Hitchcock's Movies of the Fifties and "Psycho"
I was watching the documentary on Brian DePalma("DePalma") again the other day and near the end, a visibly agitated DePalma says something like:
"Most directors make their great movies in their 30s, 40s, and 50's. Those are the peak years. Hitchcock is a classic example. People say The Birds is great but(shakes his head) and all those movies after The Birds have fans, and the critics caught up to him as a genius by then but - NO -- like the others, he made his greatest movies in his 30s, 40s, and 50's.
I believe that while Hitchcock turned 60 in 1960(August), he actually made Psycho when he was 59 and thus...voila for DePalma(though The Birds IS pretty spectacular on the technical side; c'mon let's give Hitch til age 63.)
I spend a lot of time talking about those "risible" post-Psycho movies for a couple of reasons. One is that I actually was alive to see them in theaters when they came out -- I saw every movie from The Birds through Family Plot (less Marnie) first run.
The other reason -- and this is important -- is that I think Hitchocck made those late films when he HAD made Vertigo, NXNW, Psycho -- and those peak acheivements rather "inform" the Hitchcock movies made after them. He was aging and in poor health, yes, but he was still somewhat of some kind of genius.
Still, "in the know" critics will say that it was in the 10 years BEFORE Psycho that Hitchcock truly made his mark, made classics and hits, made REAL movies(rather than the rather clunky and compromised films he made after Psycho).. THAT's where the good stuff is. Moreover(says I), Psycho is IN each of those movies, somewhere, somehow, just waiting to be found when Ed Gein finally was caught(1957), Robert Bloch wrote his book(1959), and Hitchocck made his movie(1960.)
Back up a decade: 1950. The Hays Code is rather heavily in place(though Hitchcock is going to shoot holes in it); to fight TV , movies are often in color and VistaVision or Cinemascope and travel the world(though Hitch made a few b/w films during this period); and the movies as a whole are rather "pulling punches, held back" -- a bit bloodless, if you ask me.
Except for Hitchcock movies(and of course a few other key filmmakers' works.)
1950 was the year of Sunset Boulevard and All About Eve -- for Hitchcock, it was the year of Stage Fright, not considered at the level of those two other films, and actually considered in some quarters "the tail end of a slump' that starts with The Paradine Case(those films are as ill-considered as Hitchcock's post-Psycho work, and yet Rope seems more like a classic all the time and Under Capricorn is certainly an experiment.) I don't remember much about Stage Fright other than its "fake flashback" and its trick villain(who presages Norman Bates.) Its certainly a "Hitchocck Chick Flick" -- the leads are Marlene Dietrich and Jane Wyman.
But its the NEXT movie -- 1951's Strangers on a Train -- that REALLY launches the Hitchocck Golden Era (most folks time it as starting in '51 with this movie and ending either in '60 with Psycho or '63 with The Birds.") For while on the one hand, SOAT gives us an "action spectacle" along the lines of NXNW to come(the berserk carousel climax is right beind Mount Rushmore for tentpole blockbuster influence), SOAT also gives us a "dry run for Norman Bates" in Bruno Anthony -- a psycho killer(though maybe of only one victim?); an amusing charmer -- and played by a "boyish good guy actor turned bad."(Robert Walker.) Bruno is richer than Norman and far less likeable than Norman, but the "type" is there -- the villain who attracts us and tends to "run the movie."
Hitchcock used the success of Strangers on a Train to "buy" the bleak ascetism of his next film "I Confess," which shares the SOAT template(the hero is blamed for a killing and he knows the villain who really did it) within its own great Catholic hook: "A priest is bound by the confessional and can't reveal the real killer when he himself is arrested for the crime." Psycho is reflected here in two specific ways: (1) Karl Malden's police inspector is a more heavy-handed and self-righteous version of Arbogast to come -- and he has a pretty great interrogation scene of Monty Clift's priest that is shot much like the Arbogast/Norman chat(I suppose Malden could have PLAYED Arbogast, but he was a pretty big man physically.) (2) In a courtroom scene, Monty Clift's priest is placed low in the foreground of the frame -- with "Jesus on the Cross" on the wall above him right where the owl will be above Norman in Psycho -- its practically the same shot. Finally, Monty Clift was considered a handsome young man in his prime(pre-auto accident); I suppose that Clift and Tony Perkins are rather cut from the same cloth. Perkins could have played Father Logan -- and Clift, maybe could have played Norman Bates when he was young and handsome.