I have seen a few Hitchcock films. The Birds, North by Northwest, Rear Window and (possibly, but can’t really rememeber) Vertigo. I had, up until this point, never seen Psycho, although basically know the shower scene (from its regular reference/appearance in popular media) and have, what I wrongly-assumed was, a good idea of the theme tune (from Busta Rhymes).
She might have fooled me, but she didn’t fool my mother..
Psycho is ‘up there’ in terms of horror films (#5 TimeOut, #17 Empire) but, unfortunately, it is still a horror film. Whilst, in all likelihood, a masterpiece of cinema which broke and recreated conventions, it is unfortunately also a horror film (whatever that means). Approaching this from a 21st century viewpoint (SPOILERS incoming and persistent from this point on), I’m probably underestimating the shock value of repeated bloody stabbings, the infectuous corruption of otherwise everyday situations (like visiting a motel,or having a chat), the visuals of a decayed corpse or how an imbalance in a person’s mental health can lead to frightening, otherwise unconscionable outcomes. However, having now watched (what feels like too-) many horror films, Psycho seems to contain many of the things that make the genre a bit… silly. Hitchcock may have actually invented these things, which would be a shame.
What things are you talking about? Breaking into a person’s property is justifiable, even when it is clearly the most inadvisable course of action for the corporeal safety of oneself or others. This specific rule perhaps falls under the wider directive that ostensibly normal people can/should just act plain weird and make bad decisions.
So normal people in Psycho act in unconvincingly odd ways? Exactly. When Marion (played by Janet Leigh) meets a police officer on the road, she acts so suspiciously it’s almost farce. She later acts even more suspiciously when talking to a car salesman practically in front of the same police officer. It is worth mentioning that, following her encounter with the police officer, Marion decides to change cars (presumably to make herself less conspicuous and generally evade said police officer), which she does ‘in a rush’ and to not-insignificant personal expense. Completely illogically, she also does this in direct view of the same police officer.
What are the best bits (intentionally-vague slight-spoilers)? It’s a Hitchcock film, so there is a tense atmosphere, with all the creepy accoutrements that you might want (stuffed birds, imposing gothic mansion, motel (literally) off the beaten path). Anthony Perkins as Norman Bates is loveably/pitiably freaky from the off.
What are the worst bits? All the horror film aspects. The initial murder is ‘horrific’ but, until that point, the film is more of a thriller than a horror. Even following the death, it is difficult to pinpoint when the film becomes a ‘horror’ as such. I’m beginning to formulate some sort of theory that in order to become part of the horror genre, a normal thriller/drama/comedy needs to simply loosen any grip it has on reality or sufficiently abandon logic. Horror is what happens to fill the gaps when a story becomes largely unbelievable.
Horror films are all bad then? Maybe horror is a synonym for bad or at least far-fetched. There are certainly horrific things that can be portrayed in film, but this does not appear to be the threshold for ‘horror’ films as such. What makes them ‘horror’ films seems to be the nonsense which is only incidentally related to the horrific stuff.
Is Se7en (with Morgan Freeman and Brad Pitt) a horror? Exactly. Or is it a crime drama/mystery/thriller?
So are you saying that the horror film Psycho (rated 8.5 on IMDB and largely considered one of the greatest works of Alfred Hitchcock) is bad? No. It’s a good film. It’s a revolutionary film. It has some great acting, tangible creepy atmosphere and a solid, enjoyable twist that 1960s audiences may not have seen coming from a mile off. One could argue that it is hardly a horror film, or that only the weaker elements of it are horror, or that it is a great horror film with weaker parts.
How deep is the swamp? Deep.