Movie Description Joan Fontaine's fabulous performance as a woman who grows to fear the man she loves anchors this compelling story in which Alfred Hitchcock shows his love for playing with the audience's expectations. Perfectly cast is the dashing Cary Grant, whose lovable and charming persona is on full display while being completely transformed through Hitchcock's eerie camera work and visual innuendo--to the point that the simplest gesture takes on a new and malevolent aspect. SUSPICION lives up to its title's promise, weaving dread and ambiguity into a potent psychological net. Fontaine is the beautiful daughter of a wealthy, landed English family. Grant is the lighthearted and irreverent wastrel who charms Fontaine into elopement and succeeds in introducing the young woman to the pleasures of a more carefree outlook on life. However, as Fontaine discovers the legacy of Grant's carefree ways--his numerous debts and pursuers--she begins to suspect a darker past and must confront the horrible implications this has for her future.
| Credits | | Writer: | Joan Harrison, Samson Raphaelson | | Producer: | Alfred Hitchcock | | Cast: | Constance Worth, Dame May Whitty, Isabel Jeans, Leo G. Carroll, Reginald Sheffield |
Notes Hitchcock cameo: Hitch mails a letter at the village mailbox about halfway through the film.
Hitchcock put a light inside the glass of milk that Cary Grant carries upstairs to focus the audience's attention.
An RKO producer screened the print in Hitchcock's absence and deleted all scenes that suggested Cary Grant might be a killer. The head of RKO realized the 55-minute film was ludicrous and restored the chopped scenes.
The film was remade for television in 1987, starring Jane Curtin and Anthony Andrews.
Awards 1941Academy AwardsBest ActressJoan Fontaine
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