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Tuesday, 18 February 2014

Thrilling & Riveting; Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho creates an impact greater than most of his epic noirs.


The way films shot in black-and-white portrays itself to the audience and materialise into something more than just a critical acclaimed film is surely alluring to experience. Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho might not be my first movie I watched from the 60’s era but it’s definitely the one creating a greater impact than the other. The movie has pure visceral feel and induces a thrill so powerful that you might find yourself quite intrigued by it.

Psycho opens up with a scene with Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) and Sam Loomis (John Gavin) in a rented room of cheap hotel in Pheonix. Their apparent actions and conversations give vivid impression that both are currently having an intense love affair and want to get married soon but are unable to do so since they can’t afford the expenses involved. Marion is working in an estate agent’s office and meets with a client who gives her 40,000 dollars to buy a house for his daughter.

A desperate Marion steals 40,000 dollars from the client and flees from the town.  Marion, on the run takes refuge in a motel called as Bates Motel, whose business appeared to be in total shambles. Even being strongly confronted by his dominant mother, the owner of the motel Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins) warmly welcomes Marion with warm dinner and cosy room to spend the night in. Things turned horribly ugly when Marion gets murdered in the room of the motel by an unknown entity as she gets stabbed multiple times. The unknown entity in the movie will somewhat be perceived by the audience as ‘Psycho’ and the overall objective of cold-blooded murder however remains a mystery.

Based on the novel of the same name by Robert Bloch, Psycho is a mystery thriller with the suspense not being kept on hold for long and becomes quite flagrant. Alfred Hitchcock has made an audacious effort to make such a thriller in which the title of being the ‘protagonist’ vacillates from one person to another quite impressively. You may not be sure who the lead character actually is but you are pretty sure that the film is not a bizarre scramble of sheer ambiguity. A cinephile’s experience will spring to life if he doesn’t have the prescience of the suspense before. The film is capricious but still thrilling and fantastically riveting.

Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho is worth the encomium and claps.


9 on 10 stars 

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