Spellbound

Synopsis: Dr. Constance Petersen (Ingrid Bergman) is a psychiatrist at Green Manors mental asylum. The head of Green Manors has just been replaced, with his replacement being the renowned Dr. Anthony Edwardes (Gregory Peck). Romance blossoms between Dr. Petersen and Dr. Edwards but Dr. Edwards starts to show odd aversions and personality traits. It is discovered that he is an impostor, and amnesiac, and may have killed the real Dr. Edwardes. Dr. Petersen is determined to discover the truth through unlocking the secrets held in the impostor's mind, a process which potentially puts her and others' lives at risk.
Director(s): Alfred Hitchcock
Production: Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment
  Won 1 Oscar. Another 1 win & 6 nominations.
 
IMDB:
7.6
Rotten Tomatoes:
83%
NOT RATED
Year:
1945
111 min
3,360 Views


Miss Carmichael, please.

Dr. Petersen is ready for you.

I'm awfully sorry. I have to go.

Had a perfect hand.

Would've beaten the pants off you.

- Harry will take you, Miss Carmichael.

- Thank you.

Watch her carefully.

Don't take your eyes off her.

- How are you today, Harry?

- Fine.

- You look a little bilious.

- It's the light.

I worry about you, dear.

I'll be all right.

Must we dash into Dr. Petersen's office?

Can't we go sit somewhere in private

and talk, just you and I?

Love it, if I had time.

Would you?

Come in.

You ruined a very interesting card game,

Dr. Petersen.

- You may go now, Harry.

- I'll be outside.

I hope you feel better today, Mary.

- Well, I don't.

- You will.

I think this whole thing is ridiculous.

What whole thing, Mary?

Psychoanalysis.

It bores the pants off of me.

Lying on the couch

like some dreary nitwit, telling all.

You don't really expect to get anywhere

listening to me babble

about my idiotic childhood.

Really.

My patients invariably regard me

as a wretched nuisance

during our first talks.

I see. It's my subconscious

putting up a fight.

It doesn't want me cured.

Exactly. It wants to continue

enjoying your disease.

Our job is to make you understand why.

When you know why you're doing

something that's bad for you

and when you first started doing it.

Then you can begin curing yourself.

You mean I've been telling you lies?

The usual proportion.

You're right. I've been lying like mad.

I hate men. I loathe them.

If one of them so much as touches me,

I want to sink my teeth into his hands

and bite it off.

In fact, I did that once.

Do you care to hear about it?

Tell me anything you remember.

We were dancing.

He kept asking me to marry him,

panting in my ear.

I suddenly pretended

I was going to kiss him

and sank my teeth into his mustache

and bit it clear off.

You're laughing at me.

That smug frozen face of yours

doesn't take me in.

You just want me to tell you all this

so you can feel superior to me.

You and your drooling science.

I detest you.

I never want to see

that nasty face of yours again!

I can't bear you.

You and your nickel's worth of nothing!

Come on, Miss Carmichael.

Silly fool.

Letting a creature like that worry me.

Miss Frozen Puss.

Dr. Fleurot,

I want to talk to you alone.

I can't stand that woman.

I'll see you later, Mary.

Come, Miss Carmichael.

Murchison must be really out of his mind

to assign Carmichael to you.

You may report your findings

to the new head when he arrives.

You can't treat

a love veteran like Carmichael

without some inside information.

I've done a great deal of research

on emotional problems

- and love difficulties.

- Research, my eye.

I've watched your work for six months.

It's brilliant but lifeless.

There's no intuition in it.

You approach all your problems

with an ice pack on your head.

- Are you making love to me?

- I will in a moment.

I'm just clearing the ground first.

I'm trying to convince you that your

lack of human and emotional experience

is bad for you as a doctor

and fatal for you as a woman.

I've heard that argument from

a number of amorous psychiatrists

who all wanted to make

a better doctor of me.

But I've got a much better argument.

- I'm terribly fond of you.

- Why?

It's rather like embracing a textbook.

- Why do you do it then?

- Because you're not a textbook.

You're a sweet, pulsing,

adorable woman underneath.

I sense it every time

I come near to you.

You sense only your own desires

and pulsations.

I assure you,

mine in no way resemble them.

Stop it. I'm mad about you.

I'm afraid I'm boring you.

No. Your attitudes are very interesting.

You're exactly like Miss Carmichael.

I'd like to throw a book at you.

But I won't.

- May I borrow this?

- Certainly.

Oh, and forgive me for my criticism.

I think you'd better stick to books.

And another thing...

Pardon me for marching in,

but I'm spreading the tidings.

My successor will be due any moment.

Dr. Murchison, it's been a pleasure

working under you.

Thank you very much.

Coming, Dr. Petersen?

I'm in no mad hurry

to welcome Dr. Edwardes.

It's hard to imagine this place

without you, Dr. Murchison.

Yes, I sort of go with the fixtures.

More than that. You are Green Manors.

It seems unfair.

You're very young in the profession.

You haven't learned

the basic secret of science.

The old must make way for the new,

particularly when the old is suspected

of a touch of senility.

That's ridiculous.

I should think the Board of Directors

would realize you're feeling better.

You've been like a new man

since your vacation.

The Board's as fair and all-knowing

as a hospital board can be.

I agree with you.

I'm as able and brilliant as ever.

But having crumbled once,

I might crumble again.

You were overworked.

A charming diagnosis

for a broken-down horse.

I shall always remember

your cheerfulness today

as a lesson in how to accept reality,

Dr. Murchison.

Don't be too taken in

by my happy air, Constance.

It's the least difficult way

of saying goodbye to 20 years.

Yes, I know.

Come in.

- Your mail, Dr. Petersen and Mr. Garmes.

- Come in, Mr. Garmes.

You're not leaving today?

I'll see you again?

I shall hover around for a while

like an old mother hen.

At least until Dr. Edwardes

is firmly on the list.

How do you feel today, Mr. Garmes?

Rate this script:4.5 / 2 votes

Ben Hecht

Ben Hecht (1894–1964) was an American screenwriter, director, producer, playwright, journalist and novelist. A journalist in his youth, he went on to write thirty-five books and some of the most entertaining screenplays and plays in America. He received screen credits, alone or in collaboration, for the stories or screenplays of some seventy films. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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