& FREE Delivery in the UK on orders over £20. Details
In stock.
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon. Gift-wrap available.
Quantity:1
Rosemary's Baby [1968] [D... has been added to your Basket
+ Â£1.26 UK delivery
Used: Very Good | Details
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comment: Expedited shipping available on this item. Your item will be previously owned but still in great condition. The disc will play perfectly without interruption and the case, inlay notes and sleeve may show limited signs of wear.

Other Sellers on Amazon
Add to Basket
£5.95
& FREE Delivery in the UK on orders over £20.00. Details
Sold by: jim-exselecky
55 used & new from £0.98
Have one to sell? Sell on Amazon

Rosemary's Baby [1968] [DVD]

4.4 out of 5 stars 105 customer reviews

Want it delivered to Germany - Mainland by Tuesday, 5 Apr.? Order within 32 hrs 3 mins and choose One-Day Delivery at checkout. Details
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon. Gift-wrap available.
Note: This item is eligible for click and collect. Details
Pick up your parcel at a time and place that suits you.
  • Choose from over 13,000 locations across the UK
  • Prime members get unlimited deliveries at no additional cost
How to order to an Amazon Pickup Location?
  1. Find your preferred location and add it to your address book
  2. Dispatch to this address when you check out
Learn more
39 new from Â£4.58 13 used from Â£0.98 3 collectible from Â£4.99

*Two for £10 Offer
This title is in our Two for £10 promotion. Click here to see the full range. Offer only applies to Qualifying Items dispatched from and sold by Amazon. It does not apply to purchases made from third-party sellers at Amazon.co.uk’s Marketplace platform.
£5.95 & FREE Delivery in the UK on orders over £20. Details In stock. Dispatched from and sold by Amazon. Gift-wrap available.

Special Offers and Product Promotions

  • Enjoy £1.00 credit to spend on movies or TV on Amazon Video when you purchase a DVD or Blu-ray offered by Amazon.co.uk. A maximum of 1 credit per customer applies. UK customers only. Offer ends at 23:59 GMT on Wednesday, November 30, 2016 Here's how (terms and conditions apply)
  • Buy two DVD or Blu-ray for £10 from the qualifying selection when dispatched from and sold by Amazon. Here's how (terms and conditions apply)
  • Check out big titles at small prices with our Chart Offers in DVD & Blu-ray. Find more great prices in our Top Offers Store.

Frequently Bought Together

  • Rosemary's Baby [1968] [DVD]
  • +
  • The Wicker Man - 4-Disc 40th Anniversary Edition [DVD]
Total price: £15.95
Buy the selected items together

What Other Items Do Customers Buy After Viewing This Item?

Customers Also Watched on Amazon Video


Product details

  • Actors: Mia Farrow, John Cassavetes, Ruth Gordon, Sidney Blackmer, Maurice Evans
  • Directors: Roman Polanski
  • Writers: Roman Polanski, Ira Levin
  • Producers: Dona Holloway, William Castle
  • Format: PAL
  • Language: English
  • Subtitles: Arabic, Bulgarian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, German, Hungarian, Icelandic, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Swedish, Turkish, English
  • Dubbed: German
  • Subtitles For The Hearing Impaired: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.85:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Paramount Home Entertainment
  • DVD Release Date: 5 Nov. 2001
  • Run Time: 131 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (105 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000059L9G
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,112 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

Exciting horror film with Mia Farrow as an innocent pregnant wife betrayed by her ambitious husband to a cult of devil-worshippers.

From Amazon.co.uk

For Rosemary’s Baby, his modern horror tale about Satanic worship and a pregnant woman’s decline into madness, Roman Polanski moves from the traditional monolithic mansions of Gothic flicks to an apartment building in New York City. Based on Ira Levin’s novel, the story concerns Rosemary (Mia Farrow) and Guy Woodhouse who find the apartment of their dreams in a luxurious complex in Manhattan. Soon after moving in and making friends with a group of elderly neighbours, Guy’s career takes off and Rosemary discovers she is pregnant. Their happiness seems complete. But gradually Rosemary begins to sense that something is wrong with this baby, and slowly and surely her life begins to unravel.

Polanski uses such subtle means to build up the sense of preternatural disquiet that initially you suspect Rosemary’s prenatal paranoia to be a figment of her imagination. But the guilty parties and their demonic plan to make Rosemary the receptacle of their master’s child are eventually revealed and, as Rosemary looses her grip on reality, she realises that no one can be trusted. The performances are excellent throughout; Farrow as the young wife is so fragile that you wonder how she made it unscathed to adulthood and John Cassavetes is horrifyingly duplicitous as her husband Guy. But the real star is Polanski’s masterful direction. The mood is at the same time oppressive and hysterical with the mounting terror coming from the situation and gradually unravelling plot rather than any schlock horror moments.

On the DVD: the Dolby 5.1 soundtrack shows off Christopher Komeda’s eerie "lullaby" score to it’s haunting best. The film is presented in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen and is relatively free of speckle and dust, some scenes filmed in low light are slightly grainier but this adds to the oppressive tension that Polanski is building up in the film. In terms of extras there is a 20-minute "making of" feature from 1968 and retrospective interviews with Polanski, production designer Richard Sylbert and producer Robert Evans. --Kristen Bowditch

See all Product Description

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Blu-ray Verified Purchase
The horror in "Rosemary's Baby" is the horror of betrayal and powerlessness. There are few shock moments (excluding a misjudged devil's costume with hairy arms - Wlliam Castle, the schlock producer's influence, no doubt who even makes a sub-Hitchcockian appearance in a minute cameo) in the 137 minute running time. However this is immaterial as the strength of the film rests in the classy direction (surely one of Polanski's finest achievements) excellent performances and the sophisticated and incremental paranoia it generates along with the copious black comedy lurking just below the film's surface which perfectly captures the chilling banality of evil.

No character should or can be trusted in the world which Rosemary inhabits once she is installed in her New York apartment. Her husband, the neighbours, her doctor, the elevator boy are all potentially sinister figures and even Rosemary herself could quite easily be unhinged too - and this feeling of relativism and uncertainty permeates the action for most of the film.

What an actor will do to gain a role in a new TV series is the deliciously ironic central plot premise in this, heavily 60's production, which does for "old folks" what Spielberg did for sharks and despite it's length, the film just speeds by to it's extraordinary and movingly horrific conclusion.

This Paramount Blu Ray has quite good definition and sports a totally satisfactory audio transfer too even if it doesn't wow.
I have not seen the Region A locked, highly celebrated, Criterion version but this edition seems fine by me. The definition is generally very good, the colour saturation acceptable, the contrast and black levels good too for a film of it's period and the grain is present but not intrusive. It is considerably cheaper than the Criterion version as well, and although it doesn't have the extras available of that edition, which were also present on the earlier SD DVD, it is still highly recommended.
2 Comments 6 people found this helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Sending feedback...
Thank you for your feedback.
Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again
Report abuse
Format: DVD
'Rosemary's Baby' is without doubt Roman Polanski's best movie.
Still after fourty years this film scares me. Not in the kind of gruesome (torture-porn) kind of way that the Saw franchise do, but in a deeply psychological way, in the spirit of all the great twentieth century horror films. Rosemary (Mia Farrow) is the young married woman who's just moving into an upstate New York appartment block with her husband, actor Guy (John Cassavetes). The pair soon get to know their neighbours (mainly) Minnie Castevet & her husband Roman Castevet (Sidney Blackmer).
Rosemary's baby is a very scary film, not gruesome (sometimes mildly explicit) but it has that claustrophobic eery feeling & after the first half of the film the feeling that no one can be trusted & that the world is conspring against Rosemary is very apparent.
The story is set into motion when Guy announces to a broody Rosemary that he wishes to have a baby. Which leads to probably the only prorper 'horror' scene in the film.
The performances in the movie are phenomenal, particularly that of Ruth Gordon, who plays the nosy meddling neighbour (she won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her performance). Mia Farrow is also very convincing as Rosemary, the trapped individual whose intentions are always good.
A stupendous film that will give the viewer a taste of a good horror movie, before the directors of this genre got lazy & decided to just give B list actors a vague & undeveloped plot line, just to accomodate 'torture-porn' (which I do like, but it doesn't compare to the creepiness & subtlety of a horror movie like this.)
I would recommend this movie to all fans of Alfred Hitchcock, other works of Roman Polanski & Stanley Kubrick.
In conclusion a great film, everything is right about this, a true horror great that would be in at least the top five best horror pictures of all time.
Comment 5 people found this helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Sending feedback...
Thank you for your feedback.
Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again
Report abuse
Format: DVD
Indeed Rosemary's Baby is a classic but let's get the bad points out of the way first. Some scenes are awkward, Mia Farrow and her new found friend in the washing room really doesn't belong in a movie hailed as a classic. Terrible dialogue and acting from both. Farrow seems to change accents throughout the movie, even in her same lines which is a little off putting. However she is terrific in this role as the quiet naive woman who senses over the films two hours that something is very wrong. The movie has been directed much like Nicolas Roeg's classic, Don't Look Now, that classic 70s look of chopping and changing scenes during dialogue. Rosemary's Baby is also very sexually aware of itself, and one could say with all validity was the bridge between censorship issues and what would follow in the glorious 70s.

The movie was shot in the Dakota Buildings, and looks dreadfully eerie, director Roman Polanski makes New York like that too, which all fits with the mood of the film. John Cassavetes has some great lines and is particulary good, though isn't needed once he plays his cards too early. But two actors outstage Farrow and Cassavetes and that is their old nosey could be witch neighbours played delightfully well by Ruth Gordon and Sidney Blackmer.

Rosemary's Baby may well be lost on a younger horror generation, but the movie works on so many levels. For example we have all had nosey neighbours that interfere and the film of course on a technical level is great.
Comment 4 people found this helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Sending feedback...
Thank you for your feedback.
Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again
Report abuse
Format: DVD Verified Purchase
A mesmerising movie with very distinctive self assured direction by a true master, RB is a very famous film, a light horror classic. The writing is very very good, this time a fulsome screenplay just a couple of years after his first English language feature showed a real preference for visual over verbal drama. That Polanski had immersed himself in American culture since then, shows too in the well detailed and very New Yorky looking set. Again he shows his talent for getting drama out of showing the small everyday domestic details that usually do not get big cinematic focus. He took the material elements of British kitchen sink drama and honed in on them further, as if they were characters as much as the human actors. What this does is create a claustraphobic, uncomfortably close atmosphere, which of course became his hallmark.

It is so well crafted in its minute detail, just as Repulsion was, it builds its atmosphere of growing tension almost seamlessly, but of course very very slowly. This for me causes one slight problem this time - it risks losing the bigger picture as we once again get drawn into the psychological spiral of the main character (again a female). All this intense claustraphobia is in its way very compelling, and it does do just enough to motivate me to keep watching, but this time it is a bit more of a chore than it was for Repulsion. The trouble here is that we are expecting a real story, whereas with Repulsion we didn't know what we would get, but were just knocked out by this new guy's mesmerisming depiction of obsessive madness.

Where this kind of intensity and narrowness of focus in filmmaking always takes a risk in being weak in, is with the narrative, so it is a major risk.
Read more ›
Comment 3 people found this helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Sending feedback...
Thank you for your feedback.
Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again
Report abuse

Most Recent Customer Reviews



Customer Discussions

This product's forum
See all 2 discussions...


Feedback