10 Movies To Watch if You Like Hitchcock's Rebecca, Ranked

Read on tvtowatchtonight
Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca, the gothic romance-meets-mystery released all the way back in 1940, has enchanted cinephiles for decades.

10. Gaslight (1944)
In London's genteel streets, an innocent Paula (Ingrid Bergman) finds herself ensnared in her husband's (Charles Boyer) insidious plot. Dimming gaslights, missing trinkets, and whispered secrets form the background score.

Paula's grasp on reality wanes as shadows play tricks on her. But is it merely a trick of the light or something far more sinister?


9. Notorious (1946)
Glamorous Alicia Huberman (Ingrid Bergman) possesses a stained reputation and a heart that beats fiercely. Recruited by a suave American agent (Cary Grant) for a perilous mission in Rio, she immerses herself in a world of deceit, Nazis, and uranium. The deeper she dives into the mission, the more entangled she becomes with the man who holds her heart hostage.

Love is the most dangerous game, after all.


8. Jane Eyre (1943)
Orphaned, mistreated, and often overlooked, Jane Eyre's (Joan Fontaine) resilience is both heart-wrenching and admirable.

Employed as a governess at Thornfield Hall, she discovers love in its most enigmatic form: Mr. Rochester (Orson Welles). Yet, behind every portrait and every closed door lie secrets. Dark and unsettling mysteries shroud Thornfield, and love might not be enough to dispel them.


7. The Others (2001)
The pale walls of a Victorian mansion, tucked away amidst a dense fog, hold the lives of Grace (Nicole Kidman) and her two light-sensitive children. Desperate for assistance, Grace hires peculiar servants who seem to know too much. As silence engulfs and darkness looms, Grace confronts a reality that is both terrifying and revelatory.

The house whispers, but are you willing to listen?


6. The Innocents (1961)
Miss Giddens (Deborah Kerr) arrives at a sprawling English estate to care for two seemingly angelic children. But innocence is often deceptive. Lurking beneath the children's cherubic facades are secrets as ancient as the mansion itself. Ghostly apparitions, eerie lullabies, and unsettling games pull Miss Giddens into a vortex of fear and paranoia.

Every shadow holds a story; every echo a lament.


5. The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947)
Gene Tierney plays Lucy Muir, a widow who chooses solitude in a seaside mansion. Only, she's not alone. Captain Daniel Gregg (Rex Harrison), a spirited (pun intended) former inhabitant, fills the house with his boisterous presence.

From confrontation to admiration, their ethereal love story defies the boundaries of life and death.


4. Vertigo (1958)
A tale of obsession unfolds in San Francisco's winding alleys. Retired police detective Scottie (James Stewart) is hired to follow Madeleine (Kim Novak), a woman seemingly possessed by spirits.

The vertiginous spiral of love and deception leads to heartbreak, madness, and illusions. Not all is as it appears in Hitchcock's colorful maze.


3. The Spiral Staircase (1946)
In a stormy town, a mute woman named Helen (Dorothy McGuire) confronts a series of gruesome murders targeting those with disabilities.

A foreboding mansion becomes a labyrinth of terror. Each creak of the spiral staircase portends doom. Will Helen's voice return in time to save her, or will she fall prey to the shadows that stalk?


2. Suspicion (1941)
Joan Fontaine graces the screen as Lina, a woman besotted with the charming Johnnie (Cary Grant). Their whirlwind romance soon marries an undercurrent of doubt. Secrets, lies, and a possibly lethal glass of milk. Trust is a double-edged sword, and love might not always shield from its cut.


1. Dark Victory (1939)
Bette Davis radiates as Judith, a headstrong heiress diagnosed with a terminal illness. As darkness encroaches, she finds solace in her love for Dr. Frederick Steele (George Brent). It's a poignant exploration of love, mortality, and the choices we make when faced with the inevitable