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The Morgue

July 26, 2010: Psychobabble Has Moved!

July 24, 2010: Gloria Stuart Attends her Centennial Celebration

July 21, 2010: Psychobabble recommends John Cale’s ‘Fear’

July 20, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Psycho II’

July 19, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Jack Bruce: Composing Himself’

July 16, 2010: Psychobabble’s Twelve Greatest Albums of 1980!

July 15, 2010: ‘House of the Wolf Man’ finally coming to DVD

July 13, 2010: Join Psychobabble’s All-New Facebook Group… Join It, I Say!

July 13, 2010: You too can help back the new David Lynch doc…

July 12, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘White Light/White Heat: The Velvet Underground Day-By-Day

July 10, 2010: Farewell, Pete Quaife of The Kinks

July 8, 2010: ‘Psycho’ documentary coming this Halloween season…

July 7, 2010: Ringo’s Ten Greatest Beats

June 29, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘The Bat Whispers’

June 28, 2010: 21 Underrated Beach Boys Songs You Need to Hear Now!

June 24, 2010: Psychobabble recommends Philip J. Riley’s ‘Lon Chaney as Dracula’

June 23, 2010: “Twin Peaks” producer says network execs want the show back

June 21, 2010: Super ‘70s Time Capsule: “Mr. Jaws” edition

June 20, 2010: An Open Letter to ‘Jaws’

June 18, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Stones in Exile’

June 17, 2010: ‘Plan 9 From Outer Space’ in 3-D coming…

June 16, 2010: Anatomy of a Psycho: 50 Years of Hitch’s Masterpiece

June 14, 2010: The Vaselines set to release their second LP…

June 8, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Mellodrama: The Mellotron Movie’

June 7, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘The Jaws Log’

June 3, 2010: ‘Mellodrama : The Mellotron Movie’

June 1, 2010: 15 Amazing Uses of the Mellotron

May 27, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Monkey Shines: An Experiment in Fear’

May 26, 2010: 20 Things You May Not Have Known About George Romero

May 23, 2010: Psychobabble News Round-Up: Beatles and Stones edition

May 17, 2010: Boris Karloff’s ‘Thriller’ finally coming to DVD!

May 13, 2010: Stones dish out the jive with ‘Exile’ reissues

May 13, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Forever Changes: Arthur Lee and the Book of Love’

May 11, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘I Was a Teenage Werewolf’

May 7, 2010: “Twilight Zone"-inspired exhibit coming to Gallery 1988 in LA

May 6, 2010: Punk Trainspotting with Captain Sensible

May 4, 2010: Watch ‘Nick Drake- A Skin Too Few’ on Psychobabble

May 1, 2010: “Night Gallery” on Hulu

April 30, 2010: Psychobabble’s Eleven Greatest Albums of 1970!

April 28, 2010: Here Comes Yet Another Kinks Movie

April 22, 2010: The Bride’s Many Veils: 75 Years of Bride of Frankenstein

April 19, 2010: Newly released Beatles and Stones singles

April 17, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘The Nanny’

April 14, 2010: Psychobabble recommends Philip J. Riley’s ‘The Wolfman vs. Dracula’

April 13, 2010: Simon Pegg and Nick Frost on “Twin Peaks”!

April 12, 2010: 10 Great Dylan Versions That Aren’t by The Byrds

April 9, 2010: Farewell, Malcolm McLaren

April 8, 2010: “Twin Peaks” A-Z

April 7, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Small Faces: All or Nothing 1965-1968’

April 6, 2010: Keith Moon biopic still looning about

April 3, 2010: Full specs on deluxe ‘Exile on Main Street’

April 2, 2010: New Small Faces DVD comp

April 1, 2010: Six Creepifying Decades of ‘Tales From the Crypt’!

March 29, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Troll 2’

March 26, 2010: Alien vs. Pooh

March 25, 2010: Psychobabbling about ‘The Runaways’

March 24, 2010: A Touch of Hitchcock to Tide You Over

March 20, 2010: Chilton tributes and Ray Davies rarity at SXSW

March 18, 2010: Farewell, Alex Chilton…

March 18, 2010: 100 Years of ‘Edison’s Frankenstein’!

March 16, 2010: ‘Night of the Hunter’, ‘Dawn of the Dead’, Elvis, and more in New Jersey

March 12, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht’

March 10, 2010: Feed Your Baby Acid: 14 Psychedelic Songs Aimed at Kids

March 8, 2010: That Oscar Horror Tribute Thing

March 5, 2010: The Awkward Movie Challenge: Oscar Picks

March 3, 2010: Mark Frost spreads “Twin Peaks” “resolution” rumors?

March 1, 2010: Sly Stone is Coming Back For More

February 25, 2010: Finally some details about Deluxe ‘Exile On Main Street’

February 24, 2010: 20 Things You May Not Have Known About The Creature From the Black Lagoon

February 23, 2010: Abbey Road drama reaches The End

February 22, 2010: EMI to sell Abbey Road? Scratch that.

February 20, 2010: Psychobabble News Round-Up: Townshend, Costello, Hawkins, Weller, etc.

February 18, 2010: The Awkward Movie Challenge: ‘Suite 208 does David Lynch’

February 16, 2010: Psychobabble’s 10 Greatest Horror Movies of 1960!

February 14, 2010: ‘Live at Leeds’: 40 Years of Rock’s Definitive Live Album

February 13, 2009: The Psychobabble Double-Feature: ‘Bride of Frankenstein’ and ‘Eraserhead’

February 10, 2010: Asinine ‘Jaws’ remake rumors start to fly

February 8, 2010: Track by Track: ‘Psonic Psunspot’ by The Dukes of Stratosphear

February 5, 2010: A few thoughts on John Landis’s ‘Burke and Hare’

February 3, 2010: Johnny Depp to direct Keith Richards doc!

February 2, 2010: Darlene Love film in the works

February 1, 2010: The Awkward Movie Challenge: ‘The Lawnmower Man’

January 28, 2010: Zelda Rubenstein goes into the light…

January 26, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘The Black Room’

January 25, 2010: Track by Track: ‘Their Satanic Majesties Request’ by The Rolling Stones

January 24, 2010: Danny Boyle to bring ‘Frankenstein’ to the London stage

January 23, 2010: The Psychobabble Search Bar

January 22, 2010: Six Hammer Films to Make DVD Debut

January 21, 2010: Things That Scare Me: Case Study #10

January 18, 2010: 21 Underrated Songs by The Who You Need to Hear Now!

January 16, 2010: Rhino records to release ‘The Birds, The Bees, & The Monkees box set’

January 15, 2010: Theatrical re-release of ‘Evil Dead’!

January 14, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Listen & See’ by The Blue Things

January 13, 2010: Shout! Factory opens floodgates on the Roger Corman catalogue

January 11, 2010: The Nuggets Record Buying Guide: Love

January 8, 2010: Five Classic Monster Movies for a Snowy Day

January 5, 2010: Jagger spends “some time” on “The Ed Sullivan Show”

January 4, 2010: Christopher Lee Sings!

January 2, 2010: Psychobabble’s Ten Greatest Albums of 1965!

December 30, 2009: A change of gears for Julien Temple’s Kinks movie

June 16, 2010: Anatomy of a Psycho: 50 Years of Hitch’s Masterpiece

“First customer of the day is always trouble…”



Psycho was a first in many ways, and has been causing tremendous trouble for fifty years. If there is a single film that ultimately legitimized the horror film, it is Psycho, even if there were well-crafted, artful, serious horror films before it. But such films—Rouben Mamoulian’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Jacques Tourneur’s Cat People for example—did not make the impact Alfred Hitchcock’s low-key slasher did. Along with Terence Fisher’s Dracula, Psycho essentially mapped out the way horror would develop throughout the ‘60s, but Dracula glared over its shoulder as Psycho fixed its glassy eyes on the future. Even with its new-fangled fascination with blood and sex, Dracula was still a remake, an adaptation of a 63-year old novel, and a period piece reliant on decrepit Gothic castles and supernatural hokum. These are all elements that made the film wonderful, but they do seem more in step with the cinema of 30-years prior than the contemporary world. Regardless, Dracula held massive appeal for a generation of youngsters who’d discovered Tod Browning’s original on late night TV and spent their days thumbing through Famous Monsters of Filmland and constructing their Aurora Monster model kits. Fisher’s Dracula (more so than his somewhat less memorable Frankenstein from 1957) was successful enough to lead British Hammer Films to fashion a string of similar— though increasingly bloody and sex-fixated—hit Monster movies. It inspired American producer/director Roger Corman to make like-mindedly retro Gothic horrors by plundering the works of Edgar Allan Poe. It inspired American TV producer/Dan Curtis to adapt Stoker to the small screen for his smash series “Dark Shadows”.

Christopher Lee: Bloody good as Dracula



Yes, old-fashioned Monster stories, creaky castles, and rubber bats had not gone out of style during the sophisticated ‘60s, but another breed of horror was born as well. In sharp contrast to the traditionalist Hammer and Corman pictures, Psycho was based on a new work (Robert Bloch’s novel was published a mere year before the film’s release). The movie and its progenies were contemporary in setting, Gothic castles being replaced by Gothic motor lodges, Gothic apartment buildings, and Gothic suburban neighborhoods. Supernatural monsters were passed over in favor of seemingly ordinary, innocuous human beings harboring monstrous inner selves. The fang is replaced by the kitchen knife. For every bloodsucker that popped up in response to Fisher’s Dracula, there was a gritty, realistic, psychological horror that never would have been born if not for Psycho. Hitchcock’s film established a new catalog of horror cinema tropes that had a seismic effect on many such films that followed it through the ‘60s and far beyond. In it’s own way, Psycho is as massively responsible for establishing a new set of horror fundamentals as Tod Browning’s Dracula had been nearly 40 years earlier. These include:



(Beware of spoilers…)

The Slice and Dice: Psycho is regularly credited as the first slasher film. This is somewhat arguable, as George Archainbaud’s Thirteen Women established some of the basic tropes of the slasher picture way back in 1932. In that film, a woman who has been subjected to bigotry for being part Japanese (Myrna Loy, who often played roles of this sort) takes revenge against her tormentors by employing a swami to mesmerize them into killing each other and themselves. Here we have the standard “young women are successively bumped off by a vengeful killer” structure that would become integral to the slasher pictures of the distant future, even if the killer is not personally wielding the knife yet. That being said, few remember Thirteen Women today and its influence is highly negligible. The same cannot be said of Michael Powell’s Peeping Tom (1960), a cult favorite about a handsome young photographer who uses a blade secreted in a leg of his camera tripod to murder them as he snaps their final headshots. Peeping Tom was condemned by critics upon its release for its violence, its shocking depiction of child abuse, and its perceived misogyny. The backlash nearly destroyed Powell’s career in the UK, where he’d been lauded earlier for films such as Black Narcissus and The Red Shoes. Consequently, Peeping tom did not develop its cult audience or receive an overdue reevaluation until the ‘70s. Psycho repeated several of the themes already seen in Peeping Tom, which was released three months earlier, but unlike its British counterpart, Psycho was no career-killing bomb. While the film did take some time to solidify its reputation among critics (The New York Times and the UK Observer were among the initial uncomplimentary) it was an instant smash with audiences around the world, earning significantly more at the box office than any other Hitchcock film. It was ultimately nominated for four Academy Awards, and Janet Leigh won the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress. Whether or not Psycho was the first slasher film, there is no doubt that it was the first to make a major impact. Let us not forget that John Carpenter’s Halloween, the film that launched the “golden age” of slasher movies, pays direct and loving homage to Psycho, using the name of one of Hitchcock’s heroes, Loomis, for one of its own.

The Fake-Out:: Psycho’s proto-slasher status may be slightly questionable, but there is no denying that it is the first horror movie to employ a fake-out structure: it establishes a red-herring that engrosses the audience in actions independent of the main horror plot, then shocks and shatters them by introducing the killer suddenly. The viewer spends the first half hour of Psycho caught up in the thievery of Marion Crane to such a degree that the viewer probably forgets she or he is even watching a film called Psycho. Then Hitch unleashes the title creep abruptly during one of cinema’s most famous scenes. Director John Llewellyn Moxey trots out this very same gimmick in his excellent exploration of witchery, The City of the Dead (aka: Horror Hotel) (1960), released soon enough after Psycho that he could claim ignorance of Hitchcock’s film. Francis Ford Coppola, however, could not. In fact, Roger Corman explicitly asked the young filmmaker to deliver a copy of Psycho, which he did with the terrific Dementia 13, in which he gives Luana Anders the Janet Leigh treatment. With Dressed to Kill, Brian DePalma not only mimicked the structure of Psycho (as well as many other elements of the picture, as we shall see), but he picked up on the gimmick of introducing us to a well-known actress (Angie Dickenson) and then playing against audience expectations by having her murdered early in the film. Wes Craven’s Scream (1996) does this too, dispatching Drew Barrymore in its opening moments.

Luana Anders meets her watery doom in Dementia 13



The Gender-Bender: Like its revolutionary structure, Psycho’s pioneering use of audience-baffling gender-bending has gone on to become a significant feature of several horror and thriller pictures. This trope plays on the audience’s preconceived notions regarding gender. In Psycho, Norman Bates dons a wig and his mother’s old bathrobe to impersonate the dead woman. As the domineering mother, Norman kills Marion Crane because she stirs him sexually, feelings of which mother surely would not approve, but this revelation is saved for the film’s climactic scene. Until then, we reasonably assume that Mrs. Bates is, indeed, the murderer. Variations on this twist inform such Psycho-pretenders as William Castle’s Homicidal, Dressed to Kill, and Robert Hiltzik’s suitably campy Sleepaway Campy, as well as Anne Perry’s 1979 novel The Cater Street Hangman. Juliet Marion Hulme (Perry’s real name)proved she was well capable of committing the assumedly “masculine” act of cold-blooded murder six years prior to Psycho when she and her girlfriend Pauline Parker bludgeoned Parker’s mother in the headline-making murder that inspired Peter Jackson’s superb 1992 film, Heavenly Creatures.



Sex = Death: Sex plays several roles in Psycho, one being a basic equation that would go on to be as overused in horror films as the requisite knife-wielding maniac: women who have sex die. The opening scene of Psycho finds Marion in bed with her lover, Sam Loomis (John Gavin). They’ve just enjoyed a passionate pre-marital tryst in a sleazy hotel. Sexy Marion will later elicit similarly carnal feelings from Norman Bates, who will murder her for doing so. Marion’s sister, the chaste, asexual Lila (Vera Miles, ironically, Hitchock’s first choice to play the über-desirable Madeleine/Judy in Vertigo) survives the picture. One of the most misogynist of slasher clichés, the survival of the virginal female/death of the sexually-active female reappears often: Halloween, Friday the 13th, A Nightmare on Elm Street, etc. The hoariness of the cliché is played for laughs in Scream.

Sam and Marion sex it up.



Contemporary Gothic: “Oh, we have 12 vacancies. 12 cabins, 12 vacancies.” As Psycho deals with sex and sexuality in a more direct and modern manner than the horrors that preceded it, it is only fitting that its setting should be updated likewise. Psycho is hardly the first horror film to move outside the gates of ancient castles and dilapidated graveyards. In the ‘40s, producer Val Lewton contemporized the horror setting in urban thrillers, such as Cat People, The Leopard Man, and The Seventh Victim. In Psycho, Hitchcock fused the contemporary locations of Lewton’s pictures with imagery drawn from Universal’s Gothic horrors of the ‘30s. Norman Bates’s house looms from its dreary hilltop like Castle Dracula. The interior is a disorienting system of ornate rooms not unlike the one in which Renfield bunked in Browning’s Dracula, a twisting staircase similar to the one on which Lugosi’s Dracula first appears, and a dingy cellar that secrets a mummified corpse worthy of Karloff. Bates Motel is similarly forbidding, particularly Norman’s office, with its deeply-shadowed walls lined with taxidermied birds of prey. Shooting mundane interiors as if they are Gothic haunted mansions enters the cinematic lexicon. Roman Polanski would transform city apartments into expressionistic houses of horror in Repulsion, Rosemary’s Baby, and The Tenant. DePalma would do the same to a suburban high school in Carrie. In 1979, Ridley Scott took the concept of displaced Gothic decor to its ultimate extreme by rocketing it into the future with the Goth-spaceship in Alien.



Where It's At: Steven Spielberg famously said that with Jaws, he wanted to do for the beach what Psycho did for showers. Psycho did not invent the import of associating a memorable murder (or series of murders) with a specific location, but it has become shorthand for doing so. As famous as the Spielberg remark, Janet Leigh often said that she never took another shower after the first time she saw herself murdered in the film. Many other viewers have said the same. Compare that to how often someone says, “I never sat beside a lake again after the Monster drowned little Maria in Frankenstein.” As memorable as that scene is, it did not etch a correlation between location and murder into the cultural consciousness. Psycho did. Spielberg’s comment can now be applied to any number of movies; its opening phrase easily swaps out for “Rosemary’s Baby does for apartment buildings…”, “Friday the 13th does for summer camps…”, “A Nightmare on Elm Street does for bathtubs…”, “Evil Dead does for cabins…”, “The Blair Witch Project does for the woods…”, and so on.



Psycho introduced and/or solidified so much more into the cinematic tool box: the ordinary/sympathetic killer, the trick of forcing the audience to identify with the killer, the power of familial horrors, the brief shattering of the fourth wall (Norman’s final chilling stare into the camera)… too much for me to tackle in this brief article. Hitch didn’t just pull off these feats before anyone else; in most cases, he did them better.



Psycho was released fifty years ago today…

You may also dig:

Psychobabble’s 10 Greatest Horror Movies of 1960!

Things That Scare Me: Case Study #4: The “Norman Bates” music video



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