Phoenix, Arizona
Two years and two films before "Psycho," Hitchcock in Vertigo gave us a sweeping shot of San Francisco that much anticipates what he would do for the opening of Psycho:
Its a sweeping shot of San Francisco circa 1957, in color, and used to show "the passage of time" between Scottie's stay at the asylum and his release amongst the populace. The role of the shot is to convey that passage of time...but it is also meant to "sell" the beauty of the City by the Bay and to give it to us from a different angle -- up in the hills behind the City looking out towards the Bay.
Joe Stefano had written an over-ambitious, blocks-long helicopter shot to open Psycho, but Hitchcock -- having tried it using a 1959 chopper and camera --found the image too wobbly -- gave up and sent his second unit guys back to Phoenix to essentially re-do the SF shot from Vertigo. A slow series of pans, left to right, left to right, with the camera also slowly zooming in and descending down, with dissolves helping get us where we need to go: into the window of a fake building on the Universal backlot and into the sex lives of Marion and Sam.
Before the camera reaches the Universal backlot, we DO get a lingering look at Phoenix, Arizona circa 1959, and I find this shot mesmerizing...a very big part of "setting the mood for Psycho."
To some extent, its Herrmann's great music that makes the shot so great -- Herrmann instinctively creates music that "slowly descends" with the camera. But it is sad music, too -- getting us in the mood for a scene that will begin erotic, and slowly be smothered by the sad realities of money troubles and personal pain.
Anyway, behold Phoenix, 1959(at 2:43 on Friday, December 11): there is a skyline, there is a cityscape, but it is really much smaller than San Francisco's(and captured more "close in" than the Vertigo SF shot, so as to "fill the frame.") It takes a few viewings(and one of them should DEFINITELY be on the big screen) to suss out the details, but they are there: a large radio antenna atop one building, A rotating sign on another(is it the old "Flying A" gas station logo, or something else? I can never tell). At least one building is the skeleton of a building "under construction"(perhaps it survived and is still standing.) And I think the "Westward Ho" hotel sign is visible?(If not here, in the remake, more on that later.)
As the camera continues its left to right trajectory, I always note that one of the buildings HAS to be a movie theater. The camera slides alongside the building and you can make out the "big part"(where the screen would be) and the "smaller part"(where the audience would sit.) What movie was playing at this theater in 1959? Would Psycho play there in 1960?
As the camera draws closer to the REAL building in Phoenix where Sam and Marion would be trysting, I always note: one, maybe two cars, stopping and then driving slowly down the street. This always amuses me: I'll bet that driver/drivers had no idea whatsoever that in 6 months time they'd start to be part of an opening shot of a blockbuster movie that would be seen round the world and for decades to come. They just drove down a street in Phoenix, is all.
I"ve only been to Phoenix twice in my life. Once as a kid, before I even knew of Psycho(though I think it was in 1963, not long after the movie came out.) And then once in 2009, where I went there on business and made a point of trying to "check out" the Psycho locales. I conclusively found the building where Sam and Marion tryst; and I conclusively stood in the intersection where Marion is seen by her boss. I even looked in front of me, to get Marion's POV of the intersection(the street that famously had 1959 Xmas decorations on it): the street was the same, but maybe only one building was the same down that street.
That was my biggest "takeaway" regarding Phoenix in 2009 versus Phoenix in 1959: it seemed that most of the buildings Hitchcock's crew filmed in 1959...were gone. I may be wrong, but most of them seemed much newer to me.
Looking again at the Psycho Phoenix opening after that 2009 visit to Phoenix, I became newly impressed by Psycho: among its other great acheivements, Psycho captured a city that had long since been destroyed and rebuilt. A "ghost city" of the one we have today.
When Van Sant made his Psycho remake in 1998, he could get the helicopter shot easily that Hitchcock could not get. And its weird: the shot seems to start high above "today's Phoenix"(not a building in the shot existed in 1959) then floats down past those newer buildings and into the window of the "Westward Ho" hotel that WAS visible in Hitchcock's original. Perhaps Van Sant wanted to make sure that Psycho 1998 had a least one building that was in Psycho 1960.