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Marnie
Mark marries Marnie although she is a habitual thief and has serious psychological problems, and tries to help her confront and resolve them.
4 June 1936, Chicago, Illinois, USA
10 December 1923, Schenectady, New York, USA
13 December 1917, Los Angeles, California, USA
February 11, 1905 in Iowa, USA
3 January 1908, Concho, Arizona, USA
1 November 1928, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
22 March 1933, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
23 August 1907, New York, USA
21 October 1902, Lockport, New York, USA
12 November 1933, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
March 20, 2012
This remains a compelling Hitchcock thriller but it's Tippi Hedron's remarkable central performance which steals the show.
October 30, 2001
Considered a misfire at the time, it now looks like late-period Hitchcock at his most Hitchcockian.
September 21, 2015
Psychologically resonant, visually transcendent ...
February 07, 2014
A farsighted yet unassuming thriller with brilliant desires to deconstruct a human mind.
September 12, 2008
Marnie is the character study of a thief and a liar, but what makes her tick remains clouded even after a climax reckoned to be shocking but somewhat missing its point.
January 02, 2013
professionally crafted film that focuses primarily on character development
January 01, 2000
At once a fascinating study of a sexual relationship and the master's most disappointing film in years.
July 11, 2012
Unfortunately, Marnie was released right after the masterpiece The Birds and comparisons were inevitable, but there's so much to admire about this work, textually, dramatically, visually.
February 09, 2006
It's still thrilling to watch, lush, cool and oddly moving.
March 20, 2012
A worthwhile watch for anyone who's ever enjoyed Hitchcock, but by comparison with his better known stuff it's an example style overtaking substance.
August 31, 2014
Hitchcock was criticised for bring shallow psychology into the film (Hedren's character is afraid of the colour red) but some of their exchanges - the film was based on a novel by Winston Graham - are sharp and droll.
March 20, 2012
Universally despised on its first release, Marnie remains one of Alfred Hitchcock's greatest and darkest achievements.

