5 Things You Didn't Know About Pyscho


June 16th marks the 52nd Anniversary of Alfred Hitchcock’s iconic thriller Psycho, and the team over at Open Road Media is excited to celebrate! Stephen Rebello, author of Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho (a true account of the making of America’s most notorious scary movie), offered five things we never could have known about its creation.

Click here for more information about Rebello and his work! Hold on, gang. . . I GOT MORE!  Just for fun, here’s a link to an excerpt from the first chapter of Rebello’s Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho. (HERE)

Okay, I'll warn y'all: it’s not proper reading for the weak of heart or stomach. It’s a look at the real-life serial killer- a man who was actually psychotic- who inspired Hitchcock to create Norman Bates.

This is posted with permission.

Five Things You Didn't Know About the Making of Pyscho

by Stephen Rebello





Under contract with Paramount Pictures, director Alfred Hitchcock had made box office hits like Rear Window, To Catch a Thief, and The Man Who Knew Too Much.  But when he pitched his idea for Psycho, the studio's executives were so shocked and repulsed that they denied him his usual generous budget and the use of their sound stages, cameras, and other production equipment. Instead, Hitchcock financed the film himself and shot Psycho at Universal, using his television crew. Paramount then released the film and won their biggest box office profits of the year.

1. Before Psycho, Hitchcock was famed for elegant Technicolor thrillers starring marquee actors such as Cary Grant, Grace Kelly, and James Stewart. With Psycho, Hitchcock tried something completely different. He shot the film in black–and–white and broke with convention by violently killing the film’s biggest star on screen early in the movie.  He also depicted the lead actress in what was then considered an unusually frank sexual relationship, showed and flushed a toilet on-screen for the first time in American movies, and dressed the lead actor in women's clothing in a chilling role.

2. Although Janet Leigh most of the infamous shower sequence, Hitchcock hired Playboy cover model, exotic dancer, and sometimes actress Marli Renfro as Leigh’s body double. Both he and Leigh were shy about the near-nudity, and Hitchcock created extremely specific story-boards for filming the sequence, so that he wouldn’t overexpose his star.

3. Hitchcock decided against using Anthony Perkins in the shower scene, both to avoid tipping off the audience to the killer’s identity and to spare the actor potential embarrassment. Instead, he gave Perkins time off to rehearse for his upcoming Broadway musical.

4. During filming and post production, Hitchcock became convinced that Psycho would be such an embarrassing flop that he considered cutting out the most daring and shocking scenes and dialogue, so that it could be played off as a one--hour Hitchcock TV show. The addition of Bernard Herrmann's brilliantly innovative score was a deciding factor in releasing the movie to theaters.

5. Since Hitchcock believed that the twist ending of Psycho was its biggest asset, he tried to buy up as many copies of the original Robert Bloch novel as possible, so that the public wouldn’t already know the plot. He also devised a promotional campaign that insisted no one would be allowed to enter the theater once the film had started, and also asked audiences not to reveal the finale.

BONUS: Although Hitchcock’s special effects team devised a rubber female torso that spurted fake blood, the director rejected the prosthetic as crude and unsubtle.
Stephen Rebello is the author of Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho, and a screenwriter of a motion picture adaptation of his book. The upcoming film for Fox Searchlight Pictures stars Anthony Hopkins, Helen Mirren, ScarleD Johannson, James D'Arcy, Jessica Biel, Toni ColleDe, Danny Huston, Michael Stuhlbarg, Ralph Macchio, and Michael Wincott.

5 comments:

  1. That's a good book; I read it a couple of months ago. The opening sections about Ed Gein are downright unsettling.

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  2. Oh, but I did know those 5 things about PSYCHO. 'Course, I've read 'Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho" twice, and it is a GREAT book. I'm really looking forward to the movie version (which has the much simpler title: HITCHCOCK), and seeing Sir Anthony Hopkins as Hitch. I only wish they had gotten Andrew Garfield (The Social Network, The Amazing Spider Man) to play Anthony Perkins – he's damn near a dead ringer. Alas, James D'Arcy (with whom I am not familiar) will have to do.

    While we are on the topic, one of the very first articles I ever wrote as a blogger is entitled: Psycho Babble – The Legacy of Norman Bates. If I may be a shameless self-promoter, you can find it here:

    http://www.thewordslinger.com/posts.php?id=139

    Thanks, David.

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    1. Very much looking forward to that movie. The fact that one of the characters is "Ed Gein" tells me they are going for the throat.

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  3. I too am looking forward to that movie. The only book I've read on Hitchcock was a summery book of all hismovies. It was good at points, but dragged a lot. Also could have used twice as much about Psycho. . . like they should write a whole book about just Psycho or something, ya know!

    And Ed Gein is super freaky!

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    1. I'm a huge Hitchcock fan. I've got 33 books about him; I haven't read them all, but I've got 'em!

      I highly recommend "Hitchcock/Truffaut," which is a book-length interview with Hitchcock conducted by Francois Truffaut.

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