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Forty-five seconds of horror: Shower scene in Psycho forever changed cinematography

by Julia Evans – Entertainment Editor

Iconic “Psycho” Shower ⁤Scene Revolutionized Film, remains horrific After 64 Years

Universal ⁤City,‍ CA – Alfred Hitchcock‘s 1960 thriller Psycho indelibly⁤ altered the landscape of cinematic horror⁢ with its seven-minute shower scene, a sequence lasting approximately forty-five ⁢seconds of screen violence that continues too shock and‍ influence filmmakers⁢ today.The scene, featuring Janet Leigh ‌as Marion ‍Crane, employed 70‍ different camera angles and utilized Bernard Herrmann’s ⁣jarring score⁢ to create unprecedented suspense and terror. ⁢

hitchcock deliberately misled audiences‍ by suggesting ​violence occurred ‌ during ‌ the shower, when the ⁤majority of⁤ the scene depicts⁢ its aftermath, heightening the psychological impact. As ⁢Hitchcock explained to François Truffaut in their 1962 book of conversations, the goal wasn’t graphic depiction, but to create a feeling of “panic.” ⁤

The scene’s innovative editing ⁣and sound design spawned ​the⁢ “slasher” ​horror ⁤subgenre and has been parodied and referenced countless times,including a memorable segment in The Simpsons ‌and the focus of the 2012 biographical drama Hitchcock. despite numerous sequels and a 1998 ‍shot-for-shot remake by Gus Van Sant,⁣ the ⁣original remains the definitive example of suspenseful filmmaking.

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