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Psycho (12/12) Movie CLIP - She Wouldn't Even Harm a Fly (1960) HD 

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CLIP DESCRIPTION:
In Norman's (Anthony Perkins) twisted mind, he is Mrs. Bates; her thoughts are his.
FILM DESCRIPTION:
In 1960, Alfred Hitchcock was already famous as the screen's master of suspense (and perhaps the best-known film director in the world) when he released Psycho and forever changed the shape and tone of the screen thriller. From its first scene, in which an unmarried couple balances pleasure and guilt in a lunchtime liaison in a cheap hotel (hardly a common moment in a major studio film in 1960), Psycho announced that it was taking the audience to places it had never been before, and on that score what followed would hardly disappoint. Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) is unhappy in her job at a Phoenix, Arizona real estate office and frustrated in her romance with hardware store manager Sam Loomis (John Gavin). One afternoon, Marion is given $40,000 in cash to be deposited in the bank. Minutes later, impulse has taken over and Marion takes off with the cash, hoping to leave Phoenix for good and start a new life with her purloined nest egg. 36 hours later, paranoia and exhaustion have started to set in, and Marion decides to stop for the night at the Bates Motel, where nervous but personable innkeeper Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins) cheerfully mentions that she's the first guest in weeks, before he regales her with curious stories about his mother. There's hardly a film fan alive who doesn't know what happens next, but while the shower scene is justifiably the film's most famous sequence, there are dozens of memorable bits throughout this film. The first of a handful of sequels followed in 1983, while Gus Van Sant's controversial remake, starring Vince Vaughn and Anne Heche, appeared in 1998.
CREDITS:
TM & © Universal (1960)
Cast: Anthony Perkins
Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Producer: Alfred Hitchcock
Screenwriters: Joseph Stefano, Robert Bloch
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4 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 2,5 тыс.   
@SJMJ91
@SJMJ91 9 лет назад
Anthony Perkins was perfect for the role of Norman Bates. One who has such a baby face and appears a shy, friendly actor but at the same time, has clear psychological issues. Such a superb performance!
@JoelCraike
@JoelCraike 9 лет назад
I agree with you big time
@SJMJ91
@SJMJ91 8 лет назад
Indeed. I also love how the only real glimpse of killer Perkins was for like 30 seconds when he runs into the basement with the dress on, and that evil smile at the end. Makes it more terrifying and plays on audience imagination; hence why no matter how many times I watch Psycho, I always feel the presence of Mrs Bates.
@hardren101
@hardren101 8 лет назад
+SJMJ91 sometimes during a movie/tv show....the stars align and all the pieces to the puzzle fall into place perfectly(i love lucy,psycho,silence of the lambs......alfred hitchcock had a vision and he brought the vison to life perfectly here....from casting anthony perkins as norman bates....right down to the very last scene where we see anthony perkins and seem to go inside his warped mind and hear the mother......these last few seconds are masterfull.....the inflections in the mother voice...the dialogue.....all brilliant...where they fuck up is by making a sequel which never matches the original...
@myahollandia3552
@myahollandia3552 8 лет назад
i think he is too beautiful for the rol
@samueljackson315
@samueljackson315 7 лет назад
All the same reasons why Freddie Higore is a great Norman on Bates Motel.
@yvonnelastra4962
@yvonnelastra4962 7 лет назад
The woman voicing the mom deserves an award too. That is grade A voice acting
@Amynity
@Amynity 5 лет назад
Yvonne Lastra was that really his voice? i was looking everywhere to see if it was really his voice. Maybe i have not at the right places.
@nicholassharer4405
@nicholassharer4405 5 лет назад
@@Amynity "Mother" is voiced by actress Virginia Gregg.
@Amynity
@Amynity 5 лет назад
Nicholas Sharer i see, thx.
@KingLich451
@KingLich451 4 года назад
Exactly.
@vicvega24
@vicvega24 4 года назад
Hollywood is overrun by "Want heros to win" type of people. 😂😂
@moqq4275
@moqq4275 10 лет назад
its amazing how anthony perkins transitions between a doe eyed innocent lad to an evil eyed monster in jus a few seconds........what an actor!
@Gremlins1957
@Gremlins1957 5 лет назад
I saw this when I was eight in 1964 or five at the Drive in theater with my big Sister and my little Sister. And the Parlor scene when Norman is talking to Marion Crane about how sick his mother is mentally scared the heck out of me as a kid. And I knew that there was something wrong with that Motel manager.
@taroupriapus5202
@taroupriapus5202 4 года назад
That doesnt look evil eyes for me, it looks like a guy seducing me lol
@ShawnFerrell
@ShawnFerrell 4 года назад
Yeah it's almost as if people can change their facial expressions.
@haileytriest7439
@haileytriest7439 4 года назад
Creepy
@ph8077
@ph8077 3 года назад
Yes, I came to say the same...it's a shame this movie became so iconic. It pretty much killed his career.
@ghostfacekiller4371
@ghostfacekiller4371 2 года назад
Perkins' acting was so ahead of its time. Arguably the best movie performance of the 60's.
@ghostfacekiller4371
@ghostfacekiller4371 2 года назад
@Jarred Knox-Neyhart-May If you say so.
@def7158
@def7158 2 года назад
He's amazing and is absolutely robbed of an Oscar, but for the 60s I'm going with Katherine Hepburn in "The Lion in Winter"
@dodleblob
@dodleblob 2 года назад
Maybe not of the decade but of the year. the 60s had so many great movie performances and I don't think Perkins was #1
@jennifercheck6872
@jennifercheck6872 2 года назад
@Jarred Mello-Neyhart-May Ok kid go watch some Marvel
@Howlingburd19
@Howlingburd19 2 года назад
Precisely. If this performance were done today, it’d get incredible praise!
@MLFreese
@MLFreese 3 года назад
When Norman says "thank you" to the officer for the blanket in his mother's voice is a genius transition to what state of mind Norman is in before we even see him yet.
@Powerranger-le4up
@Powerranger-le4up 8 месяцев назад
Just like the transgender people.
@user-rr6uy7re9o
@user-rr6uy7re9o 9 лет назад
This scene is so genius.
@alexisleblanc-dussault6665
@alexisleblanc-dussault6665 8 лет назад
This movie is so genius*
@kingskid1985
@kingskid1985 6 лет назад
There is something so unsettling to me about when the police go in and give Norman some blankets and you hear the female voice of Norman's mother saying, "Thank you!"
@Priyanshukumar-th5jf
@Priyanshukumar-th5jf 4 года назад
This movie is legendary
@elanagreen7610
@elanagreen7610 3 года назад
Yep
@celtictillidie67
@celtictillidie67 3 года назад
@@kingskid1985 well thats kinda the point lol ....
@julietbauer4989
@julietbauer4989 8 лет назад
That smile is the scariest thing in this movie. Not the shower scene, not the Arbogast's stabbing, not the "I'm Norma Bates" scream. That fucking smile.
@hamajaff8236
@hamajaff8236 8 лет назад
that and when they turn the freaking chair and there is a skeleton
@mario90210
@mario90210 8 лет назад
and that glance too
@The7legacy
@The7legacy 8 лет назад
Imagine Norman Bates working for the I.R.S. He has that smile when you don't pay your taxes.
@Cinemabuff97
@Cinemabuff97 8 лет назад
Agreed. 😬
@tacticuskillgore2109
@tacticuskillgore2109 7 лет назад
Juliet B yea it's Norma's skull mixed with Norman's face.Looks scary tho
@samsquanch1996
@samsquanch1996 9 лет назад
why can't horror movies nowadays be more like this? this movie proves you don't need a bunch of CGI or a shit ton of violence and gore in order to make a terrifying movie
@Gggmanlives
@Gggmanlives 8 лет назад
***** Yes but every video on RU-vid for an old song or movie is always "Why can't todays movies/music be like this bla bla" it's tiring to see.
@johnstriker480
@johnstriker480 8 лет назад
Groundhog Day is still a better movie..... ;-)
@questeye8167
@questeye8167 8 лет назад
+Gggmanlives well it's true. Back when we had Michael Jackson. now we have Justin Bieber. Back then we had John Carpenters Halloween. Now we have Rob Zombie Halloween. We use to have art music called Pop. Now we have fake auto tuned bullshit called pop. basically everything that use to be cool is shit now.
@jduka1216
@jduka1216 8 лет назад
+Gggmanlives There are people like you too in these types of videos.
@GoUtes92
@GoUtes92 8 лет назад
Most horror movies are about jumps. This one was actually kind of fascinating. I spent the whole time trying to figure out if it was actually him or his mother or somebody else that committed the murder.
@diegodubber2140
@diegodubber2140 4 года назад
Alfred Hitchcock was a great director. The murderer's face shape-shifting to the skeleton of the mother as the screen fades to the last scene is a pure piece of art. That man was a genius.
@Gsjdujdbdv
@Gsjdujdbdv 3 месяца назад
With RU-vid, I could search for this scene, drag to the end part and pause multiple times to catch that screen fade interlacing the boy and an old woman. I want to know how the crowd in the 60s, who unlike us had not been over saturated with modern cinema, had perceived this flicker of a scene. I'm really curious
@Masky5150
@Masky5150 3 года назад
This scene is perfection. Showing how deeply Norman's psychosis had become. Mother thinking she will get away with her crimes because Norman is a dutiful son and she but a frail elderly woman. The smile showing she knows she's more than capable of committing the murders but believes she will get away with it in the end with Norman taking the fall.
@fatstogie
@fatstogie 10 месяцев назад
What? You clearly didn't understand the movie bro
@jendeukiegirl
@jendeukiegirl 7 месяцев назад
​@@fatstogie what do you mean
@S0lidState
@S0lidState 9 лет назад
The ending here, even though there is no gore, was just unsettling and put the uneasiness of the frosting on the cake.
@dashman8499
@dashman8499 9 лет назад
Solid State thats what makes these old movies good, even at the intense parts, there's almost no blood, but still very intense
@Schmitzerize92
@Schmitzerize92 10 лет назад
I'm not a psychopath
@Gamelover254
@Gamelover254 10 лет назад
Your right, you're not. You're just crazy. We all go a little crazy sometimes.
@BIGBUFFGRILL
@BIGBUFFGRILL 10 лет назад
Its okay, I'm here
@SagittariusQueen1980
@SagittariusQueen1980 10 лет назад
Aw honey, don't deny it. you are a psychopath.
@RegalPlatypus
@RegalPlatypus 10 лет назад
No, you're perfectly normal. Now, why don't you go take a shower; it'll help calm your nerves...
@ruthiehenshallfan99
@ruthiehenshallfan99 10 лет назад
No, you just go a little mad sometimes. We all go a little mad sometimes.
@EduardoSanchez-gu4up
@EduardoSanchez-gu4up 9 лет назад
I love how Anthony Perkins smiles at the end, it's so terrifying and bone chilling. Rest In Peace Mr.Perkins, you will be missed. 😔
@choloyolo8522
@choloyolo8522 4 года назад
Yeah! He was so hot tho!
@choloyolo8522
@choloyolo8522 Год назад
@Thawne yeah, he passed away.
@alaricbirkett4116
@alaricbirkett4116 2 года назад
It's genius the way Hitchcock superimposed the mother's corpse's skull onto Norman's face just as he fades away: those teeth. Absolute cinema perfection.
@wowalamoiz9489
@wowalamoiz9489 4 месяца назад
Such things that we take for granted now, were acts of immense creativity back then.
@OreoSmithOfficial
@OreoSmithOfficial 3 месяца назад
I just finished watching this movie and was looking for a comment like this. Right at the end I noticed when it was fading to the car being pulled out of the swamp that I could faintly see Mrs. Bates' skeleton staring at me. One of the best shots I've ever seen.
@seanboy316
@seanboy316 2 месяца назад
Don't forget the chain that pulls the car is also tugging at his heart at the same time.
@TheeKorovaMilkBar
@TheeKorovaMilkBar Год назад
The way he subtly pans his eyes when he thinks that he's being watched. Little touches that make for a great scene.
@ianrae1064
@ianrae1064 10 лет назад
Note to modern day horror producers: You don't need lots of blood and gore to scare your audience, this clip is the perfect example of that. I'm 37 now and that part of the movie still chills me to the bone.
@katiebayliss9887
@katiebayliss9887 6 лет назад
Ian Rae its not scary tho.......
@seigenigma7230
@seigenigma7230 6 лет назад
Katie Bayliss scary is subjective. But being creepy sticks to you
@slimboyfat9409
@slimboyfat9409 6 лет назад
Ian Rae You're 41 now. My ,how time flies!
@ChristinaPh
@ChristinaPh 6 лет назад
I agree but let's not forget it's different categories. This is psychological thriller.
@linkinajar8676
@linkinajar8676 6 лет назад
PS: AND STOP IT WITH THE JUMPSCARES, MY GOODNESS!!!!!
@Suchomimus65
@Suchomimus65 10 лет назад
Hell of a way to end a movie.
@NintendoFanatic2001
@NintendoFanatic2001 5 лет назад
That's the 60s for ya
@stevehenry1
@stevehenry1 3 года назад
Yes. But in the 60's character and plot development were what made movie's great. Unlike today when special effects is more important than the characters or the plot
@Tyler-nc4px
@Tyler-nc4px 3 года назад
*creepy smile*
@michaeldavies7949
@michaeldavies7949 2 года назад
@@stevehenry1 Damn right! We're looking at you Disney
@kvngggaladrosa
@kvngggaladrosa 8 месяцев назад
@@stevehenry1through most companies eyes. What you stated AND special effects are what make a movie great to the public
@RyanKrul44
@RyanKrul44 9 лет назад
I remember watching this movie as a kid, and that smile he makes scared the living hell out of me. Even more than the shower scene, and when Mothers corpse is revealed.
@ruthiehenshallfan99
@ruthiehenshallfan99 9 лет назад
All three scenes still creep me out!
@bsb2107
@bsb2107 9 лет назад
+Ryan Krul me tooo..this particular scene you mentioned made me see nightmares for like a month when I was a kid..
@ΝικολαςΚοτζακ
@ΝικολαςΚοτζακ 5 лет назад
And Norman skullface
@bluemoon3699
@bluemoon3699 3 года назад
This is an adult movie. Not for kids.
@evernevermore-ci2so
@evernevermore-ci2so 2 года назад
At first glance, no one would imagine that this sweet, shy young man was completely deranged. He doesn't have that wild eyed, Charles Manson look. He's shy, awkward, handsome and a little timid at times. But behind closed doors, whole different situation. People like Norman exist. And they don't always "look" crazy. That's why Anthony Perkins was perfect. Very unassuming.
@DarthRushy
@DarthRushy 6 лет назад
That fly is the most famous of its race.
@Quaronna
@Quaronna 4 года назад
💀💀💀💀
@dnasty312
@dnasty312 4 года назад
What about the one on Dr. Lecter's forehead?
@abubakrakram6208
@abubakrakram6208 4 года назад
Not anymore…
@masterlangtau
@masterlangtau 4 года назад
@@abubakrakram6208 🏆
@jamieprfm
@jamieprfm 4 года назад
AbuBakr Akram lmaooo
@SuperAnubis1000
@SuperAnubis1000 10 лет назад
This SMILE
@jordanrb1996
@jordanrb1996 9 лет назад
lucas cabley you can see teeth as it fades
@bridgetoneill9684
@bridgetoneill9684 9 лет назад
jordanrb1996 It's actually a skull. Look closer at it
@mike_izzo
@mike_izzo 5 лет назад
That smile that damn smile
@idkidc4314
@idkidc4314 3 года назад
@INDIANSNIPER i have same smile :)
@sagarsaxena6318
@sagarsaxena6318 7 лет назад
So folks,you might not get Nominated for an Oscar but the World can still remember you 50 years later for that ONE role.
@bloggaloggs
@bloggaloggs 4 года назад
You mean Norman-nated.
@tiaammar925
@tiaammar925 4 года назад
60 years and counting
@101Volts
@101Volts 2 года назад
Peter Lorre's in a similar situation, after having played a serial killer of children in "M" which was released 29 years earlier, in 1931. Not like Lorre never played anything else (I appreciate the rather short Mr. Moto series, and his appearance in 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,) but he was typecast.
@Soundofsilver2007
@Soundofsilver2007 2 года назад
The world will remember this movie by 2060 (100 years later…)
@jacobjones5269
@jacobjones5269 Год назад
@@Soundofsilver2007 Imagine the ones who dig it up 50,000 years from now?!.. Mind blown!..
@wweartmaker29
@wweartmaker29 9 лет назад
from 1:28 as the transition happens,you can see Norman's face turning into a skull.Slow it down and see.
@TomHPMc
@TomHPMc 9 лет назад
S Nimgole Every time I watch the film or this clip I always try to pause it at the right point, to assure myself it is there and I'm not going crazy!
@JokingJames2
@JokingJames2 9 лет назад
+S Nimgole It's actually an image of Norma's corpse being overlayed on Norman's face during the transition.
@yoekt
@yoekt 8 лет назад
Dude I love that little bit!
@thevideocommenter3061
@thevideocommenter3061 8 лет назад
I am fucking terrifyed* right now
@Gibla2077
@Gibla2077 8 лет назад
+Tom McRoberts it's actually 1:30
@Fummy007
@Fummy007 5 лет назад
"they'll see... they'll see and they'll know. and they'll say why she wouldnt even harm a fly." One of the best written lines ever.
@mackiemesser9319
@mackiemesser9319 4 года назад
From 1:22 to 1:29 is the finest piece of acting you will ever see (even without the "special effect" at the end). Perkins' abrupt change from almost sympathetic character to psychopathic killer, accomplished solely by facial expressions, is astounding.
@diego4493115
@diego4493115 9 лет назад
Those hypocrites from the Oscar never recognized Perkins's talent, especially regarding his performance on this masterpiece. What bunch of ''idiots'', such a fraud for the cinema history.
@Partnerfrance
@Partnerfrance 9 лет назад
His facial mannerisms in this scene alone are worthy of an Oscar!
@kimmolaine8069
@kimmolaine8069 9 лет назад
Have to agree. Though the Oscar committee seems hard pressed on awarding villains. Another masterpiece of acting is Scorpio from Dirty Harry. The best kind of acting is that what makes you forget you're watching a movie.
@Partnerfrance
@Partnerfrance 9 лет назад
***** Fair enough, although they came pretty close when they awarded all those Oscars to "Silence of the Lambs". I guess you could make a case that neither "Psycho" nor "Silence of the Lambs" were really "horror" films, though -- perhaps more "psychological thrillers"?
@Partnerfrance
@Partnerfrance 9 лет назад
***** A lot of truth in what you say - I know there is a school of thought that "Psycho" was the original "slasher" film and set the stage for things like the "Freddy/Friday the 13th" films and the like, although to be honest I'm not sure that's what Hitchcock had in mind. But you're right -- the Academy doesn't really take horror films as seriously as they do other kinds of films: otherwise Boris Karloff would surely have gotten an award.
@desertdispatch
@desertdispatch 9 лет назад
Morela Vought what was funny he was on Johnny Carson and told Johnny he was leery of showers..
@pat9757
@pat9757 8 лет назад
I think that the best type of horror movies, are the ones with suspense. Hands down I think that Alfred Hitchcock is one of the best suspense writers ever!
@G38830
@G38830 4 года назад
He invented suspense...
@joefriedman9843
@joefriedman9843 3 года назад
You might even say he's a Master of Suspense?
@Bermuda8
@Bermuda8 3 года назад
I watched only one movie of him. This one. And I already think that Hitchcock is COOL. I loved the movie.
@radupopescu2370
@radupopescu2370 2 года назад
Nobody can even touch Hitchcock.
@tammyiannone488
@tammyiannone488 Год назад
That is why he is called the Master of Suspense. I truly believe he invented it!!!
@Edge1234101
@Edge1234101 10 лет назад
Its sad to know that Anthony Perkins did such an amazing job with this character that he wasnt really cast for anything of this scale after Psycho... Its a damn shame.
@shippy1991
@shippy1991 9 лет назад
Check him out in the 1978 version of Les Miserables where he played Javert. It's here on RU-vid if you haven't seen it
@missyadams
@missyadams 3 года назад
He was in Green Mansions with Audrey Hepburn.
@12classics39
@12classics39 11 месяцев назад
This role shows what range he had. I think he could’ve excelled at playing any kind of character. It would’ve been great if Hollywood had allowed him to flex his acting muscles rather than allow him to be typecast.
@Sonic_the_Hedge-hog
@Sonic_the_Hedge-hog 2 года назад
1:31 as Norman’s face fades out you can see his mother’s skull faintly.
@Jptm26
@Jptm26 4 года назад
That last line and look on Norman's face sends chills down my entire body
@brendanbrady1000
@brendanbrady1000 10 лет назад
Norman Bates is NOT a psychopath. A psychopath doesn't care about hurting people and does it for the thrill, partly. Norman Bates has multiple personality disorder. He thinks he's 'Mother' when he kills, not Norman.
@jordancurrie31
@jordancurrie31 10 лет назад
But his mother's personality in his head, finds pleasure and justice in killing (woman). Him having a sort of extreme case of bipolar, just add to his psycho/messed up mind.
@foreverahorse6302
@foreverahorse6302 10 лет назад
He does not have a personality disorder he has a dissociative disorder called Dissociative Identity Disorder when Norman was a child he was verbally abuse and since his weak emotional personality he developed a new personality that comes out when the host or genetic personality feels at danger. Norman in fact murders two young women in his teen years because his mother told him all women are whores and that they deserve to die and she, his mother was the only good woman in the world so when the teens later tried to seduce him in his adolescent years he killed them because his genetic personality felt threatened and later he forgets that he murdered them because the personality meant to protect the host came out . He later kills his mother and his mothers lover because the lover was ruining his perfect mother and Norman became jealous of their relationship so he killed her but out of guilt pretended to be his own mother so he would not have to live with the guilt of killing her now the personality that came out when Norman felt threaten was gone and a personality came out when he had a lust to kill or attraction to a female btw I am a big Norman bates fan so I just wanted to clear that up and if you think what I am telling u I made up look up Norman bates villain :P
@foreverahorse6302
@foreverahorse6302 10 лет назад
A psychopath is someone with a need to kill and cannot tell right from wrong they don't kill for the thrill they kill to stop the want it is like an addiction. Norman bates in fact can not tell right from wrong and has a hidden need to kill that comes in the form of his other personality
@jordancurrie31
@jordancurrie31 10 лет назад
ForeverAHorse hahaha he doesn't have a personality disorder??? "Dissociative Identity Disorder" is another way of saying "multiple personality disorder". its a split PERSONALITY. plus i don't think the definition of Psychopath is as complex as you guy think it is.
@TheDarkDutchman
@TheDarkDutchman 10 лет назад
It is Mother!
@clauderenaud229
@clauderenaud229 9 лет назад
One of the biggest errors in Oscar history...not at least nominating Anthony Perkins for this role, which eventually defined his entire career!
@sunnygolightly9996
@sunnygolightly9996 3 года назад
No blood, no gore, no jumpscare, no screaming monsters, just a deranged psychopath and "her" evil mind, one that feels no remorse after several murder, and truly enjoys the manipulation of her son. Truly genius.
@SunayanaSB1998
@SunayanaSB1998 3 года назад
His change in facial expression is creepy and terrifying. Within a few seconds it changes from a cute baby face to an evil monster. Amazing! That smile alone is enough to win an actor an Oscar and to give nightmare to anyone at bedtime. What an actor! Superlative performance👏👏
@herxmoy
@herxmoy 5 лет назад
Anthony should have TOTALLY WIN AN OSCAR for his role. He was amazing
@joshuahjjohnston
@joshuahjjohnston 5 лет назад
and he wasn't even nominated!!
@jareds.7063
@jareds.7063 10 лет назад
Definitely one of the best scenes. Norman is just sitting in a room, quietly, all the drama's been done, the movie is almost over. His "mother" tells us how harmless she is. I liked her speech on how harmless she was, but the best part was when she said " I'm not even going to swat that fly. I hope they are watching. They'll see, they'll see and they'll know- and they'll say- why she wouldn't even harm a fly!" And Norman looks up at the camera, a psychopathic smile on his face, which then turns into a skeletal grin.
@guru6831
@guru6831 2 года назад
Mother's ghost, not Norman, smiled!
@pascalg16
@pascalg16 2 года назад
@@guru6831 Not a ghost, Norman has a mental disorder.
@munzuury
@munzuury 9 лет назад
watching the series bates motel at the moment and i have to say the norman they chose for it fits soooo well
@jonoghue
@jonoghue 9 лет назад
you wouldn't believe he played charlie bucket in the willie wonka remake or august rush
@munzuury
@munzuury 9 лет назад
Jon Doe right. But Norman .. What a sicko :D
@yushigo12
@yushigo12 9 лет назад
I know right? I'm watching bates motel they fit so well. I love both movies and t.v series... :D
@xreaverofsoulsx
@xreaverofsoulsx 9 лет назад
Maybe...but nothing will top Anthony Perkins's performance.
@munzuury
@munzuury 9 лет назад
xreaverofsoulsx true story :D
@etanaedelman9011
@etanaedelman9011 9 лет назад
Man, he really should have won an Oscar for that, or at very least been nominated. He was really the best thing about the movie. He doesn't even say a word during this scene and yet he's still utterly terrifying.
@jacklemm1518
@jacklemm1518 3 года назад
Pause at 1:31 and look at how “mother’s” scull is overlaps with Norman’s face. That’s probably symbolic for how “mother” will always be a part of Norman, even if she’s dead.
@guru6831
@guru6831 2 года назад
Mother possessed Norman!
@johndonaldson3619
@johndonaldson3619 10 месяцев назад
0:16 'He say 'thank you' in his mothers voice - OMG!!!
@alhamauei2754
@alhamauei2754 10 лет назад
Norman's smile though...
@edgarallanpoestheblackcat6613
@edgarallanpoestheblackcat6613 8 лет назад
Am I the only one who finds Norman extremely attractive?
@Alexis13407
@Alexis13407 8 лет назад
Omg I want to devour him lol
@edgarallanpoestheblackcat6613
@edgarallanpoestheblackcat6613 8 лет назад
Livetuber So do I!!!
@k.s.4116
@k.s.4116 8 лет назад
Omg same
@edgarallanpoestheblackcat6613
@edgarallanpoestheblackcat6613 8 лет назад
He was also a singer too, although it sounds nothing like him...
@randyjhonson980
@randyjhonson980 8 лет назад
Women are fucked up
@FatHedgie
@FatHedgie 9 лет назад
That City Wok owner... why, he wouldn't even harm a fryyyyyyy.
@datboi6183
@datboi6183 9 лет назад
xD
@preparetoholdyourcolour7080
@preparetoholdyourcolour7080 4 года назад
LMAO that's exactly what I thought
@Motownsports89
@Motownsports89 4 года назад
Oh I hate a Japanese!
@Badasseditz-s4c
@Badasseditz-s4c 3 года назад
I'm not even going to swat that fryy
@princetate1586
@princetate1586 3 года назад
City sushi 🍣
@bigtony1434
@bigtony1434 3 года назад
You’ve gotta love the subtlety of the skull that faintly appears on Norman’s face as her looks into the camera. Genius.
@coldplay68
@coldplay68 Год назад
Did anyone notice how before they pull the car out of the mud Normans face transforms into his dead mothers face? 1:31 fantastic filmmaking
@rucianapollard7098
@rucianapollard7098 Год назад
Hitchcock at his finest!! 💀
@iamclassicforlife
@iamclassicforlife 8 лет назад
"It's sad, when a mother has to speak the words that condemn her own son. But I couldn't allow them to believe that I would commit murder. They'll put him away now, as I should have years ago. He was always bad, and in the end he intended to tell them I killed those girls and that man… as if I could do anything but just sit and stare, like one of his stuffed birds. They know I can't even move a finger, and I won't! I'll just sit here and be quiet, just in case they do… suspect me. They're probably watching me. Well, let them. Let them see what kind of a person I am. I'm not even going to swat that fly. I hope they are watching... they'll see. They'll see and they'll know, and they'll say, 'Why, she wouldn't even harm a fly… '"
@hardren101
@hardren101 8 лет назад
brilliant...100% brilliant...the sound of the mother's voice(sinister).....the words she speaks(clearly she is as nutty as norman)...the inflections on certain words(he's always been baddddddd...just incase they do sussspect me)from the mind of a creative genius .....the something that can be born from nothing....amazing..i've watched the movie as a teen and as an adult....storyline,shower scene,acting.overall movie good....but it the last few minutes for me that truly speaks to the brillance....
@iamclassicforlife
@iamclassicforlife 8 лет назад
Chase Jackson Well said, mate.
@iceboltlp595
@iceboltlp595 8 лет назад
One of the best monologues in movie history
@benglaser1345
@benglaser1345 7 лет назад
A boy's best friend is his mother
@O-DogKubrick
@O-DogKubrick 7 лет назад
iamclassicforlife Don't forget when she says "Thank you" to the guard. 0:19
@GretaZ499
@GretaZ499 10 лет назад
ohmegod my heart beat actually accelerated x100. Just goes to show you don't need exaggerated, disgusting effects to feel like you're watching a real horror
@jordancurrie31
@jordancurrie31 10 лет назад
or pointless jump scares.
@jordancurrie31
@jordancurrie31 10 лет назад
every B Grade Slasher film in a nutshell haha
@katiebayliss9887
@katiebayliss9887 6 лет назад
General Horse damn, someone's frustrated.
@andromedaiscoming185
@andromedaiscoming185 6 лет назад
General Horse I hope you've gotten laid since you wrote this
@haintedhouse3052
@haintedhouse3052 5 лет назад
amazing? pretty strong word for a slasher film@Mooky Blaylock
@soleyjohnson3374
@soleyjohnson3374 10 лет назад
It's okay, I didn't need to sleep tonight anyways.
@xr55
@xr55 4 года назад
Are you still awake?
@ralsei7170
@ralsei7170 3 года назад
Legends say this girl is still awake to this day
@Tyler-nc4px
@Tyler-nc4px 3 года назад
@@ralsei7170 you sir, win an award for this comment.
@antoinesubitlescoups338
@antoinesubitlescoups338 3 года назад
No dialogue. No hysterics. Just a little stare. And it curls up your blood and sends a chill down the spine. They don't make actors like him anymore. Pure dramatic genius.
@latimerjohnson4604
@latimerjohnson4604 3 года назад
They do make actors like him it’s just they don’t make movies like they use to and write movie scripts like the 60’s and Hollywood isn’t like it used to be
@justinthunder1733
@justinthunder1733 Год назад
That psychopath face at the end is giving me chills to be honest... This is a great performance
@PrinceSmith7
@PrinceSmith7 5 месяцев назад
Could you please explain me this scene? Before this, the psychiatrist clearly mentioned that the *mother's side* of Norman's personality confessed to him of killing all those people. But here in this scene, she says "I couldn't allow them to believe that I would commit murder" which contradicts the psychiatrist's story. That made it confusing for me...
@madamebkrt
@madamebkrt 6 лет назад
I just watched this movie for the first time today, and Anthony Perkins' portrayal of Norman Bates was astounding. While also terrifying, the entire movie impressed me so much.
@spideraxis
@spideraxis Год назад
Anthony Perkins' interpretation and facial expressions were perfect.
@PrinceSmith7
@PrinceSmith7 5 месяцев назад
Could you please explain me this scene? Before this, the psychiatrist clearly mentioned that the *mother's side* of Norman's personality confessed to him of killing all those people. But here in this scene, she says "I couldn't allow them to believe that I would commit murder" which contradicts the psychiatrist's story. That made it confusing for me...
@spideraxis
@spideraxis 4 месяца назад
@@PrinceSmith7 It was explained clearly in the movie. The adult male side of Norman Bates was attracted to Marian Crane. The little boy in Norman was attached to his mother. Thus an internal conflict.
@PrinceSmith7
@PrinceSmith7 4 месяца назад
@@spideraxis Obviously that was explained, but I'm talking about the final scene of the movie with Norman in the jail cell looking at the camera with his mother's voiceover. It suggests that there is another layer which the psychiatrist didn't really uncover.
@spideraxis
@spideraxis 4 месяца назад
@@PrinceSmith7 Probably Hitchcock left it to your imagination. Mine is that once Bates was in jail he had gone totally nuts.
@Makothehybrid
@Makothehybrid 2 года назад
This movie has three iconic scenes
@esra3387
@esra3387 3 года назад
Anthony Perkins is really talented. I mean look at this gaze. Like he was born for this role. Also he is a really handsome man. May God bless his soul.
@guru6831
@guru6831 2 года назад
First, viewers think Mother did it. Then, viewers think Norman did it. In the end, Hitchcock reveals Mother as the killer.
@francis_leigh
@francis_leigh 9 лет назад
Only just noticing at 0:19 sounds a lot like his mother saying 'Thank-you', very creepy.
@kingskid1985
@kingskid1985 6 лет назад
Very unsettling and disturbing...
@stonedleo
@stonedleo 4 года назад
Watch the movie and youll understand.
@rubyjennie9441
@rubyjennie9441 3 года назад
that's exactly the point tho ..
@gudapictures
@gudapictures 6 лет назад
Greatest film villain of all time. Greatest murder mystery of all time. One of the greatest movies of all time and it didn't even get nominated for an Oscar.
@lostlakpaul
@lostlakpaul 9 лет назад
God I love Psycho! I wish I had never seen it so I can watch it again for the first time. I love how Hitchcock made us sympathetic toward Norman Bates and had us spend time with him. And at the very end Hitchcock puts us in his (Mother's) mindset for the first time. Brilliant!
@ericmgarrison
@ericmgarrison Год назад
I love how the skull of the mother appears briefly right before they drag the car out of the swamp around 1:28. Also the cop who opens the door at 00:13 is Ted White from many film and TV appearances including the Mary Tyler Moore Show.
@Erekose2023
@Erekose2023 Год назад
That transition from calm innoncence to calculating demented suprior smile. This answers the ultimate question... Who is The Joker.... Normal Bates
@greg-chrisc2658
@greg-chrisc2658 9 лет назад
to this day this is still the scariest movie I ever saw.
@TaeeshNENE
@TaeeshNENE 5 лет назад
Those expressions, that voice and the mothers skull at the end ... Simply superb. What a film....
@Achilles·LastStand
@Achilles·LastStand 2 года назад
This ending was articulately OUTSTANDING. I remember watching this movie over and over as a teen, it is absolutely amazing
@mikep5335
@mikep5335 6 месяцев назад
A crane pulls out Marion Crane from the swamp. Get it? Hitchcock LOVED visual puns and visual symbolism like this...just loved it.
@wayydowneast
@wayydowneast 2 года назад
It’s the split second skull before the car emerges for me…
@OreadNYC
@OreadNYC 3 года назад
What makes this scene so fascinating is the way in which Norman believes that "Mother" killed Marion while "Mother" at least claims to believe that Norman did it (although that smile at the end suggests that "she" is lying).
@cutekittyiscuteronnie
@cutekittyiscuteronnie 11 дней назад
That’s also how I interpreted this scene
@stephenstumbke1721
@stephenstumbke1721 Год назад
Perkins was a superb actor
@littlemisscupid9823
@littlemisscupid9823 8 лет назад
I think the most chilling part of this film is the creepy smile at the end and the "thank you" in mothers voice it made me scream lol
@edwardhannah8507
@edwardhannah8507 Год назад
Damn, you kinda forget how great this film was.
@TXPAScot
@TXPAScot 2 года назад
One thing always intrigued me about this story: Between the two previous girls, Marion Crane and Arbogast, P.I. - and all their vehicles - just how deep WAS that swamp? They could be dragging it for a year...
@Eziokilla9595
@Eziokilla9595 10 лет назад
STILL SO FUCKING SCARY!!!! New horror/thriller films need to take notes from the master Hitchcock. On a good day, he might be my #1 director of all time.
@Jombo1
@Jombo1 9 лет назад
pants = shat
@LukeLovesRose
@LukeLovesRose 6 лет назад
And all he did was smile at you. That's why this is Hitchcock's greatest achievement
@5times146
@5times146 6 лет назад
Haha
@Cinemabuff97
@Cinemabuff97 8 лет назад
Literally a terrifying scene. You just know that he is *truly* insane in this movie, and seeing him like that, after seeming innocent in the movie is just scary. His dialogue is terrifying, and that creepy as hell smile of his, that reminds me of Tyler Durden and The Joker's, while he says that last quote-- Altogether it's truly scary. 😬😱😱
@Tyler-nc4px
@Tyler-nc4px 3 года назад
Thanks for mentioning me
@thehowlerofthenight2061
@thehowlerofthenight2061 2 года назад
His face at the end makes him so cute 😘
@yanyeouleong7922
@yanyeouleong7922 2 года назад
One of the greatest pioneer of modern psychological horror films.
@cahlindinhaloira
@cahlindinhaloira 10 лет назад
Uauuuuuuuuu he played this part so well that I get scared everytime he looks directly to the câmera, he deserved na oscar for this
@lukereviewscriterion8062
@lukereviewscriterion8062 4 года назад
One of the most unsettling endings in cinematic history.
@alanafowler3024
@alanafowler3024 Год назад
Perfect case of Dissociative Identity Disorder.
@12classics39
@12classics39 11 месяцев назад
The fade from his face to Mother’s skeleton to the car emerging is genius. He is no longer Norman, the potentially normal human. He has fully become the monster that is the delusion of his mother. The real mother, no more than a corpse, is silenced forever, as his mind makes its final choice to be her, to be its idea of her. Hitchcock seals Norman’s fate; there’s no hope for him. But as the car is pulled from the mud, finally exposing his crimes for good, we are reassured that while Norman can never be saved, society/civilization has been saved from this psycho and Marion has been given justice. This was Hitchcock’s intended final closing of the book. He never wanted there to be more to the story. This is how it ends. The brilliance of the ending is completely undermined by the existence of the sequels. For pete’s sake, some films *just don’t need sequels!*
@JaggedBird
@JaggedBird Год назад
Fun fact: the original personality, Norman, is gone. In this scene, it shows that Norma had completely taken over. "They'll put him away, as I should have, years ago. He was always bad." Also the skull overlay as the car gets pulled up? It's Norma's corpse's face, not any random skull. Anthony Perkins was an absolute legend
@videocrap831
@videocrap831 8 лет назад
When it transitions from Norman Bates to the Car being removed from the water, there's a few frames of his mother's face spliced in just as it fades.
@irwinisidro
@irwinisidro 8 лет назад
+Videocrap I actually didn't know that. It's almost subliminal. I always knew Alfred Hitchcock with the help of his wife had a interesting editing style.
@schleepy6362
@schleepy6362 8 лет назад
I saw that! I was wondering what that was!
@user-ri3oz1hi4k
@user-ri3oz1hi4k 7 лет назад
The way she spoke at the very end and the smile was brilliant.
@VeroniqueParks
@VeroniqueParks 7 лет назад
I can't help having chills down my spine everytime I watch this It's just perfect
@ShoeMakerWiiSports
@ShoeMakerWiiSports 3 года назад
Why does the part where they pull the car out give me chills? 😆
@transient_curse
@transient_curse 10 месяцев назад
The most unsettling & menacing thing about Bates' expression at 1:26 and onwards isn't that he's a man trying to look dangerous... he's a dangerous man genuinely trying to look nice
@tenderpawsm473
@tenderpawsm473 Год назад
Does anyone else find the final shot of the car being pulled up out of the swamp super eerie, too?
@missyadams
@missyadams Год назад
I had completely forgotten about the car so the final scene freaked me out the first time
@PrinceSmith7
@PrinceSmith7 5 месяцев назад
Could you please explain me Norman's final monologue? Before that scene, the psychiatrist clearly mentioned that the *mother's side* of Norman's personality confessed to him of killing all those people. But here in this scene, she says "I couldn't allow them to believe that I would commit murder" which contradicts the psychiatrist's story. That made it confusing for me...
@area51pictures
@area51pictures 11 месяцев назад
Anthony Perkins in Psycho has to be one of the great performances of all time in the history of cinema.
@vladivanovici510
@vladivanovici510 11 лет назад
1:31 The image of the dead mother.
@babakhanoushii
@babakhanoushii 10 лет назад
That thing will haunt me for the rest of my life. Just saw this film for the first time, damn it was creepy.
@crippleized
@crippleized 10 лет назад
Waleed Khan i got the twist spoiled for me so i knew all along. I fucking hate watchmojo man...
@babakhanoushii
@babakhanoushii 10 лет назад
Julius Thomasson I love watchmojo but it's true I do my best to avoid their videos that look spoilery.
@vladivanovici510
@vladivanovici510 10 лет назад
Julius Thomasson As far as I know, watchmojo warn you for spoilers, so it was you who watched their video knowing that you will get spoiled.
@AngelofAnguish
@AngelofAnguish 10 лет назад
Waleed Khan Glad to hear and know that Sir or Mr. Alfred Hitchcock got his point across!
@sdeb82
@sdeb82 7 месяцев назад
I wonder whether Kubrick was inspired by that “stare” by Perkins to then incorporate it masterfully in his own movies
@dethfilmsinc5047
@dethfilmsinc5047 4 месяца назад
The overlay of mother’s face over Norman’s at the end is one of the scariest visuals in movie history.
@DiCam3667
@DiCam3667 7 лет назад
Jeeze! I dont care how many times I see this...his eyes scare the crap out of me every time. Great ending
@hotelmario510
@hotelmario510 11 месяцев назад
That final shot is genuinely stomach turning.
@missyadams
@missyadams 10 месяцев назад
Definitely. I'd completely forgotten about the car 😢
@bespectacledheroine7292
@bespectacledheroine7292 2 года назад
I’ll never forget how speechless this made me my first time. How lost in your own mind can you even be to turn on yourself as someone else. Someone you’ve done away with. It’s a level of “gone” no well human being can conceive of.
@usul573
@usul573 2 года назад
Yup Norman is straight up straitjacket level dangerous psycho, which is surprising as he's capable of appearing quite normal for a while.
@benoitpellet1657
@benoitpellet1657 7 лет назад
1:27 - Even BEFORE there is that split-second image of Mother implanted on Norman's face a second or so later, that mad, haunting smile of Perkins should have gotten him the Oscar, right then and there.
@tyrannozilla
@tyrannozilla 2 месяца назад
Freddie Highmore was great in the TV series, but Anthony Perkins will always be the definitive Norman Bates, and this scene proves that.
@GamingG4276
@GamingG4276 2 года назад
The son is gone. There was only Ms Bates.
@bloozedaddy9965
@bloozedaddy9965 8 лет назад
One of the great timeless performances of all time. If Anthony Perkins had never made another movie before or after this one, his legacy would be sealed with this performance as one of the best actors ever. The way he combines the two elements of boy next door charm with creepy evil even in the same scene is magnificent. This performance is simply beyond oscar-worthy.
@southernfriedscandal1474
@southernfriedscandal1474 2 года назад
WHAAAAAAAAAAAAT IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII’VE DOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOONE
@pullthatupjamie3537
@pullthatupjamie3537 6 лет назад
Notice how the chain at the end is coming out of Norman 's heart.
@FlavioMarceloSousa35
@FlavioMarceloSousa35 2 года назад
Mother's voice-off at 0:19 still sends chill down my spine today.
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