Good morning Phoenix! It’s time for Movie Monday. I’m
highlighting scary movies from now till Halloween.
Today’s selection is a classic. The one, the only original –
Psycho, starring Janet Leigh and Anthony Perkins. The 1960 black and white
version. When you absolutely, positively, want to be scared, accept no
substitute. Shower before you watch it. Otherwise, you will swear off showers.
Plot:
• Phoenix office worker Marion Crane is fed up with the way
life has treated her. She has to meet her lover Sam in lunch breaks and they
cannot get married because Sam has to give most of his money away in alimony.
One Friday Marion is trusted to bank $40,000 by her employer. Seeing the
opportunity to take the money and start a new life, Marion leaves town and
heads towards Sam's California store. Tired after the long drive and caught in
a storm, she gets off the main highway and pulls into The Bates Motel. The
motel is managed by a quiet young man called Norman who seems to be dominated
by his mother.
Trivia:
• Although Janet Leigh was not bothered by the filming of
the famous shower scene, seeing it on film profoundly moved her. She later
remarked that it made her realize how vulnerable a woman was in a shower. To
the end of her life, she always took baths.
• First American film ever to show a toilet flushing on
screen.
• On set, Alfred Hitchcock would always refer to Anthony
Perkins as "Master Bates".
• In the opening scene, Marion Crane is wearing a white bra
because Alfred Hitchcock wanted to show her as being "angelic". After
she has taken the money, the following scene has her in a black bra because now
she has done something wrong and evil. Similarly, before she steals the money,
she has a white purse; after she's stolen the money, her purse is black.
• Marion's white 1957 Ford sedan is the same car (owned by
Universal) that the Cleaver family drove on Leave It to Beaver (1957).
Goofs:
• As Marion falls out of the shower, her hair is soaking
wet. But in the famous still shot of her lying on the floor, her hair is
relatively dry.
• Janet Leigh's body double is obvious when Norman is
pulling Marion from the tub onto the shower curtain; the dead woman has painted
toenails while Janet had clear nails during the stabbing shots.
• When Marion first gets out of her car and meets the
salesman at the used car dealership, a crewmember is reflected in the car door.
Part way through the shot, he suddenly crouches down.
• Marion is in her apartment changing her clothes after
stealing the money; as the camera dollies toward the money lying on the bed, a
shadow of the camera or member of the crew briefly appears on the bedspread in
the lower-right portion of the frame.
• When Lila and Sam are walking from their motel room to the
office, the reflection of a crew member can be seen in the window between rooms
1 and 2.
Enjoy and have a fangtastic day friends and fiends!
<3 Brock V"""V
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