Janet Leigh says she hasn't taken a shower since. She's probably not the only one. But cleanliness was not the only casualty of Alfred Hitchcock's classic thriller set at the fictional Bates Motel: the wholesome image of motherhood took a major hit as well.
AP Images
Actress Janet Leigh appears as Marion Crane in the famous shower scene in Alfred Hitchcock's 1960 classic Psycho.
Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho is being advertised as more a shocker than a thriller, and that is right—I am shocked, in the sense that I am offended and disgusted.
- Psycho
- directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Stars: Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh, John Gavin, Martin Balsam, Vera
Myles, John McIntire
Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Writer: Joseph Stefano
(from a novel by Robert Bloch)
Academy Awards: 4 nominations, no wins
Related Information: http://www.filmsite.org/psyc.html, http://www.hitchcock.nl/
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I will add that Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh and the other actors carry out their jobs very skillfully under Hitchcock's cute, if sometimes long-winded, direction. But I will add further that, despite the talk about seeing the picture from the start and not revealing the secret, there is no real mystification. Anyone with a Sunday-supplement knowledge of psychology and a modest sophistication in the techniques of mystery-story construction will easily keep abreast of the plot. I knew what was coming and, had I been in the audience for pleasure, I would have left. It is incumbent on us to inspect the real horrors of our time, but we don't have to traffic with Hitchcock's giggling obscenities.
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