Who is psycho based off of
He decorated his house with a variety of items made from the bones and skin of the dead. Police photo of Ed Gein from Photo Credit. It took a lot of negotiating, but after Hitchcock offered to personally finance the film, Paramount was fully on board.
Most of the screenplay was loyal to Bloch's novel in terms of the overall story. Norman's appearance received a makeover so that a younger actor like Perkins could portray the primary character.
Some minor details were cut whereas some notions were expanded such as Marion's involvement. The film also trimmed some of the book's violence. For example, Marion was beheaded in the novel as opposed to her being stabbed in Hitchcock's reimagining.
Leigh's shower scene in Psycho is still known as one of the most iconic scenes in film history. The film wasn't perceived as an instant success but it went on to be labeled as one of the greatest films in history, and certainly one of Hitchcock's greatest projects.
Pyscho 's legacy continues to live on and the interest in the franchise has yet to slow down. Since the film, there have been three sequels, a remake, a TV movie, and a prequel TV series, Bates Motel , that was set in the modern-day. Hitchcock also said that he doesn't see the movie as part of the same genre that everyone else does. He said, "The content was, I felt, rather amusing and it was a big joke.
I was horrified to find some people took it seriously. People definitely see Psycho as a horror movie and it's often a film that is studied and taken apart because it was just so fresh and exciting. There are endless threads about the film on Reddit, with people sharing that they just watched the movie for the first time ever and they want to hear some thoughts and opinions.
When someone asked why the shower scene is so iconic, a fan explained that a shower is seen as a place where people can be both "safe" and "vulnerable" and this scene completely altered that perception. Joseph Stefano, the screenwriter for Psycho , was interviewed by the Austin Chronicle and talked about his experience. Stefano shared a fascinating tidbit: that Hitchcock didn't think that people should rewrite scripts. Stefano said, "Another interesting thing is that he asked for no rewrites.
Not one. He felt that whoever wrote the movies was the writer, and that was their job. This included a corset of human skin, and a belt made from human nipples, alongside various face masks. He was convicted for the murders of Worden and another woman Mary Hogan — with a grim history of grave robbing and exhumation also adding to the list of crimes.
Despite confessing to two murders, Gein has been tentatively linked to a number of other unsolved crimes in the Wisconsin area, including the suspicious death of his own brother.
Adapted by Alfred Hitchcock for the titular movie, the story of deranged hotel owner Norman Bates shares many similarities with that of Gein. Both characters have a fascination with their mother. Elsewhere, controversial hit The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is loosely based on the Plainfield crimes. Directed by the late Tobe Hooper, the movie featured a family of cannibals whose home is furnished with human bones and skin furniture.
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