Psycho is a film with interesting and exciting plot, outstanding visual effects and, especially, with great soundtrack. Psycho has many remarkable scenes, for example, famous Shower Scene. This scene has become one of the well-known moments in the film by using different editing technics and ...
Seeing the shower scene today, several things stand out. Unlike modern horror films, “Psycho” never shows the knife striking flesh. There are no wounds. There is blood, but not gallons of it. Hitchcock shot in black and white because he felt the audience could not stand so much blood i...
22"Itchy & Scratchy & Marge"The scene where Maggie attacks Homer with a mallet is a recreation of the infamous shower scene fromPsycho(though not set in a shower). The soundtrack also quotes Bernard Hermann's famous score. 356"Black Widower"WhenSideshow Bobgoes to seeSelma's dead corpse ...
Psycho Sound: A never-before-seen piece that looks at the re-mastering process required to create a 5.1 mix from the original mono elements using Audionamix technology. The Shower Scene: A look at the impact of music on the infamous “shower scene.” ...
“I’ve never heard such screaming — sustained screaming — from the audience,” said critic/director Peter Bogdanovich, who was covering the event forEsquireat the time. “You couldn’t hear the soundtrack. It was unprecedented, and it really was the first time that going to the movies ...
the storyboarding of the shower scene by “visual consultant” Saul Bass, composer Bernard Herrmann settling on strings-only “black-and-white” orchestrations so his brilliantly effective score could match the gothic monochrome of the visuals—have been recounted to the point of mythologizing the ...
A forgotten Anthony Newley film with a soundtrack by Kenny Graham Jesse Hector, the guy should have been a rock star, but instead he was last heard of working as a cleaner The trees a smear of green along the valley side, the house a hazy shape beyond the trees ...
The crowning achievement of master composer Bernard Herrmann's career, although most people immediately conjure up the way that he uses the sounds of the instruments in his orchestra as weapons slicing through Janet Leigh's flesh inPsycho's notorious shower scene, the DTS soundtrack of the new ...
And then there's the soundtrack. Patrick is a pop-music aficionado, as adept at discussing the shortcomings of Whitney Houston as he is at singing the praises of Phil Collins' "Sussudio," and he likes to regale his victims with impromptu critiques as they wait for the ax to fall. Huey...
A film with a flawed ending (the psychiatrist scene will always annoy me), that can still be enjoyed to this day, thanks to its incredible handling of suspense, memorable characters, iconic scenes, and extraordinary soundtrack. Full review in Spanish. ...