Alfred Hitchcock is known as an auteur due to his unique style of directing. Discuss the techniques he uses in his film 'Psycho' to create a heightened sense of suspense for the spectator.

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Nazira Begum 10MSH

Alfred Hitchcock is known as an auteur due to his unique style of directing.  Discuss the techniques he uses in his film ‘Psycho’ to create a heightened sense of suspense for the spectator.

Alfred Hitchcock was an English film director and an American citizen from 1955.  Alfred Hitchcock was the acknowledged master of the thriller, which he virtually invented.  He was a technician who deftly blended sex and suspense.  He began his filmmaking career in 1919.  Alfred Hitchcock is a master of the suspense thriller; he was noted for his meticulously drawn storyboards that determined his camera angles and for his cameo walk-ons in his own films.  Alfred Hitchcock is famous for playing on fears and emotions of his audience by manipulating them.  In his films he involves his spectator in the scenic tension using techniques that will be discussed in this essay.  He is famous for transporting his viewers into his films.  

        I will be exploring Alfred Hitchcock’s techniques and the relationship between text, screen and the spectator.  I have chosen the film ‘Psycho’, Alfred Hitchcock’s most popular film.  ‘Psycho’ is a tense story about lust and jealousy.

        All in all, the movie is about one troubled man Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins), and his ill-fated mother.  Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) who steals $40,000 from her employer, for her boyfriend Sam (John Gavin).  Marion runs away with the money, then decides to return the money, but suddenly becomes unable to, stays at the Bates Motel.  The keeper of the Motel is Norman Bates.  Norman Bates is a shy and friendly guy but controlled by his over protective and jealous mother.  When Marion goes into the shower, Norman’s mother stabs her to death.

        Unfortunately for Norman, Marion leaves behind a concerned boyfriend, Sam, her sister Lila (Vera Miles) and private investigator Aborgast (Martin Balsam).  Sam and Lila’s searching for Marion is to no avail, until they meet Norman.  The ending of the film is surely surprising, throughout the whole film, it shows that Norman Bate’s mother is the murderer, but we find out Norman himself is the murderer and his mother has been dead for sometime.

Alfred Hitchcock employs various techniques within his films.  Notable is his technique of, ‘unconventional setting as threatening’. In this technique Hitchcock shoots horror scenes where evil is not expected.  For instant the motel is a place to just stop by, so we would not expect evil to happen.  The old lady in the house is not expected to be evil, because the audience feels sorry for her, since she is an invalid old lady.  We wouldn’t expect an old lady to be evil.  Also in the shower scene you would feel safe in the shower and you wouldn’t expect to get murdered.  In this scene, the main protagonist of the film is killed at the start of the film.  The spectators do not suspect that she would be murdered; it gives a feeling that anything could happen anytime.  The spectator thinks hat the shower is a safe place; Marion thinks she’s free from danger.  This technique involves ‘unexpectedness and shock tactics’.

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        In ‘Psycho’ the ‘unsuspected character is revealed to be the monster’. The unsuspected character is Norman Bates, through out the movie the audiences think that Norman is the innocent man, and his mother committed all the murders.  At the end of the movie we find out that Norman had schizophrenia, and in actual fact killed all those people posing as his mother.  Hitchcock uses ‘complex characters and sympathetic characters’.  In the film ‘Psycho’, the audiences feel sorry for Norman Bates.  In human nature, you wouldn’t get people completely good or bad.  First of all the audience thought that Norman Bates ...

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