PSYCHO - some pull quotes and a personal comment.
Quote:
The score alone is a supporting character. It makes various appearances throughout suspenseful moments in the story most notably the shower scene. Those high-pitched, ear-piercing violin strings will forever be associated with fear and catastrophe. - Jamie Broadnax
Quote:
The impeccable direction and cinematography, the masterful suspense, and the pitch-perfect performance of Anthony Perkins as Norman Bates all combine to create not just one of the best horror movies of all time, but one of the best films of all time. - Samantha Allen.
Quote:
Psycho still works on the big screen. Its success lies in its ability to find horror in the mundane... the true horror of Hitchcock’s masterpiece is that (Norman Bates) could be anywhere, just waiting at that next rest stop.
Quote:
“Gets scarier after you leave the theatre and discover how much it’s gotten under your skin.”– Amy Taubin, The Village Voice
“Excruciatingly tense and frightening…If you’re too scared to look you can still hear the slashing sounds.”– Pauline Kael. But she said its shrink explanation at the end was his worst scene ever.
“A chic, creepy thriller. The ultimate in arthouse Grand Guignol.”– J. Hoberman, The Village Voice
And yet it doesn't represent the qualities I love in Hitchcock - or in movies, except for his precision of construction and skill in manipulation of audience response. The most critically admired Hitchcock film today is VERTIGO. My favorite Hitchcock film is STRANGERS ON A TRAIN, but I love many others. PSYCHO is minor, limited, and despite what people say, forgettable. It's like a Fun House horror show. It shocks you and scares you for a few minutes. But it's totally unreal. There is more real horror in a Bergman film, or one by Michael Haneke. I love Hitchcock though, I love his craftsmanship and his ability to entertain. I love the Hitchcock-Truffaut dialogues tapes. You can find them somewhere on YouTube. Currently HERE.
Quote:
Pauline Kael didn’t review it (even when it ran in revival) but, in 1978, complained about it as “a borderline case of immorality… which, because of the director’s cheerful complicity with the killer, had a sadistic glee that I couldn’t quite deal with,” and she condescended to the shower scene as “a good dirty joke.”- Richard Brody, "The Greatness of PSYCHO" in
The New Yorker Nov. 18, 2012. .
As a great Pauline Kael fan myself (not that I don't disagree with a lot of her opinions and disapprove of some of her behavior), I fall in with her regarding PSYCHO as an outlier. Brody in that article points out that PSYCHO made Hitchcock a fortune, and was a flop with the critics. Incidentally I don't think it was a "career-best performance" for Anthony Perkins; I think it ruined his career.