This movie stood in the pantheon of great films that I had
never seen. OK. I recently saw the last 15 minutes and
thought the psychological explanation was pretty weak. But I was very up for watching it with the
reluctant stepdaughter when we were talking about horror films (not a genre I
have any interest in – part of the reason that I haven’t seen this is that I
have avoided it) and we both like Hitchcock – so it was agreed. We would watch this classic together for family movie night.
My assumption in what follows is that you have seen the
film. If you haven’t, either watch it
before reading or decide that it is OK to not experience the really wonderful
thrill of this film. The stuff that I
grew up fearing – the shower scene in particular – is incredibly hokey by today’s
standards – and may have been even then.
Hitchcock’s emphasis on the gore and sexuality coming together is over
the top – and I think may have been a way of both displaying and masking what I
think were probably deeper perversions that the censors would not have
tolerated – I’m actually pretty surprised that they let as much nudity through
as they did – but I think the emphasis on the slasher aspect (this is considered the first slasher film) is also to throw us off the scent. This is not about being afraid of violent
death, but about being afraid of what lies within the human psyche. And the perversions that are described are
actually quite delicious – and unnerving.
This film still chills – not because of the gore, but because of the
psychological intensity and because of the misdirection that leads us to be
unaware of where we are heading so that we tumble, unprepared, into the
messiness of human perversion. I think it is also a caution. What is dangerous lies, not outside ourselves, but within.
The central subterfuge of the film is that the out of
towners are led to believe that Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins) lives with his
mother. Well, of course, he does, but in
a much more intimate way than we initially imagine. We meet him, though, when our heroine, Marion
Crane (Janet Leigh), is running towards her lover who lives in Bates' town with
stolen money. And Marion, not Norman, is
the focus of our interest. She is a
fallen woman who wants to be legit. She
has trysts with her lover who can’t afford, because of his alimony payments, to
make her an honest woman, but he can somehow afford to fly to Arizona from
California to see her. Meanwhile Marion
is the honest and beautiful receptionist who works for a real estate company
and has to fend off the advances of a fat wealthy man whose money is entrusted
to her. To free her and her lover from
the shackles that binds them, she decides to drive to California with the money
that she was to have deposited in the bank.
This is, then, a morality play. Who are the moral characters? Who are the immoral ones? What will be the punishment for whom? How fairly are those punishments meted
out?
Once upon a time, I worked for a bank in Santa Fe. My first job out of college – with my bachelor’s degree in
hand - was as the mail boy for the bank. I drove from
branch to branch, delivering the mail and taking the cancelled checks back to
the main office. Occasionally, I would transport
cash between the branches. When there
was a lot of it, the security guard at the main bank, the ex-chief of police
who was about 90 years old, would accompany me. He was a great guy and I loved being with him. We would always know how much there was, and we often talked of driving to
Mexico with what we had and living out our days together on the beaches. It was a fun day dream to share, though the
realities were that, even at our minimum wage jobs, we were better off where we
were.
Marion ends up at the Bates motel because making a trek like
the one she is making is harrowing. She
is running from everything that she is connected to in order to, what? Start a
life as a desperado? After packing up,
on the way out of town, she spies her boss, who also sees her. She feels guilty for having betrayed
him. She drives until she can’t drive
anymore, pulls over and falls asleep, but sleeps too long and a highway patrol
officer wakes her and notices how guiltily she acts. So, when, at the end of another long day of
driving, she gets lost and is tired by the rain and glare on the road, her
arrival as the only guest of the isolated Bates motel makes her the perfect
prey for Norman, the nervous Nellie who is, we believe, hen pecked by his
overbearing mother who divines his unholy lust for a woman he has just met and
whom he wants to feed. We speculate (at
least the analysts in the audience do) that this mother is so dependent on her
son’s love that she can’t bear to think of his being attracted to anyone else,
and we feel sorry for this poor cosseted soul.
Marion is a little wiser than we. She looks around his room and sees that it is
filled with stuffed birds and gets him to admit that he is a taxidermist. She finds this creepy. She also slips and, after having signed in
with a pseudonym, tells him her real name, crane, which makes her a bird – a creature
that it is OK to kill and stuff – Norman thinks that other animals have more
use and thus shouldn’t be killed. But
who kills Marion? It is, of course,
Norman in his alter ego mode of being his long dead mother – the woman he
killed – the woman who penned him in after his father died and then married a
cruel stepfather – Norman killed them both, exhumed the body of his mother and
stuffed her, keeping her in the Gothic house out back of the cheap motel that the
stepfather built, and he now kills, as the mother, to keep him from defiling a
woman and potentially deserting his mother (who, of course, lives only in his head) and, in the process of killing, in this case, Marion, enacts
a terribly sexual and aggressive scenario.
Why doesn’t he stuff the bodies and keep the trophies? Well, mother would not abide with that, would
she?
And now we have gotten to the psychiatrist’s summary of his
mental state (skipping over the killing of the detective who was sticking his nose
in where it didn’t belong and the discovery of all that I have just laid out by
Marion’s boyfriend and Marion’s sister who has gone looking for her). When I saw it without having seen the film, I
was embarrassed by it. It seemed very
flat footed and I was prepared to try not to judge him, just I would not like
to be judged by those who follow in my shoes 50 or 100 years from now. But watching the film, the description is
actually quite satisfying. It is a nice
psychological explanation of what we have just witnessed.
Now, could what we just witnessed have happened in that
way? I think Hitchcock is encouraging us
to imagine this. To imagine just how
perverse our minds are. To imagine how
strong our early attachment to our mothers is and to wonder how that could get
played out in the real world. I think
the film works not because it describes something that actually could happen,
but because it describes something that we find hard to believe doesn’t happen. Why is it that we don’t more frequently go
over the edge? And I think we need to remember that there are two edges that have people have gone over. Marion has gone over an edge that we all stand back from - she has given up on being the nice girl. Norman went over a much steeper edge a long time ago. Are these edges being equated? Perhaps. Is it also the case that every edge is the moral equivalent of every other edge and once we go over one edge we will end up in the company of those who have gone over them all? That would also seem to be a message.
Hitchcock, himself, went over all kinds of edges, indulging
in all kinds of things. And the issue of
guilt is a very deep one for him. When
he was about five, his father caught him doing something wrong and gave him a
note he was to take to the police station asking the constable to lock him up
for about five minutes to pay for the crime.
This fear of police pervades this film – and is a fear that I think we
all share – it is not just the fear of police – but of being caught for doing
wrong and, as Freud points out, our superego has access not only to what we
do wrong, but to what we think about doing
wrong.
The characters in this movie are all trapped. Marion is trapped by her miserable job and
unavailable lover. At the Bates Motel, she decides to return
to Arizona and take back the money in the morning, but her fate is already
decided. She is given the death penalty
for thinking of stealing. Her decision to leave the straight and narrow has lead her inexorably towards Norman - she, not just as the dating woman who has forbidden trysts in the daytime, but as the one who betrays her boss, is now a siren who calls perversion to her. As mentioned
before, the detective also gets his fate handed to him for sticking his nose in
where it does not belong. Norman is going
to go to an institution – and his description of the institution he is heading
towards when he tells Marion that he would never put his mother in such a
place, is chilling. He will be
punished. But his punishment is actually
worse than that. It is clear in the
final scene that he will be punished as his mother, whom he has entirely
become. She will be put there. And, of course, Norman is innocent. It is the events of his life that have
created him – he is a good, if nervous, boy.
He, like Marion, is the kid next door.
He has the kooky mother. She has the down and out boyfriend, but she is,
in spite of herself, attached to him. And
these attachments – Norman to his mother and Marion to her boyfriend – are
their downfall.
From Freud’s perspective, the superego is the internalized
parental figure, one who is judgmental.
In fact, it is a lot more complex than this, but if we use this stripped
down simplified version, Norman has gone a bit overboard on being the dutiful
son, internalizing his mother to the nth degree. Marion, too, is trying to be a good girl, but
to do that she ultimately has to deny too much.
She overthrows her role, but she pays for it. Hitchcock, on the other hand, gets to get
away with it. He can portray his
perversions for all the world to see and what does he get? He gets an Oscar nomination for a slasher
film. He gets fame and glory. He gets away with it – as Norman Bates does
for a while. He metes out the
punishments he deserves on the characters that he directs – and the more he
flagellates them the more credit he receives. In the same way, it is not Norman who is jailed, but his mother - the person who ought to be punished for many sins, not the least of which is the murder of her son, don't you agree? What a funny world we live in.
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