While vacationing in Monte Carlo in 1927, Maxim de Winter meets the young and somewhat naive British companion of Mrs. Van Hopper, a typical Ugly American whose bout of influenza
frees the girl – who, as in the original novel, is never identified by
name – to spend time with the wealthy widower. When Mrs. Van Hopper
announces plans to return to New York City, Max proposes to the girl and
brings her to his Cornwall
coast estate known as Manderley. There a large household staff is
supervised by Mrs. Danvers, who was devoted to Max's first wife Rebecca,
the victim of a sailing accident some ten months before, whose battered
body was discovered forty miles up the coast and identified by her
distraught husband.
The new Mrs. de Winter feels overwhelmed by the vast manor, and Mrs.
Danvers does nothing to put her at ease, although she finds a friend in
Frank Crawley, who oversees the estate. The young bride's discomfort
with her new lifestyle isn't helped by the fact the memory of Rebecca
has a strong hold on Manderley and all of its inhabitants and visitors.
Lacking self-confidence, she commits one faux pas after another until
she is convinced Max is still deeply in love with his seemingly perfect
first wife and regrets his impetuous decision to marry his second one.
She is also curious about a cottage on the beach and Ben, a dimwitted
scavenger who constantly assures her he has said nothing and begs her
not to commit him to the asylum, references the girl doesn't understand.
Max's sister Beatrice and brother-in-law Giles convince him to revive
his custom of hosting an annual costume ball at the estate. Mrs.
Danvers suggests Mrs. de Winter replicate a dress worn by a family
ancestor in a portrait hanging in the gallery. The girl complies,
unaware the same costume was worn by Rebecca to much acclaim shortly
before her death the previous year. When Max sees her descend the
staircase just before the arrival of their guests, he furiously demands
she change into a different dress.
In the early morning hours after the ball, Mrs. Danvers openly
displays her contempt for the second Mrs. de Winter by taking her on a
tour of Rebecca's bedroom, which she has maintained as a shrine. Showing
the young girl Rebecca's wardrobe and luxurious possessions, she tells
her she will never be worthy of replacing her former mistress, and she
encourages her to commit suicide by jumping out the window to the stone
patio far below. Her manipulations are interrupted by a distress signal
from a ship that has run onto the reef just off the coast.
Divers hired to investigate damage to the hull of the ship discover
the remains of Rebecca's boat with a body in the locked cabin. When it
is raised, the body is identified as that of Rebecca by her jewelry and
dress, and it is discovered that holes had been drilled deliberately in
the bottom, causing it to sink.
Max confesses to his bride he strangled Rebecca in the beach cottage
when she taunted him with the news that she was pregnant and that the
child wasn't his. He locked her body in the cabin of her boat, sailed it
offshore, drove holes into its planks, and then escaped in the dinghy,
and when a body washed ashore up the coast, he intentionally
misidentified it. He confesses he never loved Rebecca, revealing she was
an evil woman who made a mockery of their marriage by consorting with
numerous men of low character in a flat she kept in London and the
cottage she maintained on the beach specifically for her many trysts.
A subsequent inquest concludes with a verdict of suicide, but
Rebecca's cousin Jack Favell is unconvinced. He has a note from Rebecca
urging him to join her at the beach cottage on the night she died
because she had something important to tell him. Jack reveals he was
Rebecca's lover and suspects she was pregnant with his child, a fact
uncovered by Max, prompting him to kill her. He attempts to blackmail Max, who refuses his demands.
A notation in Rebecca's appointment book leads them to a doctor she
visited on the day she died. He reveals that Rebecca was riddled with
cancer and had only months to live, thus supporting the verdict of
suicide. Max realizes she intentionally misled him into believing she
was expecting another man's child to spur him to kill her in a murderous
rage.
Upon returning to Manderley, Max and his wife discover the estate is
in flames, the fire set by a vengeful and despairing Mrs. Danvers. Max
races upstairs to rescue the woman from Rebecca's bedroom. Though he
manages to make it to the bedroom and retrieve Mrs. Danvers, he stumbles
on the way back down; Mrs. Danvers' fate is unclear. In an epilogue
set ten years later, we learn that Max walks with a limp and is scarred
slightly as a result of his heroic action. For unrevealed reasons, they
can never have children. Having lost Manderley and choosing not to
rebuild it, Mr. and Mrs. de Winter now live a quiet life in a small
hotel, seemingly free of Rebecca's hold.

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