Spellbound

Alfred Hitchcock's Spellbound was made in 1944 and released in 1945.
The Kiss in Spellbound












Gregory Peck and Ingrid Bergman kissing in Spellbound.
Cast
Ingrid Bergman... Dr. Constance Petersen
Gregory Peck... John Ballantyne
Michael Chekhov... Dr. Alexander Brulov
Leo G. Carroll... Dr. Murchison
Rhonda Fleming... Mary Carmichael
John Emery... Dr. Fleurot
Norman Lloyd... Mr. Garmes
Bill Goodwin... House detective
Steven Geray... Dr. Graff
Donald Curtis... Harry
Wallace Ford... Stranger in Hotel Lobby
Art Baker... Detective Lt. Cooley
Regis Toomey... Detective Sgt. Gillespie
Paul Harvey... Dr. Hanish
Spellbound (1945) titles

Leo Gratten Carroll appeared in the following Hitchcock movies
| Suspicion (1941) | Captain Melbeck |
| The Paradine Case (1947) | Council for the Prosecution |
| Rebecca (1940) | Dr Baker |
| Spellbound (1945) | Dr Murchison |
| Strangers on a Train (1951) | Senator Morton |
| North by Northwest (1959) | The Professor |
Flashbacks
| The Lodger, 1926/1927 | The lodger tells Daisy that he promised his mother that he wouldn't rest before the serial killer who calls himself the Avenger is caught The detective sees in double-exposed images the elements apparently linking the lodger to the murders. |
| Easy Virtue, 1927 | During the trial against Mrs. Filton for misconduct in marriage there are several flashbacks. |
| Blackmail, 1929 | Alice sees the hand of the murdered artist in a flashback when she is waiting to cross the street on her way home. |
| Bon Voyage, 1944 | |
| Aventure Malgache, 1944 | |
| Spellbound, 1944/1945 | John Ballantyne (Gregory Peck) remembers the accident when his brother is impaled on the fence. |
| Stage Fright, 1949/1950 | The lying flashback, one of the most discussed flashbacks in cinema history. Can a flashback lie? (At about the same time Akira Kurosawa made Rashomon, a film depicting the rape of a woman and the murder of her samurai husband through the differing flashback accounts of four witnesses. Three of them must be wrong.) Hitchcock to Truffaut on the flashback in Stage Fright: "I did one thing in that picture that I never should have done; I put in a flashback that was a lie. [...] Strangely enough, in movies, people never object if a man is shown telling a lie. And it's also acceptable, when a character tells a story about the past, for the flashback to show it as if it were taking place in the present. So why is it that we can't tell a lie through a flashback?" |
| I Confess, 1952/1953 | When the girls tell the detectives that they saw a priest leaving the murder victim's house, we see this in a flashback. When Ruth Grandfort (Anne Baxter) is telling about her being the young Father Logan's (Montgomery Clift) girlfriend and how she later got married and met the lawyer who blackmailed her, we see all this in a lengthy and narratively weak flashback. |
| Frenzy, 1971/1972 | When the serial killer Bob Rusk (Barry Foster) remembers where the tiepin is, he sees fragments of Babs (Anna Massey) being murdered. |

When the serial killer Bob Rusk (Barry Foster) remembers where the tiepin is, he sees fragments of Babs (Anna Massey) being murdered.