Psycho-Peeping Tom-- Frenzy
October 2020is awash in horror and thrillers "on streaming." Some of the movies on offer are gory, sick, perverse. Halloween used to mean trick or treating kids and Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein on TV; now on cable and streaming, there are lots and lots of movies with bloody visceral gore and sexual torture ...to celebrate such a "fun" holiday. The world got sicker.
But there are "levels" of choices, and I elected to NOT sample the worst of the stuff on the tube, but rather those fun horror movies from my youth and one or two "classics" that I never saw.
Peeping Tom is in that category.
Its is 1960 British film directed by Michael Powell, a director of great reputation with a number of British classics on his resume. I'm not familiar enough with those classics to know if what I am about to say is really true -- but -- the word on "Peeping Tom" is that its frank and sometimes graphic take on a sex killer and voyeur was enough "to ruin Michael Powell's career." This is put in greater relief given that Hitchocck released Psycho within a few months of Peeping Tom, and Hitchcock got massive audiences and the box office of his career.
Not all of this story quite checks out, really. Evidently Michael Powell DID make some movies after Peeping Tom, and came the 70's Powell had a champion of Peeping Tom in Martin Scorsese who got the film a restoration and re-release.
Meanwhile, Hitchcock may have gotten rich off of Psycho, but among some critics and Hollywood folk, he was considered to have become as "sick" as Michael Powell and was shunned in some quarters(by Walt Disney, for instance, who refused to let Hitch film a movie at Disneyland in the wake of Psycho.)
There also seems to be this disconnect. In England, Psycho and Peeping Tom came out close together, but in America, Peeping Tom's release was held until 1962, and an edited version was released in the states.
Thus, Peeping Tom and Psycho may not have been so "together" in 1960 as it might seem, and whereas Hitchcock got a blockbuster in Psycho, Powell did NOT get one in Peeping Tom.
An analysis is revealing.
Yes, in the Hays Code year of 1960, both Hitchcock and Powell made films about sexual psychopaths, and were pretty direct about how the murders took place (a big knife in Psycho; a small knife at the end of a camera tripod in Peeping Tom) and thus in creating a "fear factor" in the audience about witnessing such murders.
But the two films diverge rather quickly. Peeping Tom is British and in color; Psycho is American and in black and white. Psycho was designed as an "audience scream machine': Peeping Tom is more of a psychological study.
As often with Hitchocck, we need to take him at his word. He said "The processes through which we take the audience in Psycho are much like those when you ride a roller coaster or go through the haunted house at the fair. I see Psycho as a FUN movie."
And it WAS. Whatever deep-seated psychological perversities lie beneath the surface in Psycho, the SURFACE (in 1960) was a roller coaster ride and a trip to the haunted house. Audiences screamed hard at the murders, at the fruit cellar climax, and pretty much through the entire exploration of the Bates house by Lila Crane til that climax. People lined up around the block to experience the "ride" of Psycho.
I can't find much evidence of Peeping Tom drawing big crowds. Rather, it drew a reputation. British critics(some of whom WERE disgusted by Psycho) were MORE disgusted by Peeping Tom, because it dug deeper into sexual pathology and lingered longer on the lead up to sexual crimes(without showing them; there is nothing as graphic as the shower murder in Peeping Tom.)
i watched Peeping Tom start to finish for the first time ever this week. I had seen clips and had watched parts on TV, but never...start to finish.
The film states its theme from the first image: We are looking through the crosshairs of a camera lens, in the POV of the man operating the camera as it approaches a "lady of the evening" on a street corner. We never lose this POV(Halloween would copy this; Hitchocck would reject it -- HIS POV travelling shots were comparatively short) as the woman looks at us and says "It'll be two quid," and leads the camera across the street, down the alley, up some stairs, into an apartment, into a bedroom, onto the bed, into undressing and then -- looking out at US in terror -- for she is about to die, and the killer wants her final moments of terror on film. Which he watches later in his private screening room and...very likely it is implied...enjoys for pornographic pleasure. Yes...these are his snuff films.