Alfred Hitchcock’s powerful thriller‚ “Psycho” (1960) is a work of an auteur who builds suspense and horror through which the audience is skillfully positioned into identifying with different characters. Throughout the film‚ Hitchcock’s techniques voyeuristically implicate the audience to shift their sympathy between two main characters Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) and Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins). Hitchcock explores the nightmarish themes of madness‚ duality of characters‚ personal traps and voyeurism
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Michael Vazquez April 4‚ 2013 Personality in Bret Ellis American Psycho In American Psycho‚ the antihero and of course main character Patrick Bateman shows complete signs of insanity. In reality he is mentally unstable and lacks ability to control his blood-thirst desires. He is deceitful‚ dishonest and disloyal to his fellow co-workers (whom are almost on the same level as himself)‚ his fiancee and of course his victims. His world as we view it depicts him as an intelligent
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Film Analysis of Alfred Hitchcock’s “Psycho” Introduction “Psycho” (1960) is based on a novel of the same name by Robert Bloch. The film was directed by Hollywood legend‚ Alfred Hitchcock. The screen play was written by Joseph Stephano and based on the real life crimes of serial killer‚ Ed Gein. The film stars Janet Leigh‚ Anthony Perkins‚ John Gavin and Vera Miles. The film garnered four academy award nominations and widely regarded as one of Hitchcock’s best films. It spawned two sequels‚ a
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Derek Naegle Dr. Cammie Sublette ENGL 2033 September 7‚ 2012 American Inequality in American Psycho Set in the Manhattan of 1989‚ Brett Easton Ellis ’s novel American Psycho sketches the life of Patrick Bateman‚ an attractive 26-year-old Harvard graduate who earns a six-figure income on Wall Street. Bateman and his Ivy League educated friends enjoy all the luxury Manhattan has to offer‚ including expensive restaurants‚ exclusive nightclubs and excessive amounts of cocaine. However‚ what their
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Alfred Hitchcock’s 1960 film Psycho utilizes some innovative editing techniques‚ especially for its time. Particularly‚ the scene where Marion Crane drives her newly purchased 1957 Ford contains many edits that help drive the story. The approximately three-minute scene is comprised of 36 shots; however‚ there are only two distinctive shots throughout the entire sequence. As Marion drives‚ her mind begins to drift as she starts thinking about how her boss and others back home may suspect her of
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His Mom‚ and That Fatal Shower‚” describing the cinematic significance of that famous shower scene. Lehmann-Haupt explains in his article that Janet Leigh‚ the actress who played the lead character of Marion Crane‚ has written a book on Hitchcock’s Psycho‚ describing behind the scenes of the film and how Hitchcock took the idea from Ed Gein and made him a more attractive protagonist. In Leigh’s book‚ she discusses how she was indeed the first actress picked to play the role of Marion Crane and a lot
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early age of 21 and has made several novels ever since but is most known for his novel “The American Psycho”. This story is revolved around a young stockbroker who is a a average man by day with friends and a fiancée who attends dinner events and party but by night he takes joy in taking the lives of other human in New York and engaging in sexual activates with multiple women. In the American Psycho‚ Bret Easton Ellis uses Literary devices such as foreshadowing and allusions all while leaving readers
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killing one another‚” (Miss Manners‚ Judith Martin). Author Bret Easton Ellis‚ opens his novel‚ American Psycho‚ with a quote on this idea of sociological proprieties. He beckons the reader to wonder what the natural impulse of humanity might be. Some people might think of the bestial cruelty of man‚ yet no animal could ever be as cruel as a man‚ so artfully‚ so artistically cruel. In American Psycho‚ Ellis proposes that many of the sociological cruelties imposed by mankind originate from the enterprise
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Alfred Hitchcock uses many ways to explore the duality of human nature in his films‚ especially in the 1960 horror thriller Psycho. The duality of human nature represents our inner self‚ aspects that are mainly opposites‚ the light showing good‚ the dark showing evil‚ the natural and the unnatural‚ are just some examples of human nature. Hitchcock explored the duality of human nature using ways such as lighting‚ dialogue‚ camera angles‚ music‚ comparing and contrasting what different characters would
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psychopath is not in itself evil or vicious‚ but combined with perverse appetites or with an unusually hostile or aggressive temperament‚ the lack of these normal constraints can result in an explosive and dangerous package.” Within “The American Psycho”‚ Bret Easton Ellis composes a narrative which attempts to instil in us the idea that “that society is responsible for creating the warped aspirations of people like Patrick Bateman...” the main protagonist and serial killer within the novel. Similarly
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