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  1. Rosemary's Baby: Directed by Roman Polanski. With Mia Farrow, John Cassavetes, Ruth Gordon, Sidney Blackmer. A young couple trying for a baby moves into an aging, ornate apartment building on Central Park West, where they find themselves surrounded by peculiar neighbors.

    • (237K)
    • Drama, Horror
    • Roman Polanski
    • 1968-06-12
  2. The Rosemary's BabyDVD, released on October 3, 2000 by Paramount Home Entertainment, contains a 23-minute documentary film, Mia and Roman, directed by Shahrokh Hatami, which was shot during the making of the film. The title refers to Mia Farrowand Roman Polanski.

  3. Rosemary's Daughter ( German: Rosemaries Tochter) is a 1976 West German sex comedy film directed by Rolf Thiele and starring Lillian Müller, Béla Ernyey, and Werner Pochath. [1] It is based on the story of Rosemarie Nitribitt, which Thiele had already treated more seriously in the 1958 drama Rosemary .

  4. Roman Polanski's "Rosemary's Baby" is a brooding, macabre film, filled with the sense of unthinkable danger. Strangely enough it also has an eerie sense of humor almost until the end. It is a creepy film and a crawly film, and a film filled with things that go bump in the night.

    • The Inversion of Nature and Security. Part of the thematic brilliance of Rosemary’s Baby is its success in playing off of one’s natural trust in things like doctors, urban living, loved ones, and the elderly.
    • The Score. The scoring of Rosemary’s Baby is commendable in that it accomplishes the goal of complimenting or setting the tone of the film without fail.
    • The Pace. One creative choice that separates Rosemary’s Baby from contemporary thrillers is its pacing. Many modern thrillers fall victim to the shortcoming of rushing through the plot and not properly building up to their reveals.
    • Metaphor. There are multiple metaphors to be found within Rosemary’s Baby, the most prominent of which is the manipulability and victimization of women in the 1960s.
  5. In 1968, Roman Polanski directed a horror classic that would go on to become a seminal work in the genre - “Rosemary’s Baby.” Set in New York City, this film tells the story of a young couple who move into a new apartment building and become entangled in a dark and sinister plot.

  6. The murder of the well-known Frankfurt high-class prostitute Rosemarie Nitribitt kept the Federal Republic in suspense at the time, but the crime could never be solved.