Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho has been commended for forming the archetypical basis of all horror films that followed its 1960 release. The mass appeal that Psycho has maintained for over three decades can undoubtedly be attributed to its universality. In Psycho, Hitchcock allows the audience to become a subjective character within the plot to enhance the film's psychological effects for an audience that is forced to recognise its own neurosis and psychological inadequacies as it is compelled to identify, for varying lengths of time, with the contrasting personalities of the film's main characters. Hitchcock conveys an intensifying theme in Psycho, that bases itself on the unending subconscious battle between good and evil that exists in everyone through the audience's subjective participation and implicit character parallels.
Psycho begins
with a view of a city that is arbitrarily identified along with an exact date
and time. The camera, seemingly at random, chooses first one of the many
buildings and then one of the many windows to explore before the audience is
introduced to Marion and Sam. Hitchcock's use of random selection creates a
sense of normalcy for the audience. The fact that the city and room were
arbitrarily identified impresses upon the audience that their own lives could
randomly be applied to the events that are about to follow.
In the opening
sequence of Psycho, Hitchcock succeeds in capturing the audience's initial
senses of awareness and suspicion while allowing it to identify with Marion's
helpless situation. The audience's sympathy toward Marion is heightened with
the introduction of Cassidy whose crude boasting encourages the audience's
dislike of his character. Cassidy's blatant statement that all unhappiness can
be bought away with money, provokes the audience to form a justification for
Marion's theft of his forty thousand dollars. As Marion begins her journey, the
audience is drawn farther into the depths of what is disturbingly abnormal
behaviour although it is compelled to identify and sympathize with her actions.
It is with
Marion's character that Hitchcock first introduces the notion of a split
personality to the audience. Throughout the first part of the film, Marion's
reflection is often noted in several mirrors and windows. Hitchcock is
therefore able to create a voyeuristic sensation within the audience as it can
visualise the effects of any situation through Marion's conscious mind. In the
car dealership, for example, Marion enters the secluded bathroom in order to
have privacy while counting her money. Hitchcock, however, with upper camera
angles and the convenient placing of a mirror is able to convey the sense of an
ever lingering conscious mind that makes privacy impossible. Hitchcock brings
the audience into the bathroom with Marion and allows it to struggle with its
own values and beliefs while Marion makes her own decision and continues with
her journey.
The split
personality motif reaches the height of its foreshadowing power as Marion
battles both sides of her conscience while driving on an ominous and seemingly
endless road toward the Bates Motel. Marion wrestles with the voices of those
that her crime and disappearance has affected while the audience is compelled
to recognise as to why it can so easily identify with Marion despite her
wrongful actions.
As Marion's
journey comes to an end at the Bates Motel, Hitchcock has successfully made the
audience a direct participant within the plot. The suspicion and animosity that
Marion feels while at the motel is felt by the audience. As Marion shudders
while hearing Norman's mother yell at him, the audience's suspicions are
heightened as Hitchcock has, at this point, made Marion the vital link between
the audience and the plot.
The initial
confrontation between Marion and Norman Bates is used by Hitchcock to subtly
and slowly sway the audience's sympathy from Marion to Norman. Hitchcock
compels the audience to identify with the quiet and shy character whose
devotion to his invalid mother has cost him his own identity. After Marion and
Norman finish dining, Hitchcock has secured the audience's empathy for Norman
and the audience is made to question its previous relationship with Marion
whose criminal behaviour does not compare to Norman's seemingly honest and
respectable lifestyle. The audience is reassured, however, when Marion, upon
returning to her room, decides to return the money and face the consequences of
her actions.
Upon the
introduction of Norman, Hitchcock introduces the first of several character
parallels within Psycho. The clash between Marion and Norman, although not
apparent to the audience until the end of the film, is one of neurosis versus
psychosis. The compulsive and obsessive actions that drove Marion to steal the
money is recognisable, albeit unusual behaviour, that the audience embraces as
its sympathy is primarily directed towards her character. The terror that
Hitchcock conveys to the audience manifests itself once the audience learns
that it empathised with a psychotic person to a greater extent than with rational
one when its sympathy is shifted to Norman. The shift from the normal to the
abnormal is not apparent to the audience in the parlour scene but the audience
is later forced to disturbingly reexamine its own conscience and character
judgment abilities to discover why Norman's predicament seemed more worthy of
its sympathy than Marion's.
During the
infamous shower scene, Hitchcock conveys a sense of cleansing for the audience.
Hitchcock has reassured the audience of Marion's credibility and introduced
Norman as a wholesome character. The audience's newly discovered security is
destroyed when Marion is murdered. Even more disturbing for the audience,
however, is that the scene is shot not through Marion's eyes, but those of the
killer. The audience, now in a vulnerable state looks to Norman to replace
Marion as its main focus in its subjective role.
After Marion's
murder, the audience's role in the film takes a different approach. Hitchcock
provokes the audience to utilise the film's other characters in order to solve
the mystery of Marion's death yet he still successfully maintains the
sympathetic bond between Norman and the audience. Interestingly, Hitchcock
plays on the audience's obsession with the stolen money as the audience knows
that it had been sunk yet clings to the fact that Marion's death may have been
a result of her crime with the introduction of Sam, Lila, and Arbogast.
Hitchcock uses
Arbogast's character to arouse suspicion within the audience. Arbogast's murder
is not as intense as Marion's because the audience had not developed any type
of subjective bond with his character. Arbogast's primary motivation, however,
was to recover the stolen money which similarly compels the audience to take an
interest in his quest. Despite the fact that Arbogast interrupts Norman's
seemingly innocent existence the audience does not perceive him as an annoyance
as they had the interrogative policeman who had hindered Marion's journey.
When Sam and
Lila venture to the Bates Motel to investigate both Marion's and Arbogast's
disappearances, Hitchcock presents the audience with more character parallels.
As Lila begins to explore Norman's home, Hitchcock conveniently places Sam and
Norman in the parlour where Marion had dined with Norman before she had been
murdered. As the two men face each other, the audience is able to see their
contrasting personalities in relation to Marion. Sam, who had legitimately
gained Marion's affection is poised and respectable in comparison to Norman,
whose timid nature and sexual repression is reflected in the scenes of Lila's
exploration of his bedroom. The conflict that arises between Sam and Norman
reflects the fact that Sam had what Norman wanted but was unable to attain due
to his psychotic nature.
Psycho concludes
by providing a blatant explanation for Norman's psychotic tendencies. The
audience, although it had received a valid explanation for Norman's actions, is
left terrified and confused by the last scene of Norman and the manifestation
of his split personality. Faced with this spectacle, Hitchcock forces the
audience to examine its conscious self in relation to the events that it had
just subjectively played a role in.
The fear that
Psycho creates for the audience does not arise from the brutality of the
murders but from the subconscious identification with the film's characters who
all reflect one side of a collective character. Hitchcock enforces the idea
that all the basic emotions and sentiments derived from the film can be felt by
anyone as the unending battle between good and evil exists in all aspects of
life. The effective use of character parallels and the creation of the
audience's subjective role in the plot allows Hitchcock to entice terror and a
convey a lingering sense of anxiety within the audience through a progressively
intensifying theme. Hitchcock's brilliance as a director has consolidated
Psycho's place among the most reputable and profound horror films ever made.
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