Alfred Hitchcock is certainly best known for his film "Psycho", and especially for the scene in which a man dressed in his dead mother's clothes attacks a naked woman who is taking a shower in a motel with a knife.
The legendary shower scene in the movie "Psycho", although very short, was shot from as many as 70 angles, and its shooting lasted seven days. was important.
"The audience was completely traumatized in 1960. In a recent documentary about that scene, '78/52' Peter Bogdanovich recalls the 'continuous screaming' that filled the cinema during the New York premiere of 'Psycho.'
Ed Gain, a serial killer from Wisconsin who committed a series of brutal murders, and later kept the bones of his victims. Gain later confessed to the two murders, and many of the bizarre things the police found in his house stem from his nightly visits to the cemetery. Ed Gain, who had a very strict and dominant mother who was married to a violent and often unemployed alcoholic. He had no friends, and he was one of the most intelligent students at school. When he was 10, he ejaculated after seeing his mother and father kill a dog, and his mother later nearly drowned him when she found him masturbating in the bathtub. His father died of a heart attack in 1940, and four years later, his brother Henry died in a fire. Some held Ed to blame, but it was never proven. After his mother's death, he became obsessed with violence and sex, so he exhumed the bodies of dead women from the cemetery in order to have sexual relations with them and made souvenirs from their body parts. However, since this did not satisfy his fantasies, he started killing. Suspicion immediately fell on him, and he spent the rest of his life in a madhouse.
The introductory scene with which the film begins is as dramatic as the film it presents. Although the illusion of the film is shattered by the names of the people behind it, Bernard Herman's music combined with unique and rhythmic shifts on the screen inflicts a kind of fear of the unknown.
The introductory scene with which the film begins is as dramatic as the film it presents. Although the illusion of the film is shattered by the names of the people behind it, Bernard Herman's music combined with unique and rhythmic shifts on the screen inflicts a kind of fear of the unknown. All in all, the film "Psycho" is a revolutionary masterpiece, a master of horror and tension.
Sir Alfred Joseph Hitchcock,
Most Excellent "Order of the British Empire"
was an English film director, producer and screenwriter. He is one of the most influential and extensively studied filmmakers in the history of cinema. Known as the "Master of Suspense", he directed over 50 feature films in a career spanning six decades
i'm not a horror fan because i'm scared then.