Just want to say I love you guys. Want to vote on what I should watch next? Click here! www.patreon.com/jamesvscinema AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON first time watching tomorrow!
I actually just watched "An American Werewolf in London" last night lmao. Its one of my favorite Werewolf movies. That Silver Bullet and Teen Wolf lol. Gonna watch "An American Werewolf in Paris" tonight lol. Can't remember if its a remake or just set in a different time and place.
A huge part of the shock factor was the casting. Janet Leigh (Jamie Lee Curtis’ mother) was a huge marquee star, the only real star in the movie. Killing her off was mind-blowing at the time because it wasn’t ever done. Killing off Drew Barrymore at the beginning of Scream was an homage to this. She was definitely the biggest star in Scream at the time.
@@Luisaan145 It's dated for now. But in 1960, this sort of thing was not known by many people as it is today. People would have no clue without that explanation back in 1960.
@Randy White It's essentially just exposition explaining the entire film, in case audiences didn't get it. Could have been handled better, but I understand why he did it, as @Duglor1 explains in the above comment. Simply a product of its time.
@@manic-n5n It´s not ONLY exposition to explain Norman´s character, it´s most important function is to set up the final scene. Without the exposition the last scene would have lost all it´s touch and impact.
As a film student in college, I took a class that was nothing but Hitchcock. The guy was way ahead of his time. A true cinematic genius. If you love film, you can never go wrong doing a deep dive into his work.
I was flipping channels once some years ago and got engrossed in this movie called The Rope. Had no idea it was hitchcock until the end. AMAZING. Can’t say enough about how good that movie was!
Hitchcock hasn't really made much "horror" films, there are only two overly popular among common people i.e Psycho and The Birds that may fall into that category. He's called the "master of suspense" and mainly made suspense, mystery thrillers. He's an icon and his catalogue is as enthralling as it gets.
I have to disagree, but only on terminology. This IS horror. Suspense IS horror. What most people these days typically refer to as horror is nothing but schlock.
@@steved1135 I must disagree. There is certainly suspense in a well-made horror film, but Suspense is a different genre. There is nothing horrific in _North by Northwest_ or _Suspicion_ or _Rear Window_ or _The 39 Steps_ or _The Lady Vanishes_ or either _The Man Who Knew Too Much,_ but they are masterfully suspenseful. _Psycho_ is certainly a horror film, though these days it doesn't have the violence and gore that current horror fans seem to salivate over. _The Birds_ falls into Horror because in it the natural world acts in unnatural fashion, which most people will find horrifying.
@@peterengelen2794 Which other of his films would you class as Horror? "Rebecca," like several of Daphne du Maurier's stories, has supernatural overtones, but I'd say it stops short of Horror.
@@ElliotNesterman The Man Who Knew too Much was made twice, first in the early 30s, very dark, noirish, with scenes with no music and no ambient sound, it's totally mesmerizing and scary as heck.
When I showed my friends this for the first time, one of them said- "If that car stops sinking, I'm gonna laugh so hard." And then it did and I was DYING.
Such a twist that you follow that Marion character thinking she's gonna be the protagonist only to get killed off like that! Such a classic & hope you react to more of his films since you've seen Rear Window & now this one. Vertigo, The Birds, North by Northwest are a few of my favorites!
@@Hecallsmeblackbird - Definitely. The first time, to the best of my knowledge, anyone pulled off the "one shot" trick for an entire film. Meticulously timed so the camera could move behind something right when it needed to cut because they needed to reload the camera.
And what's really amazing is that Hitch was 61 years old when he made PSYCHO. At a time when a lot of people have their eyes on retirement, this dude is still innovating, still pushing the art form to places it had never been. Really inspirational.
Rope is a gem. Though you can see the moments where the scenes are cut together, it tries to be 1 continuous scene, which is amazing for the time it was made.
I’m sure you know this but the reason there are a couple of cuts in Rope is only due to the fact that, at the time, they didn’t have film that lasted that long. If it was shot today, the movie would be a complete continuous shot.
Thanks for the kind words! I'm going through a few things but optimistic I'll get through it and come back stronger. Enjoy your videos and glad to hear your mother's influence made a positive impact on your life!
When you look at Psycho through the lense of when it came out in 1960 you find a very interesting but important choice that impact the film's importance and shock value, and that is how Hitchcock used casting to trick the audience. Janet Leigh (Marion) was a huge movie star at that point, in 1960 audiences are expecting her to be the lead and to follow her throughout the film, except Hitch kills her off half way through the film, leaving the audience in shock not knowing who would take over the story. The second important casting choice was Anthony Perkins (Norman), now to put in perspective Perkins at the time and in the 50s had made most of his career playing light, comedic boy-next-door types. He could play leading man or young son, but he always had darkness lingering beneath the surface. Audiences at the time are expecting this type of role but are instead given, in my opinion, the best horror villain in cinema history. Seeing Perkins brutally murder people shocked the public and sadly he would be typecast as "psycho" roles for the rest of his career in Hollywood. Hitchcock casting against type was one of his best decisions, something he did 9 years earlier with Robert Walker in Strangers on a Train. Also just shout out to the fantastic actor that was Anthony Perkins!
Alfred Hitchcock and his wife were in bed one night with his wife reading a new book that had come out. she turned to Hitch and said you HAVE to do this film! she dies in the first 30 minutes ! so hitch pitched it and couldn't get financing. he and his wife mortgaged their own home to make it. Plus - the "blood" used in the shower was not blood - it didn't show up properly as blood in black and white, so they used chocolate syrup. Janet Leigh wore moleskin (a beige sticky material) over her private parts for the shower scene which took days to film (hitch was a bit of a torturer with the cool blondes he cast in his films - there have been films and interviews about it, including Tippi Hedren in the birds regarding the attic bird scene where real birds were basically thrown at her for days during filming).
What you said about the movie and Hitchcock’s wife is not true for the simple reason that if you read the book you’ll soon see that it starts with Norman Bates, he is the main character and Marion Crane visits near the the beginning of the book. It was Hitchcock together with Joseph Stefano the screenwriter who made the decision to start with the character of Marion Crane for the shock value of having your protagonist die half way through the movie.
Hitchcock played a trick on the audience by making the first part of the movie seem like the ones he'd made before. Back then, theaters let people wander into a movie in the middle of a screening, but Hitchcock made theater owners promise not to let anyone in after the movie had started. He also asked audiences not to reveal anything about the plot (the word "spoiler" wasn't used in 1960).This gave the film the maximum psychological impact. You mentioned the music a few times. The score was by the great Bernard Hermann, who also did the music for Citizen Kane, The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, The Day the Earth Stood Still, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Vertigo, North by Northwest, Cape Fear, Taxi Driver, and many other movies. The music for Psycho is so good that orchestras sometimes play it in concert as a stand-alone piece of music. My favorite Hitchcock movie is Rear Window. Maybe you could react to it sometime.
Not sure if you spotted it, but at the very end of the "mother's" monologue when Perkins smiles at the camera, Hitchcock overlaid a couple of frames of the mother's skull.
I remember hiding on the stairs as a kid whilst my mom watched this, it scared me so much I couldn’t sleep the entire night lol. The voice of Mrs Bates scared the crap out of me!
It's a meta commentary and self critique of filmmakers' using and disregarding actresses selfishly for their art. Or just a relationship study on a man so obsessed with visual attraction that he ignores of the human being in front of him.
Pretty cool that Janet Leigh & Anthony Perkins each had kids that would also go on to contribute to the horror genre. Jamie Lee Curtis in the Halloween franchise and Oz Perkins as a director/writer.
The death of the detective is my favorite scene of the movie... Most of the people who watch the film nowadays have been spoiled the shower scene... But the staircase scene is practically untouched... When Mrs Bates came out of the right side of the door... I almost crapped my pants... It was so quick... So well done... It was perfect
As a companion to this, i'd recommend watching Hitchcock starring Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren. On top of a fun performance from Hopkins as Hitch, it shows the making of Psycho and all the stuff he had to deal with getting it done
This is why film history courses are nice. You can get comparisons to what was common in the day and then how this is groundbreaking. But it also seems to stand up pretty well so many years later.
I remember seeing the poster for the remake, and thinking this film was about killer showers. Oh, to be young. It was fun to get older and learn about all the details that went into making this, like the film being adapted from Robert Bloch's 1956 novel, which was loosely inspired by Ed Gein. Also, Hitchcock's extensive battle with the Production Code, and him using the "no late admission" policy to heighten the mystery of the twist, and push moviegoers to see it for themselves.
Bernard Hermann's music score is masterful. You should do John Carpenter's 1980 film The Fog. It has both Janet Leigh and Jamie Lee Curtis (real life mother/daughter).
So great to hear about your mom’s influence on your film love. My mom also loved Hitchcock and introduced me to his films young and they become hugely influential in me going to film school. My mom died last year and every rewatch of these movies is bittersweet.
I’m so happy you’re watching this!! I love Hitchcock! My absolute favorite of his is Shadow of a Doubt. Joseph Cotten is so good in it. He’s also in another fave of mine that I think you would really enjoy, The Third Man. Yay for old movies! Also, Hitchcock and his team had a real knack for playing with casting choices and casting against type.
Rear Window is my favorite Hitchcock movie as well, with Psycho being an extremely close second. Next down from there would either be North by Northwest or Rebecca. If you haven't seen those ones yet, they are two more you should definitely add to your reaction list.
@@BongEyedBastard I do think Vertigo is one of the best in terms of film style, but I really came to hate Stewart’s character in that movie. Yes, I understand that he was feeling tortured and that it was likely a character study, but I felt far too uncomfortable with it. Probably was the point, of course.
I managed to see it in a movie theatre during a Hitchcock mini-festival when I was in my early twenties. It's not less scary on a huge screen with a full sound system blaring the amazing score at you from all sides. :)
Alfred Hitchcock really squeezed screams out of chocolate syrup, BUT John L russel as director of photography and the 19 people in the camera and electrical roles for this slice of history are the unsung heroes
By the way, the son of Anthony Perkins(Norman Bates/the psycho) is horror movies director. His name Osgood Perkins and he made an excellent horror movie called The Blackcoat's Daughter, highly recommend it if you're into atmospheric horror.
Thanks for saying what you did in the beginning. I'm going through an awful time in my life right now. Just hearing someone offer some reassurance means so much to me. It sounded so genuine it just might get me through today thanks man
I just watched this in a movie theater with my dad for my first ever viewing. It's one of his favorites. Gotta say, when "Mrs. Bates" came flying out ready to stab the inspector, the violins gave me a straight up heart attack! I loved this film so much that it almost became my favorite Hitchcock movie over The Birds. Would love to see you react to that one!
I love how James is all about the camera work in the opening scene. How new the technique is. In a scene were there is a man and a woman who are not married, kissing in bed together. For the first time on film.
For some earlier Hitchcock, check out "The Lady Vanishes" and "Notorious". Also, if you haven't seen "M" by Fritz Lang (1931), you should add it to the list. It is a German movie from which so many movie tropes originate, including serial killers and police procedurals.
Absolutely second the reference to M. One of the first police procedurals (if not the first), a great performance by Peter Lorre (much to his later detriment), great photography, and sound design. Real must-see movie.
Your videos definitely help me, James. They help me focus on something else for awhile instead of my problems, and I always smile watching your reactions to certain things.
Dude, I know your channel for 5 days now, and I already watched EVERY reaction. Your analysis and know how of film making techniques are mind blowing. Great work, man! Keep up. Greetings from Kassel, germany
Psycho's impact can not be overstated. It started modern horror, moving it away from the campier movies made more for kids, and bringing it into a more real, disturbing and adult realm. Psycho, along with the underrated Peeping Tom, was the seed planted, then everything after tried to one-up Psycho being the growing plant, but Night of the Living Dead was the bloomed flower of modern horror.
Something I learned from the RLM Re:View of this film. Mr. Hitchcook had been out of films for years when this was made. He was working 100% on his anthology horror TV series. This was filmed for budget reasons, was shot by his TV crew. This also explains why the shot's dressing and composition is SOOOO different than most films.
I love how he talks about his mama with such love and adoration. I hope I can be the kind of mama deserving of that someday; that my son would talk about me like this 💕
One thing I love about Hitchcock movies is that he makes a cameo in every one of his movies. Usually just for a second or two. Also he was known as the master of suspense.
When she's being questioned by the cop on the side of the road, the camera angle shows him looming over her. It kind of reminds me of how the house looms over the motel later in the movie. Now that I think of it, the guy with all the money looms over Marion when she's at her desk. It creates an oppressive atmosphere. "She got punished for her sins" well yeah. This movie was made with the Hays Code still in effect and a woman who is sexually active outside marriage and steals money will be punished in the movie, thems the rules. Hitchcock used those rules in his favor though. He shocks the audience by following the rules, it's genius.
You should look into the music composer of this film, Bernard Herrmann, the best film composer of all time. There is a good bio of him on RUclips. His first film was Citizen Kane, and his last was Taxi Driver, with many all time classics in between.
A singular film for sure. Later in the 60's, the scariest movie was Wait Until Dark, starring Audrey Hepburn. Terence Young directed and Henry Mancini scored it. Like most of Hitchcock's films mentioned here, it's also suspense rather than horror.
Yes! I totally forgot about Wait Until Dark, it was great, and I cant wait for some of these reactors to get to it. Thanks!!! I’m going to start suggesting it!
when i did media studies in secondary (high) school, this was the first movie we had to study and analyse. probably increased my love of thriller films!
I had the absolute privilege of seeing this film with the NY Philharmonic playing the score live. Nothing, and I do mean NOTHING, prepares you for watching the violins hack and stab that shower scene into existence. It was incredible.
24:48 yeah it was groundbreaking that’s why they had to throw in that whole explanation scene at the end because they were so worried about audiences being upset at not being able to wrap their heads around it
Rear Window is my favorite movie not just my favorite Hitchcock. Vertigo is an amazing movie from a film-maker's perspective. So intelligent and innovative. Gorgeous cinematography and score.
24:57 right as it transitions, they superimposed Norman's Mom's skull over his face. Some cuts during the official release didn't have this, and some DID, so audience members were even more tripped out by what they saw. Imagine seeing a skull then you go to the next screening and it's not there. You would begin to think this film had an effect on your psyche.
This movie is one of those that will always be underrated. People assume its just one of those classics but it has such an affect that it always takes you off guard with how real and present it feels.
I was born in 1960. My parents told me when I was older and saw this film for the first time that women across the United States literally stopped taking showers for quite a while. Great reaction, appreciate your comments!
I remember in film class when we got around to this film. We had been watching films that were shot around this time and I immediately remember being shocked at how different this film felt compared to other films of this time and how the camera moved. Hitchcock was so ahead of his time. Rear window is a great one too! I personally really like Vertigo as well!
Tony Perkins was just such an incredible actor, stage and film, and a slim kind of gorgeous, he got typecast after this, but he LIVED in the theater! Plus, Robert Bloch's book was revolutionary for the time, pointing out that mental illness can come from things beyond our control, that one can do nightmarish things in response to what happens in their life, rather than Crazy being a Moral Failing, our fault.
I love seeing your reactions to these films. This is one of my favorites, and I find it funny when you and others react to these older films, but I think a lot of that stems from the fact that I, through my parents, grew up on a lot of older horror films. Can't wait to see what you've got next on the list.
Love to hear you talk film, James! Though mentioned in few other comments, I didn't see any that really focused specifically on "Vertigo" -- it is in not only my opinion, but in the longest running international film critics poll ("Sight & Sound" poll that first began in 1952) voted the best movie of all-time. It was ranked #2 behind Citizen Kane in the 2002 poll, and #1 in the most recent (2012) poll. Will be interesting to see how it ranks the next poll (2022). Hope you get to it at some point James.
Excellent pick! I projected this at a halloween movie marathon a couple years ago. It always kills. By the way, James... If you slow down the fade from Norman's face to the excavated car at the end, you can see his mother's skull briefly fade over the outline of his own face.
Anthony Perkins was so perfect for this role. close to a perfect film. When Janet Leigh saw this on film she was never able to take a shower ever again and only took baths. Recommend watching Psycho 4 and the show Bates Motel...such a great movie!
Great reaction. There are all sorts of technical bug-a-boos throughout Psycho. Hitchcock was shooting quickly and decided to let some of these errors go by without reshooting. As noted in other comments, Hitchcock was financing Psycho himself and to further save money, he utilized his TV crew from Alfred Hitchcock Presents. You noticed the shadow of the camera on Marion's bed but some others are a light in frame lighting the Bates Motel as Marion drives up and the camera going slightly out of focus when Arbogast is going up the stairs. One major one that was fixed was in Marion's death stare into the camera, Janet Leigh blinked. Amazingly, no one caught it except Hitchcock's wife, Alma Reville (an unsung hero who had tremendous influence on every aspect of Hitchcock's work). That's why there is a cut to the shower head again. Interestingly enough, there was a shot removed from the film that might have been a way for Hitchcock to remove something for the censors while keeping other things in. There was a shot of Marion slumped over the side of the tub and her rear end was visible. Naturally the censors went nuts over this and Hitchcock removed it. What the censors didn't ask to be removed was the shot of Marion's hand reaching for the shower curtain. If you look in the background, you will very clearly see Marion's nipples, but out of focus.
I LOVE your mom, just from that opening intro. Same way with me; so much of my love for movies comes from my mom. I loved what she said about Hitchcock, it's totally true. / 16:44 And I love what YOU said about Hitchcock here. You are totally correct./ I always tell people to start with these four Hitchcock (and you've already seen two): Psycho, Rear Window, Strangers On A Train and Shadow Of A Doubt. All four of those are Hitchcock as master of suspense, textbook HItchcock, and they go down easy, if you know what I mean. After that, there are so many branches to the Hitchcock tree: the more commercial (North By Northwest, To Catch A Thief), the more experimental (Rope, Vertigo), the more romantic (Notorious, Rebecca), the excellent early British ones (The 39 Steps, the first version of the Man Who Knew Too Much), the overlooked gems (The Wrong Man, Marnie), the later work (Frenzy), his great silent work (The Ring, The Lodger). But Strangers On A Train and Shadow Of A Doubt......those two are quintessential Hitchcock. Shadow Of A Doubt was his personal favorite, incidentally.
a new subscriber here from having watched your Mulholland Drive reaction some days ago and then so many more videos of yours in between! a little surprising to me that you hadn't watched Psycho until now but it's not my place to say that since i only watched my first Hitchcock film this year, aha. my favorite works of his are Rope, North by Northwest, Vertigo and this! got 2 other friends of mine to watch this movie for the first time as well and it's always fun to see reactions to it. looking forward patiently to more of your content!
Rear Window is my favorite Hitchcock film, too. I love how the whole movie never leaves Jeff's apartment. My second would probably be North by Northwest.
I am a 90s kid and I love these older movies. It is extremely saddening that the better the graphics and tech gets in movies, the lack of story quality and dumb down a ting we get. Its honestly worrisome for me bc I enjoy film so much. But a great director from the 50s and one of my all time favorites is Billy Wilder. Check out some of his movies sometime even if its just for your own personal entertainment. You'll be shocked at how good the story and acting is in his movies.
New subscriber here. This was a very enjoyable reaction and analysis of such a classic film. I also want to show some appreciation for your sound quality and sound levels. I'm quite sensitive to sound and find it really uncomfortable to watch a lot of youtubers due to bad sound quality of various varieties, whether it be the movie and commentary sound being way off (where one or the other is either too loud or too quiet), or bursts of unnecessary shouting into crappy distorted microphones, among numerous other issues that make me wanna' throw my headphones out the window, lol. Whereas your sound in general is perfect. :)
This is definately one of my favorite films of all time. The whole thing is so masterfully put together. For example, in the scene as Norman and Marion talk within his office the camera angles change as the power dynamic does. Hitchcock was meticulous with details like that. His wife as well. Their daughter, who appears in the film as the young lady at the beginning offering Marion pain medicine, mentioned her mother catching a frame where you could see Marion taking a breath as she was laying on the floor. No one else had caught it. Definately check out the making of documentaries if you are interested as they are well worth it. Another fun fact: at the time of the film "bird" was slang for a young lady. When Norman causes the picture of one on the wall to fall when he sees the body, it was a subtle nod to the viewer that Norman knocked off/killed the girl.
Rope and Strangers on a Train are perfect thrillers by Hitchcock! I really recommend, Rope was one of the first films to be done in the style of being a single take and Strangers on a Train is just iconic!
That is Anthony Perkins on the classic film. He was also a gay rights activist I believe. He unfortunately passed away in 1992 from aids at the age of 60s.
Funnily enough, Anthony Perkins' first film was based on Ruth Gordon's (Minnie Castevet in 'Rosemary's Baby') biography. It's called 'The Actress' and it's from 1953
The Bad Seed (1956) is a great film with one of the all time psychopaths in film history. You can tell it was a play (very successful) also even with the cast being introduced at the end.
I remember stumbling across this movie as a kid and being terrified lol. Now it’s pretty high on my list of favorite movies. I really like the way you call out the more technical aspects of the filmmaking while still getting invested in the story being told. Liked and subscribed 👍🏾
Oh dang this would make me so curious for you to see 1962 Carnival of Souls. Its hands down my favorite horror art house movie, I dont know why but its honestly scary for me. The director of the movie was the main "bad guy" I guess you could call him, his makeup was pretty simple but he is so horrifying to me. We watched it in one of my film classes
@@marcuscato9083 Same! I think the reason no one has reacted to it is because its not widely known. Ive only meet one other person that was like "Oh yeah I know that movie"
So nice when a youngster truly appreciates film, camera work, and even knows some of the best known directors, etc. By the way Janet Leigh is Jamie Lee Curtis mother. Hope you know who that is. Kudos to your mom!
Wow thank you for saying what you said in the beginning of this video..Im going thru something right now and not for nothing when im feeling down I go to watch your movie reactions because they truly put a smile on my face...but those words you said before you got into the review, I really needed to hear that so , thank you😌
Marion Crane was played by Janet Leigh. Janet Leigh’s daughter Jamie Lee Curtis dressed up as Marion Crane with a bloody shower curtain at the last Halloween premier.
Just want to say I love you guys.
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AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON first time watching tomorrow!
Psycho AND American werewolf, you're spoiling us sir! ;)
;)
I actually just watched "An American Werewolf in London" last night lmao. Its one of my favorite Werewolf movies. That Silver Bullet and Teen Wolf lol. Gonna watch "An American Werewolf in Paris" tonight lol. Can't remember if its a remake or just set in a different time and place.
I appreciate you doing these videos
Rear Window is one of my favorite Hitchcock films. Highly recommend.
A huge part of the shock factor was the casting. Janet Leigh (Jamie Lee Curtis’ mother) was a huge marquee star, the only real star in the movie. Killing her off was mind-blowing at the time because it wasn’t ever done. Killing off Drew Barrymore at the beginning of Scream was an homage to this. She was definitely the biggest star in Scream at the time.
As soon as I read the first part of your comment I immediately thought of Drew in Scream. That's such a cool fact!
Drew Barrymore was offered the part of Sydney Presscot but turned it down
First half of the movie is about Marion, the second half is about Norman
@@SnailHatan HilARious!
Anthony Perkins was a well-known star also.
"Why she wouldn't even harm a fly." One of the greatest ending lines ever. :)
But that bit just before with the over-written explanation is the worst decision ever made!
@@Luisaan145 It's dated for now. But in 1960, this sort of thing was not known by many people as it is today. People would have no clue without that explanation back in 1960.
@Randy White It's essentially just exposition explaining the entire film, in case audiences didn't get it. Could have been handled better, but I understand why he did it, as @Duglor1 explains in the above comment. Simply a product of its time.
@@manic-n5n Yeah wasn't that sort of thing quite commonplace in these sort of suspense/detective style movies? Always at the end explain everything.
@@manic-n5n It´s not ONLY exposition to explain Norman´s character, it´s most important function is to set up the final scene. Without the exposition the last scene would have lost all it´s touch and impact.
As a film student in college, I took a class that was nothing but Hitchcock. The guy was way ahead of his time. A true cinematic genius. If you love film, you can never go wrong doing a deep dive into his work.
he was so ahead of his time. I only recently saw this film, much better than I thought !
I know right? He made one of the best comedies of all time with Rear Window.
I was flipping channels once some years ago and got engrossed in this movie called The Rope. Had no idea it was hitchcock until the end. AMAZING. Can’t say enough about how good that movie was!
@@Ivy94F The one shot picture. Amazing feat.
@@Ivy94FI think the movie is just "Rope", not "The Rope".
Hitchcock hasn't really made much "horror" films, there are only two overly popular among common people i.e Psycho and The Birds that may fall into that category. He's called the "master of suspense" and mainly made suspense, mystery thrillers. He's an icon and his catalogue is as enthralling as it gets.
I have to disagree, but only on terminology. This IS horror. Suspense IS horror. What most people these days typically refer to as horror is nothing but schlock.
@@steved1135 I must disagree. There is certainly suspense in a well-made horror film, but Suspense is a different genre. There is nothing horrific in _North by Northwest_ or _Suspicion_ or _Rear Window_ or _The 39 Steps_ or _The Lady Vanishes_ or either _The Man Who Knew Too Much,_ but they are masterfully suspenseful.
_Psycho_ is certainly a horror film, though these days it doesn't have the violence and gore that current horror fans seem to salivate over.
_The Birds_ falls into Horror because in it the natural world acts in unnatural fashion, which most people will find horrifying.
Hahahaha! Hitchcock hasn't made much horror movies? Besides ''Psycho'' and ''The Birds'', really?
@@peterengelen2794 Which other of his films would you class as Horror?
"Rebecca," like several of Daphne du Maurier's stories, has supernatural overtones, but I'd say it stops short of Horror.
@@ElliotNesterman The Man Who Knew too Much was made twice, first in the early 30s, very dark, noirish, with scenes with no music and no ambient sound, it's totally mesmerizing and scary as heck.
I love how this movie almost has you worried for Norman when that car stops sinking momentarily.
When I showed my friends this for the first time, one of them said- "If that car stops sinking, I'm gonna laugh so hard." And then it did and I was DYING.
Such a twist that you follow that Marion character thinking she's gonna be the protagonist only to get killed off like that! Such a classic & hope you react to more of his films since you've seen Rear Window & now this one. Vertigo, The Birds, North by Northwest are a few of my favorites!
Fasho brotha! Hope you enjoy the holiday!
His movie Rope is also a great one to keep in mind if you're interested in doing more Hitchcock
@@Hecallsmeblackbird - Definitely. The first time, to the best of my knowledge, anyone pulled off the "one shot" trick for an entire film. Meticulously timed so the camera could move behind something right when it needed to cut because they needed to reload the camera.
Marion is played by Jamie Lee Curtis' mom, Janet Leigh btw. If you didn't know.
Can’t forget Torn Curtain, Man who knew too much, and Trouble with Harry
Jsmes out here yelling "red flag" like he's Danny from the shining
Good catch! That was the reference!
Galfder! Galfder!! Galfder!!!
First toilet ever filmed in a major motion picture lol
And what's really amazing is that Hitch was 61 years old when he made PSYCHO. At a time when a lot of people have their eyes on retirement, this dude is still innovating, still pushing the art form to places it had never been. Really inspirational.
Rope is a gem. Though you can see the moments where the scenes are cut together, it tries to be 1 continuous scene, which is amazing for the time it was made.
I’m sure you know this but the reason there are a couple of cuts in Rope is only due to the fact that, at the time, they didn’t have film that lasted that long. If it was shot today, the movie would be a complete continuous shot.
@@Jungbeck yes, heard about that.
Thanks for the kind words! I'm going through a few things but optimistic I'll get through it and come back stronger. Enjoy your videos and glad to hear your mother's influence made a positive impact on your life!
When you look at Psycho through the lense of when it came out in 1960 you find a very interesting but important choice that impact the film's importance and shock value, and that is how Hitchcock used casting to trick the audience. Janet Leigh (Marion) was a huge movie star at that point, in 1960 audiences are expecting her to be the lead and to follow her throughout the film, except Hitch kills her off half way through the film, leaving the audience in shock not knowing who would take over the story. The second important casting choice was Anthony Perkins (Norman), now to put in perspective Perkins at the time and in the 50s had made most of his career playing light, comedic boy-next-door types. He could play leading man or young son, but he always had darkness lingering beneath the surface. Audiences at the time are expecting this type of role but are instead given, in my opinion, the best horror villain in cinema history. Seeing Perkins brutally murder people shocked the public and sadly he would be typecast as "psycho" roles for the rest of his career in Hollywood. Hitchcock casting against type was one of his best decisions, something he did 9 years earlier with Robert Walker in Strangers on a Train.
Also just shout out to the fantastic actor that was Anthony Perkins!
Alfred Hitchcock and his wife were in bed one night with his wife reading a new book that had come out. she turned to Hitch and said you HAVE to do this film! she dies in the first 30 minutes ! so hitch pitched it and couldn't get financing. he and his wife mortgaged their own home to make it. Plus - the "blood" used in the shower was not blood - it didn't show up properly as blood in black and white, so they used chocolate syrup. Janet Leigh wore moleskin (a beige sticky material) over her private parts for the shower scene which took days to film (hitch was a bit of a torturer with the cool blondes he cast in his films - there have been films and interviews about it, including Tippi Hedren in the birds regarding the attic bird scene where real birds were basically thrown at her for days during filming).
What you said about the movie and Hitchcock’s wife is not true for the simple reason that if you read the book you’ll soon see that it starts with Norman Bates, he is the main character and Marion Crane visits near the the beginning of the book. It was Hitchcock together with Joseph Stefano the screenwriter who made the decision to start with the character of Marion Crane for the shock value of having your protagonist die half way through the movie.
Hitchcock played a trick on the audience by making the first part of the movie seem like the ones he'd made before. Back then, theaters let people wander into a movie in the middle of a screening, but Hitchcock made theater owners promise not to let anyone in after the movie had started. He also asked audiences not to reveal anything about the plot (the word "spoiler" wasn't used in 1960).This gave the film the maximum psychological impact.
You mentioned the music a few times. The score was by the great Bernard Hermann, who also did the music for Citizen Kane, The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, The Day the Earth Stood Still, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Vertigo, North by Northwest, Cape Fear, Taxi Driver, and many other movies. The music for Psycho is so good that orchestras sometimes play it in concert as a stand-alone piece of music.
My favorite Hitchcock movie is Rear Window. Maybe you could react to it sometime.
Suspense, not horror. That’s what Hitchcock did brilliantly.
Wrong. He just directed it. Didn't write it. He is not brilliant.
I.was about to say the same thing.It is suspense not horror.
Not sure if you spotted it, but at the very end of the "mother's" monologue when Perkins smiles at the camera, Hitchcock overlaid a couple of frames of the mother's skull.
I did catch that!
@@JamesVSCinema That stare shot was Malcolm McDowel's inspiration for the stare of Alex in "A Clockwork Orange."
I remember hiding on the stairs as a kid whilst my mom watched this, it scared me so much I couldn’t sleep the entire night lol. The voice of Mrs Bates scared the crap out of me!
😂😂😂
Vertigo is considered one of the best ever films. The 39 Steps is a great earlier one.
I just couldn’t get into Vertigo. I watched it once and thought “meh”. What am I missing?
It's a meta commentary and self critique of filmmakers' using and disregarding actresses selfishly for their art.
Or just a relationship study on a man so obsessed with visual attraction that he ignores of the human being in front of him.
A lot of people have said that Andrew Garfield looks like Tony Perkins they've said that for at least 10 years now
Pretty cool that Janet Leigh & Anthony Perkins each had kids that would also go on to contribute to the horror genre. Jamie Lee Curtis in the Halloween franchise and Oz Perkins as a director/writer.
The death of the detective is my favorite scene of the movie... Most of the people who watch the film nowadays have been spoiled the shower scene... But the staircase scene is practically untouched... When Mrs Bates came out of the right side of the door... I almost crapped my pants... It was so quick... So well done... It was perfect
That stand in did a great job at scaring the crap out of everyone
13:34 "sower sheen", okay I laughed at that only because I said the exact same thing during my horror film class.
"That's a big knife".
Well, as a general rule, I consider ANY knife that stabs me to be a big knife.
Anthony Perkins' line about "being trapped in our own prisons" really hits a lot different once you learn he was gay.
As a companion to this, i'd recommend watching Hitchcock starring Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren. On top of a fun performance from Hopkins as Hitch, it shows the making of Psycho and all the stuff he had to deal with getting it done
This is why film history courses are nice. You can get comparisons to what was common in the day and then how this is groundbreaking. But it also seems to stand up pretty well so many years later.
I remember seeing the poster for the remake, and thinking this film was about killer showers. Oh, to be young.
It was fun to get older and learn about all the details that went into making this, like the film being adapted from Robert Bloch's 1956 novel, which was loosely inspired by Ed Gein.
Also, Hitchcock's extensive battle with the Production Code, and him using the "no late admission" policy to heighten the mystery of the twist, and push moviegoers to see it for themselves.
Bernard Hermann's music score is masterful. You should do John Carpenter's 1980 film The Fog. It has both Janet Leigh and Jamie Lee Curtis (real life mother/daughter).
That’s so cool. I knew about Jamie’s father, but I had no idea Janet was her mother.
I loved The Fog as a kid...still do
So great to hear about your mom’s influence on your film love. My mom also loved Hitchcock and introduced me to his films young and they become hugely influential in me going to film school. My mom died last year and every rewatch of these movies is bittersweet.
I’m so happy you’re watching this!! I love Hitchcock! My absolute favorite of his is Shadow of a Doubt. Joseph Cotten is so good in it. He’s also in another fave of mine that I think you would really enjoy, The Third Man. Yay for old movies!
Also, Hitchcock and his team had a real knack for playing with casting choices and casting against type.
Woo!
@@JamesVSCinema She’s right about Shadow of a Doubt and The Third Man. Outstanding films!
@@susannariera I didn’t know that! That’s so cool! Rope and Vertigo are also really great. I love Joseph Cotten so much.
@travelling_sammykitty
Hitchcock didn't cast this movie. The casting director did.
@@MrParkerman6 I know casting directors cast films, but directors do have a say. That’s why I said, “Hitchcock and his team”.
Rear Window is my favorite Hitchcock movie as well, with Psycho being an extremely close second. Next down from there would either be North by Northwest or Rebecca. If you haven't seen those ones yet, they are two more you should definitely add to your reaction list.
Totally agree with Rear Window. The 39 Steps comes close second for me though.
Don’t forget Strangers On A Train and Dial M for Murder.
Can't agree. I love Rear Window and consider it Hitch's most "fun" thriller, but his best work has got to be Vertigo. Masterful filmmaking.
@@BongEyedBastard
I do think Vertigo is one of the best in terms of film style, but I really came to hate Stewart’s character in that movie. Yes, I understand that he was feeling tortured and that it was likely a character study, but I felt far too uncomfortable with it. Probably was the point, of course.
@@LucareonVee Yup, a study of obsession and necrophilia played out over a sickly green canvas.
I managed to see it in a movie theatre during a Hitchcock mini-festival when I was in my early twenties. It's not less scary on a huge screen with a full sound system blaring the amazing score at you from all sides. :)
It's absolutely amazing that you know so much about film making but haven't seen so many of the big movies. You're like an ultra rare gem!
Alfred Hitchcock really squeezed screams out of chocolate syrup, BUT John L russel as director of photography and the 19 people in the camera and electrical roles for this slice of history are the unsung heroes
By the way, the son of Anthony Perkins(Norman Bates/the psycho) is horror movies director. His name Osgood Perkins and he made an excellent horror movie called The Blackcoat's Daughter, highly recommend it if you're into atmospheric horror.
Alfred Hitchcock was a master with shadows in his black and white films.
Thanks for saying what you did in the beginning. I'm going through an awful time in my life right now. Just hearing someone offer some reassurance means so much to me. It sounded so genuine it just might get me through today thanks man
Oh yes, a true classic in every sense. So good and unexpected several times over.
As always, I love the things you notice and the information you provide in your commentary. Thanks!!
I just watched this in a movie theater with my dad for my first ever viewing. It's one of his favorites. Gotta say, when "Mrs. Bates" came flying out ready to stab the inspector, the violins gave me a straight up heart attack! I loved this film so much that it almost became my favorite Hitchcock movie over The Birds. Would love to see you react to that one!
Hitchcock wasn't the master of horror, he was the master of suspense, and shock in this film.
I love how James is all about the camera work in the opening scene. How new the technique is.
In a scene were there is a man and a woman who are not married, kissing in bed together. For the first time on film.
Always gotta respect the origins and pioneers!
It was probably done before the onset of the Hayes Code in 1934. So first time in the "modern" era.
first time to show a toilet, too
For some earlier Hitchcock, check out "The Lady Vanishes" and "Notorious".
Also, if you haven't seen "M" by Fritz Lang (1931), you should add it to the list. It is a German movie from which so many movie tropes originate, including serial killers and police procedurals.
M is another great one. I doubt anyone has reacted to it.
Absolutely second the reference to M. One of the first police procedurals (if not the first), a great performance by Peter Lorre (much to his later detriment), great photography, and sound design. Real must-see movie.
Your videos definitely help me, James. They help me focus on something else for awhile instead of my problems, and I always smile watching your reactions to certain things.
Dude, I know your channel for 5 days now, and I already watched EVERY reaction. Your analysis and know how of film making techniques are mind blowing. Great work, man! Keep up. Greetings from Kassel, germany
Hahaha that’s awesome!! Much love Dave!
Psycho's impact can not be overstated. It started modern horror, moving it away from the campier movies made more for kids, and bringing it into a more real, disturbing and adult realm. Psycho, along with the underrated Peeping Tom, was the seed planted, then everything after tried to one-up Psycho being the growing plant, but Night of the Living Dead was the bloomed flower of modern horror.
Peeping Tom ✓✓✓✓
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The film critic Roger Ebert wrote a film review of Night of the Living Dead. It was published by the Reader's Digest. Must read.
Something I learned from the RLM Re:View of this film. Mr. Hitchcook had been out of films for years when this was made. He was working 100% on his anthology horror TV series. This was filmed for budget reasons, was shot by his TV crew. This also explains why the shot's dressing and composition is SOOOO different than most films.
Really? North By Northwest was released just one year earlier, and was a huge hit.
I love how he talks about his mama with such love and adoration. I hope I can be the kind of mama deserving of that someday; that my son would talk about me like this 💕
Did you actually watch Psycho? The relationship Norman has with his mother is the unhealthiest kind any son can have with his mother.
Right on James. A classic pick. So glad you select movies like this. I haven't watched yet, but as a filmmaker, I know you're going to love this.
One thing I love about Hitchcock movies is that he makes a cameo in every one of his movies. Usually just for a second or two. Also he was known as the master of suspense.
When she's being questioned by the cop on the side of the road, the camera angle shows him looming over her. It kind of reminds me of how the house looms over the motel later in the movie. Now that I think of it, the guy with all the money looms over Marion when she's at her desk. It creates an oppressive atmosphere. "She got punished for her sins" well yeah. This movie was made with the Hays Code still in effect and a woman who is sexually active outside marriage and steals money will be punished in the movie, thems the rules. Hitchcock used those rules in his favor though. He shocks the audience by following the rules, it's genius.
You should look into the music composer of this film, Bernard Herrmann, the best film composer of all time. There is a good bio of him on RUclips. His first film was Citizen Kane, and his last was Taxi Driver, with many all time classics in between.
A singular film for sure. Later in the 60's, the scariest movie was Wait Until Dark, starring Audrey Hepburn. Terence Young directed and Henry Mancini scored it. Like most of Hitchcock's films mentioned here, it's also suspense rather than horror.
Yes! I totally forgot about Wait Until Dark, it was great, and I cant wait for some of these reactors to get to it. Thanks!!! I’m going to start suggesting it!
My favorite Hitchcock film is "Rope." Just brilliant, script & filmcraft-wise. Definitely would be a great reaction for you.
Also, the Beethoven record Marion's sister sees in the house; "Eroica" is "heroic" in Italian.
“The Birds”..... another Hitchcock masterpiece! 💯🔥🤙🏽😎
Have you ever noticed that "The Birds" has no music just electronic sounds
78/52 is a documentary about the shower scene, the title refers to the 78 camera setups, and the 52 cuts.
when i did media studies in secondary (high) school, this was the first movie we had to study and analyse. probably increased my love of thriller films!
Rear window is another amazing Hitchcock film. It's my favorite movie of all time.
Another great video, been enjoying them a lot last couple months, keep it up man!
I had the absolute privilege of seeing this film with the NY Philharmonic playing the score live. Nothing, and I do mean NOTHING, prepares you for watching the violins hack and stab that shower scene into existence. It was incredible.
24:48 yeah it was groundbreaking that’s why they had to throw in that whole explanation scene at the end because they were so worried about audiences being upset at not being able to wrap their heads around it
I think of Hitchcock as the master of suspense. He did it in our heads and didn't need gore on screen.
Rear Window is my favorite movie not just my favorite Hitchcock. Vertigo is an amazing movie from a film-maker's perspective. So intelligent and innovative. Gorgeous cinematography and score.
You got it! Great insight and your expertise from the production side is very much appreciated. Now subscribed! Looking forward to more.
24:57 right as it transitions, they superimposed Norman's Mom's skull over his face. Some cuts during the official release didn't have this, and some DID, so audience members were even more tripped out by what they saw. Imagine seeing a skull then you go to the next screening and it's not there. You would begin to think this film had an effect on your psyche.
James always got the best background music.
You're the best reviewer on youtube. I always enjoy your insight and comments.
This movie is one of those that will always be underrated. People assume its just one of those classics but it has such an affect that it always takes you off guard with how real and present it feels.
@Randy White and its still underrated thats how crazy Hitchcock is imo
I was born in 1960. My parents told me when I was older and saw this film for the first time that women across the United States literally stopped taking showers for quite a while. Great reaction, appreciate your comments!
I remember in film class when we got around to this film. We had been watching films that were shot around this time and I immediately remember being shocked at how different this film felt compared to other films of this time and how the camera moved. Hitchcock was so ahead of his time. Rear window is a great one too! I personally really like Vertigo as well!
Tony Perkins was just such an incredible actor, stage and film, and a slim kind of gorgeous, he got typecast after this, but he LIVED in the theater! Plus, Robert Bloch's book was revolutionary for the time, pointing out that mental illness can come from things beyond our control, that one can do nightmarish things in response to what happens in their life, rather than Crazy being a Moral Failing, our fault.
What a treat! Excited to watch you react to this masterpiece.
I swear by a book called “Hitchcock’s Notebook” as it deals specifically with his craft of filmmaking. Highly recommended to a film student.
I love seeing your reactions to these films. This is one of my favorites, and I find it funny when you and others react to these older films, but I think a lot of that stems from the fact that I, through my parents, grew up on a lot of older horror films. Can't wait to see what you've got next on the list.
Love to hear you talk film, James! Though mentioned in few other comments, I didn't see any that really focused specifically on "Vertigo" -- it is in not only my opinion, but in the longest running international film critics poll ("Sight & Sound" poll that first began in 1952) voted the best movie of all-time. It was ranked #2 behind Citizen Kane in the 2002 poll, and #1 in the most recent (2012) poll. Will be interesting to see how it ranks the next poll (2022). Hope you get to it at some point James.
Excellent pick! I projected this at a halloween movie marathon a couple years ago. It always kills. By the way, James... If you slow down the fade from Norman's face to the excavated car at the end, you can see his mother's skull briefly fade over the outline of his own face.
Arbogast the private investigator played in the show Archie Bunkers Place and Breakfast at Tiffanys.
Anthony Perkins was so perfect for this role. close to a perfect film. When Janet Leigh saw this on film she was never able to take a shower ever again and only took baths. Recommend watching Psycho 4 and the show Bates Motel...such a great movie!
you must check out his show from the 50’s. brilliant episodic television that’s been very influential on other tv shows and movies, ever since.
Great reaction. There are all sorts of technical bug-a-boos throughout Psycho. Hitchcock was shooting quickly and decided to let some of these errors go by without reshooting. As noted in other comments, Hitchcock was financing Psycho himself and to further save money, he utilized his TV crew from Alfred Hitchcock Presents. You noticed the shadow of the camera on Marion's bed but some others are a light in frame lighting the Bates Motel as Marion drives up and the camera going slightly out of focus when Arbogast is going up the stairs. One major one that was fixed was in Marion's death stare into the camera, Janet Leigh blinked. Amazingly, no one caught it except Hitchcock's wife, Alma Reville (an unsung hero who had tremendous influence on every aspect of Hitchcock's work). That's why there is a cut to the shower head again. Interestingly enough, there was a shot removed from the film that might have been a way for Hitchcock to remove something for the censors while keeping other things in. There was a shot of Marion slumped over the side of the tub and her rear end was visible. Naturally the censors went nuts over this and Hitchcock removed it. What the censors didn't ask to be removed was the shot of Marion's hand reaching for the shower curtain. If you look in the background, you will very clearly see Marion's nipples, but out of focus.
Notorious, Rear Window and North by Northwest are other brilliant movies by Hitchcock. 1 down 2 to go!
I LOVE your mom, just from that opening intro. Same way with me; so much of my love for movies comes from my mom. I loved what she said about Hitchcock, it's totally true. / 16:44 And I love what YOU said about Hitchcock here. You are totally correct./ I always tell people to start with these four Hitchcock (and you've already seen two): Psycho, Rear Window, Strangers On A Train and Shadow Of A Doubt. All four of those are Hitchcock as master of suspense, textbook HItchcock, and they go down easy, if you know what I mean. After that, there are so many branches to the Hitchcock tree: the more commercial (North By Northwest, To Catch A Thief), the more experimental (Rope, Vertigo), the more romantic (Notorious, Rebecca), the excellent early British ones (The 39 Steps, the first version of the Man Who Knew Too Much), the overlooked gems (The Wrong Man, Marnie), the later work (Frenzy), his great silent work (The Ring, The Lodger). But Strangers On A Train and Shadow Of A Doubt......those two are quintessential Hitchcock. Shadow Of A Doubt was his personal favorite, incidentally.
The irony of your mother recommending this to you...gotta love it.
a new subscriber here from having watched your Mulholland Drive reaction some days ago and then so many more videos of yours in between! a little surprising to me that you hadn't watched Psycho until now but it's not my place to say that since i only watched my first Hitchcock film this year, aha. my favorite works of his are Rope, North by Northwest, Vertigo and this! got 2 other friends of mine to watch this movie for the first time as well and it's always fun to see reactions to it. looking forward patiently to more of your content!
Rear Window is my favorite Hitchcock film, too. I love how the whole movie never leaves Jeff's apartment. My second would probably be North by Northwest.
I am a 90s kid and I love these older movies. It is extremely saddening that the better the graphics and tech gets in movies, the lack of story quality and dumb down a ting we get. Its honestly worrisome for me bc I enjoy film so much. But a great director from the 50s and one of my all time favorites is Billy Wilder. Check out some of his movies sometime even if its just for your own personal entertainment. You'll be shocked at how good the story and acting is in his movies.
New subscriber here. This was a very enjoyable reaction and analysis of such a classic film. I also want to show some appreciation for your sound quality and sound levels. I'm quite sensitive to sound and find it really uncomfortable to watch a lot of youtubers due to bad sound quality of various varieties, whether it be the movie and commentary sound being way off (where one or the other is either too loud or too quiet), or bursts of unnecessary shouting into crappy distorted microphones, among numerous other issues that make me wanna' throw my headphones out the window, lol. Whereas your sound in general is perfect. :)
This is definately one of my favorite films of all time. The whole thing is so masterfully put together. For example, in the scene as Norman and Marion talk within his office the camera angles change as the power dynamic does. Hitchcock was meticulous with details like that. His wife as well. Their daughter, who appears in the film as the young lady at the beginning offering Marion pain medicine, mentioned her mother catching a frame where you could see Marion taking a breath as she was laying on the floor. No one else had caught it. Definately check out the making of documentaries if you are interested as they are well worth it.
Another fun fact: at the time of the film "bird" was slang for a young lady. When Norman causes the picture of one on the wall to fall when he sees the body, it was a subtle nod to the viewer that Norman knocked off/killed the girl.
Rope and Strangers on a Train are perfect thrillers by Hitchcock! I really recommend, Rope was one of the first films to be done in the style of being a single take and Strangers on a Train is just iconic!
Never thought about it before, but the Andrew Garfield resemblance in looks and acting style is spot on. We need an Andrew Garfield horror movie now😁
omg a remake with andrew garfield playing norman bates😳😳
That is Anthony Perkins on the classic film. He was also a gay rights activist I believe. He unfortunately passed away in 1992 from aids at the age of 60s.
60 not 60s. Stupid me
"I'll probably never stay in a hotel again." as she heads into the bathroom - Oh, you're gonna wanna change that to "never shower again" 😬
Fun Fact: Psycho is the first film to show a 🚽 on camera.
I always like to think of Psycho kicking off the decade and of Rosemary’s Baby in 68. Just 8 years and the state of movies and horror changes so much.
Funnily enough, Anthony Perkins' first film was based on Ruth Gordon's (Minnie Castevet in 'Rosemary's Baby') biography. It's called 'The Actress' and it's from 1953
The Bad Seed (1956) is a great film with one of the all time psychopaths in film history. You can tell it was a play (very successful) also even with the cast being introduced at the end.
I remember stumbling across this movie as a kid and being terrified lol. Now it’s pretty high on my list of favorite movies. I really like the way you call out the more technical aspects of the filmmaking while still getting invested in the story being told. Liked and subscribed 👍🏾
Oh dang this would make me so curious for you to see 1962 Carnival of Souls. Its hands down my favorite horror art house movie, I dont know why but its honestly scary for me. The director of the movie was the main "bad guy" I guess you could call him, his makeup was pretty simple but he is so horrifying to me. We watched it in one of my film classes
Great movie. I don’t think I’ve seen anyone react to it.
@@marcuscato9083 Same! I think the reason no one has reacted to it is because its not widely known. Ive only meet one other person that was like "Oh yeah I know that movie"
So nice when a youngster truly appreciates film, camera work, and even knows some of the best known directors, etc.
By the way Janet Leigh is Jamie Lee Curtis mother. Hope you know who that is.
Kudos to your mom!
Wow thank you for saying what you said in the beginning of this video..Im going thru something right now and not for nothing when im feeling down I go to watch your movie reactions because they truly put a smile on my face...but those words you said before you got into the review, I really needed to hear that so , thank you😌
Always Alisha, we here for you. Good vibes always
Marion Crane was played by Janet Leigh. Janet Leigh’s daughter Jamie Lee Curtis dressed up as Marion Crane with a bloody shower curtain at the last Halloween premier.