MovieChat Forums > Psycho (1960) Discussion > Halloween 2021: The Status of Psycho

Halloween 2021: The Status of Psycho


Last year in October of 2020, Psycho got a re-release to American cineplexes (at a time when new films were still not much being released) as the "60th Anniversary of Psycho -- Director's Cut."

The 60th Anniversary was correct. 1960 continues to fade into the past of a previous century, and oh how far we've come.

The Director's Cut was pretty much a correct monicker. Hitchcock operated in an era where directors didn't much HAVE Director's Cuts, though we know that Orson Welles had a couple of movies where scenes were cut for release and a certain number of other old films had additional material later discovered (Garland's A Star is Born, for one.)

The Psycho Director's cut -- also known as the German version (because this version was shown in Germany, ha) had perhaps 20 seconds of new footage over three scenes -- more of Janet Leigh's back and side-boob as Perkins watches her strip for the shower; a longer shot of the blood on Perkins' hands as he moves to the sink to wash it off; and two additional stabs down on the unseen Arbogast on the floor. So "welded" is Psycho -- frame by frame -- in our minds that those mere seconds WERE "something new" -- and I'm still not sure that the Arbogast stabbing was "real" -- it looked like a repeat frame to me.

On my personal list of favorite films over my lifetime, I gave "Psycho 60th Anniversary Director's Cut" my favorite film of 2020 for a few reasons: (1) there was literally nothing else to choose from --only about 3 films were released in 2020; (2) I saw it at a theater(risking COVID at a late age); and (2) those 20 seconds made it a new movie.

The 2020 release of Psycho was in October, I believe, to tie into Halloween 2020. This has been done before with Psycho to cineplexes(an October release) and certain individual theaters have been known to play Psycho on Halloween day. I once saw Psycho at a college on Halloween day.

Psycho also got its share of Halloween day or night showings on TV over the decades.

And Psycho usually gets mentioned in Halloween articles about "the great horror movies." Funny how many of those movies came AFTER Psycho -- Night of the Living Dead, The Exorcist, Halloween, The Shining, Friday the 13th, Nightmare on Elm Street.

It is as if -- in purposeful ignorance of the Frankenstein/Dracula/Wolf Man era of movie horror...Psycho is seen as "the first year of the modern horror film." As far back as we can go.

I write of all this to note that...in 2021...it looks to me like Psycho is a bit "out of the game."

No theatrical release. No streaming or cable showings that I can find.

And I've read a few articles about "movies for Halloween" that do NOT mention Psycho.

Oh, well. I'm sure it will rise again. Maybe at the 70th Anniversary. Maybe through some new documentary or biopic. (How about: The Forgotten Man: Arbogast.)

It remains interesting to me after all these years, that while much of Psycho IS horror stuff(the shots of the mansion on the hill; Mother's zombie face, the two murders) a lot of Psycho is NOT the stuff of traditional horror(whatever that is.)

There is nothing supernatural in Psycho. Which makes the movie kind of great to me. Its a very plausible story. Rosemary's Baby, The Exorcist, and The Omen all relied on Satan(and his corollary in God) to "sell" the horror. Carrie just flat out pushes "magic" (oooh, Carrie can make objects -- like knives -- fly through the air.) The Shining may not have gone for Satan or God, but it did go for ghosts and otherworldly behavior.

Even a supposed "straight slasher" -- Halloween -- elected to make ITS Mrs. Bates(Michael Myers) a rather indestructible phantom rather than a human being. Bullets and other fatal assaults(like fire) don't stop him. He's a magical being. To me, that's what makes ALL the sequels rather boring. He's unstoppable. In every movie(from trailers I've seen) Jaime Lee Curtis et al vow to "kill him for good this time." And he never dies. Boring.

Coupled with Psycho's lack of the supernatural is its emphasis on a "realistic crime plot" that keeps bumping into Gothic horror. Marion is an amateur thief. Arbogast is a professional detective. Her crime and his investigation are the stuff of a "normal" thriller - and so we BELIEVE in this movie even as the two of them meet horrific fates in creepy locations.

Its a matter of FLAVOR, I think. Marion and Arbogast...and Norman...and Sam and Lila...and everybody...seem so real, witty and accessible that Psycho is just an easy movie to return to.

I also like the "small town, backwater Americana" of Psycho. I like how the Bates Motel is established as ONLY 15 miles from Fairvale. This is a cruel fact when Marion decides to stay the night at the motel -- she was thisclose to her lover. It makes for an ironic Saturday night of first Arbogast, and then Sam, driving the 15 miles for differing ends (Arbogast: horrifyingly murdered; Sam, mysteified by Arbogasts absence.)

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I like how we get the "feel" of Fairvale even though we don't see it much. Very much small town, with places like Sam's hardware store and the church, and characters like the woman who buys the insectside, Sheriff and Mrs. Chambers and.."Bob," Sam's assistant.

Its all very 1959/1960 and that's one reason I think Psycho is so special (so many of the modern horror movies are from 1970 on) and a big reason why I think the sequels of the 80s, the prequel of the 2010s, and even the remake of 1998 don't work. Psycho is of a very specific time and place. A less populated America. A more innocent America. A more "sex under the surface" America.

Oh, well. Consider this MY Halloween salute to Psycho. For 2021.

Its been about a year since last I saw Psycho all the way through. I try to keep viewings in full to once a year.

Consequently...I'll be seeing Psycho soon.

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"A more innocent America. A more "sex under the surface" America."

Requiring Simon Oakland's comforting, bedside manner to be made more palatable.

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"A more innocent America. A more "sex under the surface" America."

Requiring Simon Oakland's comforting, bedside manner to be made more palatable.

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Indeed. Yet another "reason" for him and his scene. Its hard to even picture 1960 audiences, trained on pretty sedate violence and characters (nobody was gutting and stuffing their mother's corpse in OTHER movies) being confronted with all this horror. Dr. Simon showed up to calm them down.

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There's been a rash of 'Reactions to Psycho' videos on youtube this (lead up to) Halloween. This suggests to me that Psycho still has some real drawing power in 2021. I haven't watched any of these reactions, but they're all from people whose reactions (to other things) I've occasionally been entertained by:

From 'James vs Cinema' (a young, black, US, male film-maker):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=84izNsYkW_M
From 'Centane' (a young Norwegian woman whose reaction to The Thing (1982) was a classic because she translated what the Norwegians were trying to communicate at the beginning of the movie, which in fact gives away the first few plot beats of the film! They say 'It's not a dog, it's a thing disguised as a dog'. Norwegians see a different movie!):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_mtj283sWk
From 'TBR Schmit' (A 30-something Canadian couple):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BR1J1JNQfkY
From 'Vkunia' (US, college girl):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VCcxj3KAQAQ
From 'You, Me, and The Movies' (US, 30-something couple):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=alZlHi8txFA

And there are at least 4 or 5 *more* such vids. posted just in the last week or so whose authors are completely new to me and so I haven't listed them here. In sum, then, in 2021 there's a whole lotta Psycho watchin' and sharin' goin' on.

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There's been a rash of 'Reactions to Psycho' videos on youtube this (lead up to) Halloween. This suggests to me that Psycho still has some real drawing power in 2021. And there are at least 4 or 5 *more* such vids. posted just in the last week or so whose authors are completely new to me and so I haven't listed them here. In sum, then, in 2021 there's a whole lotta Psycho watchin' and sharin' goin' on...

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A whole lotta Psycho watchin and sharin' goin' on...

...real drawing power in 2021.

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I couldn't be happier. Psycho remains my favorite even in the face of the much more violent, much more terrifying, much more effects filled, much more MURDER (aka "KILLS" ) filled films that have followed it.

If reaction videos are yet ANOTHER way to get this bona fide classic "game changer"(as some have called it) before more young eyes...great.

...even if it isn't REALLY Psycho anymore (i.e. people aren't screaming their lungs out watching it or sleeping with the lights on for nights after it, which, I recall, was something Hitchcock was counting on with this shocker: how it would "follow the audience home to bed in the dark.")

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PS. Funny about the Norwegian translation about the dog in the opening of The Thing. "That's not really a dog." Hah. I think we kinda figured that out even back in 1982 without knowing the full story yet.

I watched The Thing "prequel" of 2011 the other night; it ends with the dog getting chased by the guys in the helicopter and should merge seamlessly with the 1982 "original" (er, original remake) except somehow modern CGI mastery and 1982 practical effects(and 1982 cinematography) don't "match" that well, I would suppose.

EITHER of those two Things put Psycho to shame in the gore department(especially the second one, in which CGI human heads morph into body parts of a different type and merge into their victims' heads.) But..."first was important" and one lady in a shower and one man on a staircase rather set the template for all kills to follow.

I suppose that the "original original" Thing(1951, produced and maybe directed by Howard Hawks) had a pretty good jump scare or two a full nine years before Psycho -- like when Kenneth Tobey opened the door and the Thing(a Frankenstein-like James Arness in that on) was RIGHT THERE. Made me jump as a youngster, that's for damn sure -- and thus a precursor to Mother coming out the door at Arbogast. The key difference(again) : The Thing did NOT kill any of his human targets in 1951; Mother DID kill two people in Psycho. She was "the real deal."

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Psycho (1960) had two art house airings tonight at 7 PM on Halloween 2021 in a metropolitan area near me. There have probably been others in the Halloween season. Multiplexes need content.

A lot of multiplexes have aired the original Ghostbusters for $5 this weekend.

Showtime and four premium streaming services list Psycho as being available. Flix is a free channel for some Xfinity packages that shows select Showtime films. It might have been played there in October.

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Psycho (1960) had two art house airings tonight at 7 PM on Halloween 2021 in a metropolitan area near me. There have probably been others in the Halloween season. Multiplexes need content.

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Yep. I have since tracked down several showings of Psycho directly ON Halloween night(for people who wanted to skip trick or treating I guess) in American cities. A friend of a friend of a friend went to one. His report: Full house. Lots of people in Halloween costumes -- only SOME as Mrs. Bates. No screaming. Big applause at the end.

I suppose a full house with NO screaming(not even when Arbo bought it) was filled with people who knew everything that was coming. That's OK. I can't say that I ever screamed at Psycho either -- though one time I went a lot of OTHER people were. Long ago. 1979(as I've reported before.)

I suppose Psycho with no screaming plays rather like other thrillers that one just "watches," like Orson Welles' Touch of Evil or Charles Laughton's Night of the Hunter from the same era. You take in the great images and maybe the interesting music and certainly the great performances (Welles, not Heston) and you get a "classic."

But Psycho was more than just a classic at one time. It was a real honest-to-goodness thrill ride, a scream-a-thon masquerading as a movie.

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A lot of multiplexes have aired the original Ghostbusters for $5 this weekend.

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"Closer in time" (a mere 37 years ago instead of 61), in color, "family entertainment" with a nice Bill Murray improvisational vibe (and yeah, a "movie about guys.")

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Showtime and four premium streaming services list Psycho as being available. Flix is a free channel for some Xfinity packages that shows select Showtime films. It might have been played there in October.

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You know, I forgot that Showtime is not just a cable channel anymore, but available for streaming (I assume now that one has to go for HBO Max to get HBO streaming? I dunno.)
In 1990, Janet Leigh herself hosted the premiere of Psycho IV(right after a showing of Psycho) and said that Psycho was getting "its first network premiere" given the aborted CBS screening of 1966. Not quite true -- Showtime was a nationwide network (worldwide?) but not a broadcast network.

Right now, I don't think that Psycho can be found on HBO Max, Netflix or Hulu...but you can go on Amazon Prime and watch it...if you pay a rental fee. Available ALL the time, not just at Halloween.

Still...available.

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FLIX is a free channel for some Xfinity packages that shows select Showtime films. Psycho (1960) is airing seven times on that channel from Sunday Nov 7, 2021 through Sunday Nov 14, 2021. It started at 8 PM ET tonight, with no commercials.

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FLIX is a free channel for some Xfinity packages that shows select Showtime films. Psycho (1960) is airing seven times on that channel from Sunday Nov 7, 2021 through Sunday Nov 14, 2021. It started at 8 PM ET tonight, with no commercials.

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Posting today November 13, 2021...great to know Psycho is getting its airtime, or cable time, or bandlength time, or whatever fits.

I don't get Showtime or FLIX, so I wasn't aware. I was speaking to the streaming services I now get -- only Amazon Prime has it, but you have to pay for it. (Though I believe that Amazon Prime sometimes puts their "pay" movies out for free for awhile and then pulls them back to pay.) Some OTHER Hitchcocks have been on streaming recently -- Vertigo, NXNW, To Catch a Thief -- but Psycho still can evidently make a buck.

I got a further report from my friend about the Halloween showing of Psycho in a major city last month:

Full house. A lot of costumes. A lot of men AND women dressed like Mrs. Bates (I always feel that Mrs. B gets short shrift as a vision of terror against Michael Myers and Jason and Freddie.....in the shower scene and in the staircase scene, she is a haunting MONSTER.)

Cute: a family of four -- mom, dad, and two pre-teen sons dressed well and hair coiffed -- all posed in the lobby next to the original 1960 Psycho poster.

Not so cute: A sign of our times: a homeless man in a sleeping bag lay right outside the theater as patrons poured out.
I doubt that happened around many -- any? -- movie theaters in 1960.

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I need to see this version!

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