Nadzieja @ Sat Mar 31, 2007 2:25 am wrote:I haven't seen all of Hitchcock's films but Psycho scared me half to death. That shower scene bothered me so much for a long time I took a kitchen chair with me & put it under the door when I took a shower. I also loved Rear Window. ( Jimmy Stewart if I remember correctly) I've never seen The Older Sister, I'm going to keep checking the Turner Classic Movie Guide to see if they show it. Sometimes they feature directors, maybe they'll have a month of Hitchcock greats. Ok, help my memory here, did Alfred Hitchcock have a regular TV program? I seem to remember his outline on screen & then he would really walk into it & start talking to the audience.
What made the shower scene so terrifying in "Psycho" was the facts that:
A. She was caught completely off guard,
B. She was unarmed and totaly defensless,
C. She was cornered in that shower and had no way of escape,
D. She was naked and had nothing to protect her from the knife
It was Jimmy Stewart in "Rear Window." I love the way Hitchcock showed so much action within so little space. The two windows in Burr's apartment, the very narrow ally, and the few other windows in the apartment building. He was able to tell a complete story using so little viewing area. Amazing. As in "Psycho" Hitchcock created a helpless character, Stewart, who has to fight for his life against a killer as Janet Leigh did in the shower."
If I am not mistaken I think that show was called "Hitchcock Presents." It was done in the '50's. He would introduce the show with some speech and end the show with something twisted and/or funny. He had a very dry, droll sense of humor.
I wish he had shot his movies without that #*%@$&! thing on his lens! That gets right up my nose.

He was a master of the "creepy" though. I got to hand it to him. He was something.
-1bigsteve (o:
"All of your tomorrows begin today. Move it!" -Susan Hayward 1973