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10.02.26, 20:30, Spellbound (1945)

Young Constance (Ingrid Bergman), a somewhat perfectionist psychiatrist from Vermont, suddenly falls in love with a mysterious patient with amnesia (Gregory Peck). Her new love turns out to be not entirely without complications when he is accused of murder. To protect him, Constance tries to unravel his repressed traumas in therapy sessions, hoping to uncover the truth in her practice. Because what is love without a thorough psychoanalysis of your partner? All the clues emerge in a delirium where eyes become liquid and the architecture is at least as unreliable as the patient's memory.

Alfred Hitchcock, master of suspense (and notorious control freak himself), brings his familiar ingredients together again in Spellbound. Cutting tension, cameos, plot twists and tight editing. He gave carte blanche to the surrealist painter Salvador Dalí for the set design of the dream sequence. This iconic scene has become permanently embedded in the collective film memory as a textbook example of how cinema can make you dream.

This screening will be introduced by Film-Plateau coordinator and filmmaker Julie Daems.

Alfred Hitchcock, 1945, USA, 111 minutes, English spoken, no subtitles
i.c.w. Film-Plateau
Campus Bijloke
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent