his acting ability. Smarmy little POS that he is, bravo!
I still think back on the scene when Guy and Rosemary first went over to Roman and Minnie's apartment for dinner. Minnie and Rosemary are washing dishes and talking in the kitchen, and all we see in the other room is Guy sitting and staring intently at an unseen Roman while smoke flows from a cigarette from Roman's direction. Obviously, this is when Guy was "recruited" to the other side, fame and fortune as an actor being his reward. But it makes me wonder what exactly Roman said or did to draw Guy in. Guy was so cynical and rationalistic, so Roman must have offered some rather ample proof of what power he and his crew possessed.
I absolutely love that pivotal scene. You described it perfectly. I always wanted to know what he said, too. Again, the genius of Polanski:, letting our imaginations do the work.
Poor Rosemary. She really didn’t stand a chance after that. She was the perfect target for the witches. Raised to be as compliant and accommodating as a doormat and all alone in an unfamiliar uncaring city with practically nobody to help her.
I was thinking about that too, and my only thought was that Roman predicted that other actor would go blind, and that was how Guy would know they were for real. It was eerily quiet in that living room. That's why Guy was staring in disbelief. What a selfish *****
@@timebandito4278 Good point. The night probably ended with Guy intrigued but not yet convinced, and he probably left it with Roman that he would believe him and offer up Rosemary as a sacrifice if he indeed got the part, which he ultimately did.
Oh for God’s sake, everyone’s always harping on about the bloody nose. No! Voldemort doesn’t have a nose! It’s not that odd. The Thing has no ears, Freddy Krueger has no skin, Doomsday has no dick. I don’t hear people losing their shit over that!
A truly terrifying climactic scene in all respects: the subjective camera angles, direction and music eliciting paranoia and a genuine sense of dread. The ending is, in a way, absurdly comic when we face evil as an afternoon tea party with seemingly harmless elderly people. Undeniably Polanski's modern horror masterpiece.
The ending is one that sticks. Shattering and yet childlike/innocent. Rosemary accepting her fate, raising the spawn of Satan. It is an open end leaving the viewer feeling helpless and alone - as the camera pulls back to a top shot of the Dakota. The bleak realism Polanski employs is inherent in his other feature films "Knife in the Water", "Cul-de-Sac" and "Repulsion" - among others. His characters rarely find peace or redemption.
You know, one thing that I think is even a bit creepier about this scene that is overlooked is one other fact: You can never hear the baby make any noises. It’s minor, but it’s chilling. Especially since Rosemary’s “what have you done to it’s eyes?!” line indicates he’s *not* asleep.
The horrifying part is that, imagine if you were a parent. You'd want to protect your children no matter what, so seeing this mother go through this is tough.
A great classic. The slow buildup is meant to show Rosemary's dawning awareness that all these nice old folks might just be a group of unspeakably evil people after all. I found the new remake boring and gory - give the audience credit in the original for using their imagination to imagine the utter horror.
Dave Glo Yeah, that unnecessary made-for-tv version was utter jackass. OOOOH LOOK, THIS TIME it's set in PARIS! OOOOH LOOK, THIS TIME Rosemary is BLACK! OOOOH LOOK, THIS TIME they SHOW THE BABY! None of which did anything for the movie. Not to mention, that film didn't even have the guts to have the supporting cast chant, HAIL SATAN! Instead it has them chant, Hail Rosemary; quietly I might add. Lame. Skip it. Stick with this, the classic original version. 👍🏻
Yes, at this point, she probably thought that they were nothing more than a bunch of old lunatics dabbling in witchcraft. Notice how she never made any connection to the Devil until they told her, and when she first saw the baby, she of course finally came to the realization that something supernatural had occurred.
The Japanese tourist made Rosemary’s situation far more hopeless. She was up against more than just a few crazy old people, but an international organization.
18 Years Later: Adrian: (levitating a bunch of stuff around his room) With these powers, I could be...A SUPERHERO! Fighting crime, protecting the innocent! Battling the followers of Satan with the powers he himself gave me! Cultist 1: This could present an issue... Cultist 2: Yeahhh, that's what we forgot: the whole 'humans have free will' thing...
I think that Guy Woodhouse is one of the greatest villains ever. He acts all cool nonchalant while his wife becomes unglued during her pregnancy. He allows his neighbors (who are, yes, evil) to take the fall for his actions--pimping his wife out to the devil to reap financial gain and success. John Casavettes is fantastic, even if he Roman Polanski did but heads during filming.
This moment is so satisfactory, dissatisfactory and scary at the same time. On the one hand, all the time we were expecting Rosemary to figure it all out and discover these maniacs and we got it... But the reaction of everybody was not what at least I expected, those satanists were so calm to such a scary and tensioning situation that I felt they were creepier and crazier than what I thought. And the fact that Rosemary accepted being her mother and raise the son of the Devil just left me with the feeling of sadness and dissatisfaction.
I think it's both kind of funny and creepy, having a seemingly nice old couple so gleefully praising Satan. One of the reasons this movie is so effective is that the Satanists in the film, for the most part, seem like charming and decent people. Minnie and Roman for instance initially come off as friendly, welcoming, and generally normal despite their true nature. That's pretty disturbing when you think of it.
This whole scene is funny. Everything about is off about it. Like a f**ked up dinner party. All the happy old people and even that guy taking pictures. I think it's meant to be that way, making you laugh and cringe simultaneously.
It's hilarious. The older woman in that shot plays Aunt Bee's best friend, Clara, on The Andy Griffith Show. The only thing that would be funnier would be if Aunt Bee herself popped up and screamed "Hail Satan!"
they don't make horror movies like this anymore. Polanski was a genius. This movie truly terrified me while ideas watching this in the dark in the basement. the atmosphere and music were brilliant in scaring the bejesus out of you.
It is? What about The Exorcist, or Damien Omen II or The Sixth Sense, or The Ring, or Final Destination, or Carrie, or Misery, or Look Away, or The Faculty, or The Craft, or Soy-lent Green, or The Exorcism of Emily Rose, or The Wish Master, or so many more!
The way the actors have shown their performance is true brilliance.Their demeanor doesnt suddenly shifted from good friendly neighbour to vicious monsters,that would have felt like a jerk to character development.Instill,till the end they were consistent in their behaviour.Thats more creepy than if they had acted like monsters.
One of my fav movies as a kid and still today. The writing directing the acting is above great and this movie couldn't be made today! The ending was done perfectly as was the entire movie. I remember as a kid watching this late at night scarying the heck out of me. I watch it thousands of time. classic.
1:44 anyone else notice that Ruth Gordon flubs her dialogue when she says "He choose you out of all the world" and then immediately corrects herself lol
I honestly like it better like this because it sounds way more natural. People trip over their words all the time in real life. When actors and actresses stutter in shows/movies, it feels more realistic to me
Yes. May absolute favorites are Rosemary’s Baby, The Exorcist, The Omen, Carrie, and The Shining. They don’t make horror films like they used to. Although I will say the last few years have seen some really promising developments, like The Witch, Hereditary, Midsomner.
That whining trumpet music is the sound of spoiled milk curdling before your eyes. In a two-second span, her hopes of a normal motherhood dissolve, leaving the dreaded realization that the nightmare she thought she was living has only just begun.
I know right? If I was Satan I'd have the baby look like Robert Redford, a boy born in 1966 could come a long way in this prejudice world if he has blond hair and blue eyes
+Julianne Hannes Devil in disguise... agreed, that would actually been a smart move. But what can you expect from that old goat head lacking in imagination? Lol.
I can't understand why other actors in the movie weren't nominated. Like John Cassavetes who played Rosemary's husband, Sidney Blackmer as Roman and of course Mia Farrow as Rosemary alongside Ruth Gordon who played Minnie ⁉️
What fascinates me about this scene is the brilliant filmmaking used in it. There is great dialogue, great acting and one of the most terrifying scores I have ever heard. But really the best thing about this scene is that it didn't show exactly what the baby looked like. Instead of showing the baby, they showed us the shock and the terrified facial expression of Rosemary. Some may not like the fact that they didn't see the baby because of curiosity. But that curiosity is also why this scene is so great. You were so curious to know what the baby looked like that you started imagining the baby's looks in your mind. That is what the scene is suppose to accomplish. It didn't really matter if they didn't show the baby, what matters is how terrifying and monstrous you imagine the baby to look like.
Just finished reading the book! When she sees the baby’s eyes I got mad goosebumps! It describes them as being yellow with no white or corneas, just yellow!
These gender reveal parties are getting out of control
This comment is no longer a joke.
❌boy
❌girl
✅devil
I'm happy to give your comment its 700th like!
@vestiphobe what? They were talking about a wild fire lmao?
@vestiphobe Wasn't the poster talking about the baby's gender reveal as the devil?
That saxophone "scream" when she sees the eyes of the baby, really gave me goosebumps when i first saw the movie and it still does everytime i watch this scene.
Muted Trumpet
@@daweller
Μuted trumpet ? Maybe you're right, I can't tell for sure.
@@theo9952 well, could also be some woodwind like a clarinet or oboe
@@daweller Υes, come to think of it now, it could.
Goosebumps? I almost had a heart attack when that Voice that came out of nowhere did that!
I love the way she screams the word “MANIACS.” The definition of blood-curdling. Great performance
Better than Charlton Heston at end of Planet of the Apes
Their performances were terrible 😂
@@retrospectgaming8754 Aye, their performances were terrifying to behold. If I take your meaning aright.
weird science
Crazy seeing you here!
"He has his fathers eyes" such a great line lol
It’s the non-chalant way Roman says it that makes the delivery of the line poignant
@@marciloni12 yes, I agree, and it was one of the worst decisions ever made in the 2014 tv remake with Zoe Saldana, to actually show the baby! We can only imagine what kind of monster 1968 Rosemary eventually accepted as her flesh-and-blood son. Since we get short glimpses of the devil's ugly scaly body and demonic eyes (he actually seems to look a lot like an ork from Peter Jackson's LOTR) during the black mass rape scene, we can imagine that the resulting baby must've inherited at least a few of his father's ugly features. Only a mother could love such a little monster. I blame the crying, lo!! The baby totally sounds like any other newborn who wants to be comforted. And you can almost see how Rosemary's motherly instincts start to kick in - despite the baby's looks.
However, the 2014 baby is shown in full detail - and he is actually a gorgeous baby with beautiful bright blue eyes which are striking but not the least bit scary or demonic. If babies fathered by the devil himself look like that, he could start a profitable side business as a sperm donor😄. The decision to actually show a perfectly normal beautiful baby causes the iconic lines "What have you done to his eyes??" - "He has his father's eyes!" to fall totally flat. The end is absolutely anticlimactic in the remake. I wonder what they were thinking! Maybe the underlying idea was to eliminate the supernatural element. The eyes of the baby of the 1968 movie make it pretty clear that in the reality of that particular movie the devil actually exists. However, the remake leaves it open if the devil exists, since all terrible happenings could've been caused solely by the machinations of evil humans. The blue-eyed stranger who apparently fathered the baby could well be just an ordinary man with evil intentions. It would have been much more effective and scary if - like in the original version - the baby's looks had remained a secret. While it's truly astonishing that Mia Farrow's Rosemary ultimately accepted her demonic son, it's not surprising at all that Zoe Saldana's Rosemary decides to love her beautiful baby. After all, there's no reason for her to suspect that the baby was really the son of the devil.
I'm responsible for your 666th like. Make of that what you will 😂
The Adams family values gave a nice hint back to this scene ."He has his Grandfather's eyes!"Gomez,Take those out of his Mouth!"
troy ray it’s so good. I love that line.
One of the most brilliant decisions ever to be put to film is Polanski's decision NOT to show the baby. Our own imaginations are 1000x worse than any visual. And he knew that. Genius.
pup lover Yup! Something modern horror films are lacking!
***** True! Good luck getting these ADHD millenials to appreciate movies where you have to think!
Thats why I get more of a scare from the classics and occasional independent films which are not sucked into those new Hollywood formulas.
The Memorgia Original!
The Memorgia ????
John Cassevetes pacing in the background like a cowardly worm is the cherry on top of this amazing scene.
I don't think Guy is winning the Best Husband awat
That music combined with her expression sends chills down my spine.
What instrument makes that noise? It is very creepy
@@tessalette3231 It sounds like a trombone.
I love the way the camera pans around her as she turns to everyone in the room. It helps the viewer feel the same chaos and just as frantic as Rosemary.
@@tessalette3231 that's a creepy Trumpet. ..
Does it every single goddamn time for me too. This is one of a handful of films that can genuinely give me the creeps.
great acting from mia farrow that look on her face after seeing the baby makes my blood run cold, sheer horror
Dissent That's not only my favorite scene from this movie but it is the only scary scene in this movie. It makes your imagination run with her expression.
I was just thinking that, and the scene where they tell her the baby is dead. They don't make actresses raw like that any more.
+Dissent That, and the creepy music.
+Dissent I love the reaction she gives to seeing the baby. It makes your imagination run wild. You feel her disgust and horror. I don't think she was overacting. This is a very extreme ending and situation. Her acting was perfect for this extreme scene.
This whole scene is great acting, and great cinematogrophy. The music plus "his power is stronger than stronger! His might will last longer than longer!" Truly harrowing
This scene actually feels like a dream sequence, with the suspension of logic you sometimes get in dreams - a woman strides into a living room with a knife and is hardly noticed.
Wow so true!
Life can feel like a dream especially when something traumatizing is happening.
Yes very well put. It was extremely surreal
It lends some credence to the theory that this is all in Rosemary's head, who is going through psychosis because of the pregnancy and miscarriage
I absolutely love how the old lady explains the situation so plainly and matter of fact in that thick accent while everyone else is shouting religiously. She's hysterical.
And she explains it as if Rosemary ought to be grateful.
Yes! She left the biggest impact in me
Minnie's personality never changed when the truth was finally revealed. Often, horror films have characters present as more sinister when their true evil is revealed, not with Minnie (Ruth Gordon's character). She remained funny, catty, and nosey from start to end! 🎉
@@beetlejamie8065 She's such an icon, she's the moment
@@biaispravda she's also a fucking satanist
The 60s 70s horror movies are the scariest because they use subtle psychological horror unlike the in your face CGI/makeup that modern horror movies use.
chaoticdays Exactly! Movies like this are not only classic to the genre but classics as a whole. A lot of directors knew how to direct a good horror film given the a great cast and screenplay such as this, and The Exorcist, The Omen, and sorta Amityville Horror with Margot Kidder and John Brolin(obviously have been hoaxed AF but still made a creepy ass movie) Anyway, right on for the comment I completely agree with you LoL
Slashers were the beginning of the end. The only ones that were worth a damn were the original Nightmare and MAYBE the first Friday and Texas Chainsaw (haven't seen them so can't offer an opinion). Scream was as well because it was silly and at least tried to kill the vanquish the genre. Hellraiser was actually good from what I remember, but IDK objective quality.
The last good horror movie I've seen, chronologically speaking, was the Babadook (hyped, yes, but good nonetheless). The last good American ones were The Ring series and the adaptation to Silent Hill. The latter was directed by a Frenchman who was such a huge fan of the games he wanted to adapt it as soon as the first one came out.
After everyone got sick of torture porn and fake found footage after One Missed Called killed J-Horror, it seems like they're going back to (fake, bad) religious horror and zombies. Zombies are definitely partiality due to the Walking Dead, and demons and witches and shit, IDK, maybe just their lack of creativity in general. Or Supernatural (the show), or American Horror Story, or their disturbing fondness for occult and demonic imagery as a whole. Whatever their reasoning, MOST big horror movies nowadays are nothing more than porn, and the really bad kind that leaves wanting to take a shower and watch feel good Disney movies at that. The only good horror left is in the written media, online, or in video game form.
Yeah, a bunch of people shouting "Hail Satan" as they explain that she fave birth to the devil's child is real subtle horror.
There were some really bad horror movies from the 60s too, but we remember the good ones. Sure, a lot of modern horror films are bad, but honestly the genre is as good now as its ever been. If you think modern horror movies are all jump scares and CGI, then you need to look harder! There are some amazing horror films being released today, and the genre has learned a lot over the past 50 years.
So true I don't bother watching them they can't hold a candle to these classics
chaoticdays *BAAAABAAAADOOOOOK*
This scene really disturbed me! This film really made me terrified of cults. The fact that they didn’t show the baby made this scene so much more horrifying!
The Greek Pianist they did at 2:12
@@nidieunimaitre3638 No, that was the Devil himself. Rosemary was remembering her being raped.
Travis B thanks for correcting me
Travis B yeah, its’s definitely the devil himself, the baby would obviously look.. younger and cutter :)
The Greek Pianist I agree in my opinion if they showed it the scene and the music would have been super fucking Anti climactic and cliche
The true horror of this film was at the end. When we hoped and prayed that Rosemary kills the baby and ends it all. But she pets the baby and accepts to be his mother. Throughout the film it was only us and Rosemary against the mysteries and unknown vicious plots. But at the end it's just us. Left alone.
In the book, she intends to grab the baby, throw it out the window, and jump out after it. Then she reasons that it's partly human, so she'll bring the issue to the Vatican and let them deal with it. As for herself, she knows she's defeated. Sad really.
+Novin Sadighi That's really well put. After seeing that Rosemary MAY accept the baby, it's the audience left holding the bag. We, the audience, have been betrayed. Great way of putting that!
+Novin Sadighi The *true* horror was when in real life Sharon Tate and her baby were murdered bestially soon after the premiere of this movie - a strange case of life imitates art? Who knows...
TheNightmareReaper Hmm, I'm not sure how you got that ending. In the sequel by Ira Levin, the baby grows into a man of 33 (sound familiar to anyone else?!) and kills off humanity. I don't really consider that 'somewhat good.' But then again, maybe you've got a point and humanity should be killed off!
Dave Glo Jeez! I read the sequel a long time ago and never made the age 33 connection to the death of a certain prominent historical religious figure who shall remain nameless. How could I have missed that?Thank you!!
That music at 0:49 and the look on her face oh my goodness. Nobody makes this stuff anymore.
Sadly, now everything is cheap jumpscares
Watch Hereditary, has combined good old creepy horror and good acting with the good effects of modern age.
watch hereditary
Hereditary has good plot and very cool music also.
well my neighbors make those sounds once a week
No line in film history has ever been delivered more perfectly than Mia Farrow's "What have you done to its eyes!"
The way the woman at 1:44 speaks makes it sound like a reasonable argument.
bs lol like “oh.. makes sense.. grab the champagne! Let’s celebrate!”
That made me laugh 😂
And that's why she won an Oscar for her performance.
That's the phylosophy of Luciferianism as well...
Yeah. That actress who played Minnie was so natural 🖤
my favorite line in the movie: "shut up, you're in Dubrovnik, I don't hear you"
What does that mean?
+Anna Costello Wisniewski What did she mean by that?
+Starguard ! Apparently, Dubrovnik is a city in Croatia. My guess is it was a reference to her vacation fantasies that she had during the movie. Or when Roman went traveling near the end of the movie. I don't remember where he went, maybe he went to Dubrovnik.
blackhart64 Thanks!
well, Dubrovnik is one of the cities Roman said he traveled to...and I think that's where he said he and Ruth Gordon were going when they left town when Rosemary was ready to give birth. In fact, he was lying about leaving NYC...he'd never miss the birth of the Baby. So I guess she's being ironic--calling him on his lie. It's a funny tension-releaving bit in a very intense scene
The fact that everyone in that room looks normal and acts normal in the outside world makes it even more terrifying.
All they do is celebrating the birth of their lord and savior. You know, normal behavior. They´re not terrifying, but simply humble observants to the new age.
Hail Satan!
@@theheavymetalbrony2257 ok
@@spaceace4387 Just to let you know, I´m playing a character here. In this story they are truly some evil people trying to bring on the end times of humanity. I wrote my original comment while I was drunk and I tend to get into character as an "actual" satanist when I´m in that mood. Hope that clears things out for you and I hope I didn´t scare you too much.
@@theheavymetalbrony2257 ok
I see little distinction between these folks and religious zealots. Lots of shouting and thinking their way is the only way.
though I wouldn't consider this movie "scary," it leaves you with an unsettling feeling for a while that is difficult to shake off. Am I the only one who feels this way?
It's a different type of scary, more shocking and unsettling.
Rachel Vass Yes, you are the only human to have a particular experience, it is unique to you; you are special.
No not at all. I felt the exact same way as well.
ony mous Why don't you? It was a joke. Hypocrite much?
People really need to lighten the fuck up! boring cunts! :P
0:47 is so sinister the way Mia Farrow's eyes get so wide in shock
george mikal and the music is so freaking distutbing
C Daddy the music makes me laugh for some reason
Squishy Zoran yeah, it's quite funny
Squishy Zoran me too 😂
Quality acting
“What have you DONE to him you MANIAAACS?!?” That’s my fave lol
Mia Farrow's reaction to her baby's looks is not only the scariest part in this film (and the only scary part really) it's also a horrifying means of making people pair their imagination with the movie's intentions.
To me the scariest part was them all chanting "hail satan." For the first time you're shown they actually are satanist, and you're just like fuck...
Yes, very scary moment. But I'd say getting raped by the devil in front of a coven of old folks might rate right up there as very creepy! Also when she's first pregnant and gets very sick - her doctor is a satanist too; any other doctor would've said, uh, honey, you got a beast inside there! No wonder you're feeling under the weather!
+Dave Glo that also explains why she was eating her meat raw, those were unnatural cravings as she had a beast inside of her!
For me the scariest thing is just how inevitable the ending feels. Rosemary really didn’t stand a chance once they decided she should be the mother.
sin8800 everyone has a different perspective and view on how it looks
what have you done to him you MANIAAACSSSSS!!!!!
That had me dying.
is that from that insane movie mother
liza Estevez GET OUT OF MY HOUUUSSSSSSSSE!
no Liza it's from the video that is playing right now wtf lol
YOU BLEW IT UP!!! CURSE YOU ALL TO HELL!!! wait...wrong movie
One of the most memorable scenes from a movie. The chords at the moment Rosemary sees the baby is enough to give one an idea what the baby looks like.
Like all movies, Rosemary's Baby is not meant to be seen just in one clip on RUclips. After watching the whole film in its entirety, this scene is horrifying.
The innocent naive human totally fooled and led astray by satans family and her career aspiring husband.
Nah, not really. Saw this movie when I was 13 and thought this scene was hilarious. I know it’s a product of its time, but Mia’s overacting killed it. “Noooooo! It can’t beeeee!”
Exactly
@@HauntFreak13 the movie is scarier than the majority of supernatural horror movies produced today and it also talks about how women are seen by society.
Agreed. In context it’s the scariest scene in the film.
Ruth Gordon is just amazing in this scene, explaining to Rosemary that she was "chosen" as if Rosemary should be proud of that!
“What have you done to it? What have you done to its eyes?!” That line always haunts me, and Rosemary’s wide-eyed terror upon seeing her baby only adds to the horror.
I once heard a female critic say that in the 1970's there were 2 movies that would make you terrified to be a woman. The Stepford Wives & Rosemary's Baby.
It is horrifying to think that someone would use you just for your uterus and then not even try and care for the resulting baby.
I agree. Ira Levine wrote both novels and I think that he's a great feminist writer
Actually, terrified to be a MARRIED woman.
All honesty? The Exorcist didn't scare me much. Didn't see it until I was 17, and while it started the reliance on demons and gore and exorcisms to scare people, oversaturation of the same types of movies made it less scary, even though I still liked it. But this? Jesus, the story buildup and pure suspense was utterly nerve-shredding. I love this movie to pieces.
"Gore"
What version of The Exorcist did you watch?
Imagine being nine years old when the movie came out and sister took me to watch it and, irresponsibly enough, the entrance was allowed. I can’t watch horror movies since then.
Carlos Velasquez don't tell me the exorcist didn't make you feel unsettled. I'm 20 and that movie still fucks with me
I totally agree with you
Carlos Velasquez One of the key differences between this film and "The Exorcist" is that "Rosemary's Baby" suggestively toys with the idea of demonic worship, whereas "The Exorcist" is more "in your face" about it, as it deals rather with possession than worship.
Dunno how they did it, but the composer and the trumpeteer hit the PERFECT tone right when Ro sees the baby. Chilling beyond belief.
The look of pure terror in Mia Farrows eyes is more blood chilling than any demon baby's eyes could be. The choice not to show us the baby and instead only her reaction is a brilliant decision. Horror is more about the things we don't see and can't properly rationalise.
If producer William Castle (known for his gimmicky "horror movies" of the 50's and 60's like The Tingler, the OG Thirteen Ghosts and House on Haunted Hill) had his way, we would've seen the baby. The director fought tooth and nail against it. Say what you will about the director but he at least made the right call here.
Everyone can imagine it in a different ways, thus way we imagine it in the scariest way possible - differently for every human.
@@mydloSA or we could imagine it as it's shown at 2:12...
@@Nuuur_9 I'm not sure if that's the father or son haha
@@mydloSA “he has his father’s eyes…”
Interesting that she's named Rosemary. It could mean Red Mary as in Satan's version of Mary.
+Jonathan Hole Ikr. I thought of that too.
Jonathan Hole maybe that's the reason Satan decided to come up from Hell and raped Rosemary.
Monster Master Gojira Mary is really Isis.
The popularity of that beautiful name plummeted abruptly after this movie and never really recovered it's former glory. It is a very pretty female name.
I thought it was interesting that the movie talked about the significance of herbs in Satanic rituals, while rosemary itself is a kind of herb. As if she was specifically grown just like the herbs in her apartment.
Mia Farrow’s performance in this movie: one of the greatest Oscar snubs of all time
Not sure how this plays out, but I heard that her recent ex-husband Frank Sinatra, who was furious at her for continuing to work after their marriage (he had the divorce papers served to her on the movie set), used his "influence" in Hollywood to prevent Mia from even being nominated.
This should've been nominated and won best picture
@@jerrygil1965 over Frank Sinatra's dead body
Plus anything with a whiff of horror about it was always treated as a B movie even when it's as well done as this.
Her first movie 🎥 break 21 years old
one of the GREATEST scenes of any movie in history.....a gem.
My favorite detail in this is how Guy can't even look at Rosemary and even has to leave the room because he's so ashamed of himself.
He’s not ashamed of himself.
He’s too much of a coward to face his wife.
He’s an evil, worthless nobody!
I know this a movie. I know he was an actor. But, good God..
I absolutely LOATHED that POS character Guy Woodhouse. I wanted to kiss his face with a rake..or an ice pick. So, in all fairness, I must absolutely commend his acting ability. Smarmy little POS that he is, bravo!
He's not ashamed. He is just a coward.
He was a cuk to Satan. The epitome of being a cuk.
What have you done to him, you ManIACS?!
Delivery of that line was impeccable.
I hate it when that happens.
Billie Piper’s Teeth TM lol having an ugly baby?
Sucks doesn’t it.
BarterTom Hence the phrase, "A face only a _mother_ could love." 😉
What the fuck🤣
This scene still gives me chills.
How??? The acting is awful.
@@jrex3 No
@Victor's life I understand a shit movie
Adrian must be about 50 by now, surveying the state of the world and pleased that his life’s work is proceeding on schedule.
He was born in 1966, he would be 55 years old
In 2016, the Superbowl was his 50th birthday celebration.
@@brijmsn But he was born in June.
@@humanbeing2420 They were celebrating the whole satanic year.
Plot twist :Adrian's twin brother is Michael. Both born 6/6/66
I still think back on the scene when Guy and Rosemary first went over to Roman and Minnie's apartment for dinner. Minnie and Rosemary are washing dishes and talking in the kitchen, and all we see in the other room is Guy sitting and staring intently at an unseen Roman while smoke flows from a cigarette from Roman's direction. Obviously, this is when Guy was "recruited" to the other side, fame and fortune as an actor being his reward. But it makes me wonder what exactly Roman said or did to draw Guy in. Guy was so cynical and rationalistic, so Roman must have offered some rather ample proof of what power he and his crew possessed.
I absolutely love that pivotal scene. You described it perfectly. I always wanted to know what he said, too. Again, the genius of Polanski:, letting our imaginations do the work.
pup lover Thank you for your concurrence!
Poor Rosemary. She really didn’t stand a chance after that. She was the perfect target for the witches. Raised to be as compliant and accommodating as a doormat and all alone in an unfamiliar uncaring city with practically nobody to help her.
I was thinking about that too, and my only thought was that Roman predicted that other actor would go blind, and that was how Guy would know they were for real. It was eerily quiet in that living room. That's why Guy was staring in disbelief. What a selfish *****
@@timebandito4278 Good point. The night probably ended with Guy intrigued but not yet convinced, and he probably left it with Roman that he would believe him and offer up Rosemary as a sacrifice if he indeed got the part, which he ultimately did.
(Rosemary sees Voldemort as a baby)
Rosemary: What have you done to its nose!?
Animeniac 635 *its
(Rosemary discovers her baby is jewish)
Rosemary: “What have you done to its nose?!”
Oh for God’s sake, everyone’s always harping on about the bloody nose. No! Voldemort doesn’t have a nose! It’s not that odd. The Thing has no ears, Freddy Krueger has no skin, Doomsday has no dick. I don’t hear people losing their shit over that!
@@BarterTom it's just for fun.
Sees Rudolph as a baby
That look on her face is just gold. It’s so unsettling, and the music... don’t get me started on the music.
I love the music in this scene.
Krzysztof Komeda's film music is indeed the best!
The music is INSANE!
Brilliant horror film stretches up to his last second. Don't recall ever seeing a "horror movie" without seeing a single drop of blood.
Apart from Terry's suicide. Rather a lot of blood in that scene if I recall
Best female performance in a horror movie and one of the best female performances of all time by Mia Farrow.
A truly terrifying climactic scene in all respects: the subjective camera angles, direction and music eliciting paranoia and a genuine sense of dread. The ending is, in a way, absurdly comic when we face evil as an afternoon tea party with seemingly harmless elderly people. Undeniably Polanski's modern horror masterpiece.
The ending is one that sticks. Shattering and yet childlike/innocent. Rosemary accepting her fate, raising the spawn of Satan. It is an open end leaving the viewer feeling helpless and alone - as the camera pulls back to a top shot of the Dakota. The bleak realism Polanski employs is inherent in his other feature films "Knife in the Water", "Cul-de-Sac" and "Repulsion" - among others. His characters rarely find peace or redemption.
@@veryeyeofnight If you want truly bleak Polanski watch The Tenant.
@@veryeyeofnight My God dude, give that man a baby already....wait, guess you're not a 13 year old girl.
Rosemarys baby is one of the best Movie i ever seen!!
The sound that plays when she sees the child is so unnerving
It’s also chilling. The music alone tells you how frightening the child is.
that look of horror on her face after she see's the baby...makes my blood run cold
You know, one thing that I think is even a bit creepier about this scene that is overlooked is one other fact:
You can never hear the baby make any noises. It’s minor, but it’s chilling.
Especially since Rosemary’s “what have you done to it’s eyes?!” line indicates he’s *not* asleep.
It's like the baby is just staring at the ceiling love the imagination factor this movie had
He's busy contemplating what he'll do to the world
That mental image actually makes me laugh.
And the “it” ain’t human
In the book,the baby has feline eyes with slits,claws,tiny horns and a tail.
Probably the most creepy and evil ending in history of cinema!
That awkward moment when your name is Adrian.
wow such a powerful scene for the 60's...still impacts. I could imagine when it 1st. came out.
Exacto!
The horrifying part is that, imagine if you were a parent. You'd want to protect your children no matter what, so seeing this mother go through this is tough.
"He has his FATHER'S eyes" a MOST chilling line!
A great classic. The slow buildup is meant to show Rosemary's dawning awareness that all these nice old folks might just be a group of unspeakably evil people after all. I found the new remake boring and gory - give the audience credit in the original for using their imagination to imagine the utter horror.
Dave Glo Yeah, that unnecessary made-for-tv version was utter jackass. OOOOH LOOK, THIS TIME it's set in PARIS! OOOOH LOOK, THIS TIME Rosemary is BLACK! OOOOH LOOK, THIS TIME they SHOW THE BABY! None of which did anything for the movie. Not to mention, that film didn't even have the guts to have the supporting cast chant, HAIL SATAN! Instead it has them chant, Hail Rosemary; quietly I might add. Lame. Skip it. Stick with this, the classic original version. 👍🏻
Yes, at this point, she probably thought that they were nothing more than a bunch of old lunatics dabbling in witchcraft. Notice how she never made any connection to the Devil until they told her, and when she first saw the baby, she of course finally came to the realization that something supernatural had occurred.
@@bobthebear1246 agree Bob I've never had any interest in the new version the original is a horror masterpiece
What is brilliant when she sees the baby with horror she doesn't scream, the music does.
The Japanese tourist made Rosemary’s situation far more hopeless. She was up against more than just a few crazy old people, but an international organization.
Her expression upon seeing the baby combined with the music is one of the most chilling scenes of all time. Brilliant.
18 Years Later:
Adrian: (levitating a bunch of stuff around his room) With these powers, I could be...A SUPERHERO! Fighting crime, protecting the innocent! Battling the followers of Satan with the powers he himself gave me!
Cultist 1: This could present an issue...
Cultist 2: Yeahhh, that's what we forgot: the whole 'humans have free will' thing...
@@lookatthepicture4107 LMAO
That is how hellboy came to be.
That’s the story of Good Omens lmao
Sounds like Devilman to me
I think that Guy Woodhouse is one of the greatest villains ever. He acts all cool nonchalant while his wife becomes unglued during her pregnancy. He allows his neighbors (who are, yes, evil) to take the fall for his actions--pimping his wife out to the devil to reap financial gain and success. John Casavettes is fantastic, even if he Roman Polanski did but heads during filming.
are they evil or are they just loyal to their beliefs?
@@ataqueparoxisticoI would say gang raping a woman is a tad evil.
@@ataqueparoxisticoloyalty to an evil doctrine makes you evil by extension and choice
2:02 😆 “It can’t be!!!”
“look at his hands.”
“And his feet!”
This moment is so satisfactory, dissatisfactory and scary at the same time. On the one hand, all the time we were expecting Rosemary to figure it all out and discover these maniacs and we got it... But the reaction of everybody was not what at least I expected, those satanists were so calm to such a scary and tensioning situation that I felt they were creepier and crazier than what I thought. And the fact that Rosemary accepted being her mother and raise the son of the Devil just left me with the feeling of sadness and dissatisfaction.
The Japanese guy blurting out "Hail Satan!" with his thick accent at 1:56 cracks me up every time :D
Used as a' birthing chamber' a 'womb' just like princess Diana said she was.
Mia Farrow’s performance in this film is the most underrated in history
This is more or less the reaction I assume Mia Farrow had when she found those pictures of Soon Yi.
Oh that's cruel. But very funny!
@@wotan10950 no, just cruel
Yes. I was really glad she spat at him. He deserved that and a whole lot more.
I agree. That was a fitting response from her. He was disgusting
One of the most effective utilizations of music I've ever experienced in a film.
Absolutely haunting.
One of the greatest horror movies of all time. I've seen it 20 times and I'll probably watch it 20 more times.
Am i the onoy one that found the old couple's "Hail Satan" at 1:23 unintentionally funny?
I think it's both kind of funny and creepy, having a seemingly nice old couple so gleefully praising Satan. One of the reasons this movie is so effective is that the Satanists in the film, for the most part, seem like charming and decent people. Minnie and Roman for instance initially come off as friendly, welcoming, and generally normal despite their true nature. That's pretty disturbing when you think of it.
This whole scene is funny. Everything about is off about it. Like a f**ked up dinner party. All the happy old people and even that guy taking pictures. I think it's meant to be that way, making you laugh and cringe simultaneously.
It's hilarious. The older woman in that shot plays Aunt Bee's best friend, Clara, on The Andy Griffith Show. The only thing that would be funnier would be if Aunt Bee herself popped up and screamed "Hail Satan!"
Nathaniel Korb and
the moment she saw the babies eyes, such a chilling moment! you can only imagine what she see's..
they don't make horror movies like this anymore. Polanski was a genius. This movie truly terrified me while ideas watching this in the dark in the basement. the atmosphere and music were brilliant in scaring the bejesus out of you.
Amen.
This is my favorite horror film of all times
It is? What about The Exorcist, or Damien Omen II or The Sixth Sense, or The Ring, or Final Destination, or Carrie, or Misery, or Look Away, or The Faculty, or The Craft, or Soy-lent Green, or The Exorcism of Emily Rose, or The Wish Master, or so many more!
Because this shit is real.
The way the actors have shown their performance is true brilliance.Their demeanor doesnt suddenly shifted from good friendly neighbour to vicious monsters,that would have felt like a jerk to character development.Instill,till the end they were consistent in their behaviour.Thats more creepy than if they had acted like monsters.
Such powerful emotion, What have you done to him you manIACS!!!!
YOU MANIACS.
One of my fav movies as a kid and still today. The writing directing the acting is above great and this
movie couldn't be made today! The ending was done perfectly as was the entire movie. I remember
as a kid watching this late at night scarying the heck out of me. I watch it thousands of time. classic.
its really weird to watch this when your name is Adrian lol
"Hail Adrian!" - I think that would make a good ringtone
Right? My name's Adrienne, and when I first saw this scene I couldn't stop laughing.
Well j have some news for you buddy 😉😂
My name is Adrian and I felt kinda proud
And how do you think people named satan feel!
1:44 anyone else notice that Ruth Gordon flubs her dialogue when she says "He choose you out of all the world" and then immediately corrects herself lol
I honestly like it better like this because it sounds way more natural. People trip over their words all the time in real life. When actors and actresses stutter in shows/movies, it feels more realistic to me
"What have you done to him, you MANIAAACS" fucks me up EVERYTIME
Rosemarys Baby and The Shining are the two best horror movies Ever! ( to me! ☺)
To me to.
The exorcist too!
@Sagacious i'm sure you're right.
Yes. May absolute favorites are Rosemary’s Baby, The Exorcist, The Omen, Carrie, and The Shining. They don’t make horror films like they used to. Although I will say the last few years have seen some really promising developments, like The Witch, Hereditary, Midsomner.
@@edienandy what about "The Haunting at Hill House"? That series is bone-chilling
The camerawork is just amazing in this scene!
That whining trumpet music is the sound of spoiled milk curdling before your eyes. In a two-second span, her hopes of a normal motherhood dissolve, leaving the dreaded realization that the nightmare she thought she was living has only just begun.
Ok, but the question is if the boy has such disturbing eyes, how will he successfully grow up without suspicion ?
fruitofthejoot Funny, those questions are answered in the sequel novel: Son of Rosemary's Baby!
What about his hands?
+fruitofthejoot And his feet...
I know right? If I was Satan I'd have the baby look like Robert Redford, a boy born in 1966 could come a long way in this prejudice world if he has blond hair and blue eyes
+Julianne Hannes Devil in disguise... agreed, that would actually been a smart move. But what can you expect from that old goat head lacking in imagination? Lol.
I can't understand why other actors in the movie weren't nominated. Like John Cassavetes who played Rosemary's husband, Sidney Blackmer as Roman and of course Mia Farrow as Rosemary alongside Ruth Gordon who played Minnie ⁉️
This scene it’s so realistic. You would think that they’re NOT acting but just being themselves…
What We Do In the Shadows alternate ending😂😂
This is one of the great film performances of all time. Mia Farrow is a genius.
"The Year is One!"
Love that line.
I can’t even imagine people’s brains after this ending and how they fathomed it......
Polansky was a genius in his details. Rosemarys night gown being light blue like the virgin marys...
entire film is a masterpiece, he used cheerful yellows and whites in the beginning to portray how innocent and fresh she is...
She looks genuinely shocked and terrified when she saw the child.
What fascinates me about this scene is the brilliant filmmaking used in it. There is great dialogue, great acting and one of the most terrifying scores I have ever heard. But really the best thing about this scene is that it didn't show exactly what the baby looked like. Instead of showing the baby, they showed us the shock and the terrified facial expression of Rosemary. Some may not like the fact that they didn't see the baby because of curiosity. But that curiosity is also why this scene is so great. You were so curious to know what the baby looked like that you started imagining the baby's looks in your mind. That is what the scene is suppose to accomplish. It didn't really matter if they didn't show the baby, what matters is how terrifying and monstrous you imagine the baby to look like.
"what have you done to him you maniacs!" sometimes this creeps me out more than the Exorcist
Shut up,you're in Dubrovnik, I don't hear you! 😂
I loved this line, so funny and such a great delivery!
Still one of the best horror movies of all time.
Just finished reading the book! When she sees the baby’s eyes I got mad goosebumps! It describes them as being yellow with no white or corneas, just yellow!
Gabe Hernandez That is disturbing! OMG.
The book described the eyes. The film did not which was genius. The look on Mia's face when she sees the eyes if so masterful and so much scarier.
Check out the Japanese guy at 1:55... _"Hail, Satan!"_ LMAO!