Rosemary's Baby is one of the greatest movies of the late 1960s and
one of the best of all horror movies, an outstanding modern Gothic tale.
An art-house fable and an elegant popular entertainment, it finds its
home on the cusp between a cinema of sentiment and one of sensation.
Michael Newton's study of the film traces its development at a time when
Hollywood stood poised between the old world and the new, its dominance
threatened by the rise of TV and cultural change, and the roles played
variously by super producer Robert Evans, the film's producer William
Castle, director Polanski and its stars including Mia Farrow and John
Cassavetes.
Newton's close textual analysis explores the film's meanings and
resonances, and, looking beyond the film itself, he examines its
reception and cultural impact, and its afterlife, in which Rosemary's
Baby has become linked with the terrible murder of Polanski's wife and
unborn child by members of the Manson cult, and with controversies
surrounding the director.