Good
Evening Ladies and Gentlemen. A special word to you who were arrested by your
local law enforcement body for speeding home to read this blog entry. Despite having
many favors owed to me, I am deeply sorry that there is nothing I can do for
you in this regards, except to recommend a few good lawyers and remind you that
this is the age of the internet. The posting will be up as long as the website
is up.
In light of
what has happened between my last post and this posting in Connecticut, I am going to forestall my normal macabre
Hitchcock opening.
Because of opportunity, I am also
going to interrupt our normal discussion on Writing Hitchcockian and discuss a
movie that I recommend that you should go see. Please obey the traffic laws
while you hurry to make the next showing of Hitchcock.
The poster art copyright is believed to belong to the distributor of
the film, the publisher of the film or the graphic artist.
WARNING—SPOILER ALERTS— WARNING—SPOILER ALERTS—
WARNING—SPOILER ALERTS
If you
haven’t had a chance, but you are following the discussion the Writer’s Lens
has been having on Alfred Hitchcock, I would recommend that you see the movie Hitchcock
starring Anthony Hopkins and Hellen Mirren. There are many reviews on this
movie by critics and Hitchcock fans. Some are positive and some are negative.
If you want a review from a movie critic’s point of view, please see a blog or
article written by a critic. As close to a movie critic’s statement that this
article will come is: I saw it twice in the theater, which I rarely do to a
movie any more these days, and I intend to make the movie a part of my DVD collection.
The movie is being slowly released in a limited viewing—not unlike the original
release of Psycho. At the end of this article, I will put a link to the
movie site so that you can see where and when it may be released in your area.
What I would
like to do instead is discuss in this article how the movie on Hitchcock and
his making of Psycho shows the creative process of the Master of
Suspense, of the doubts and obsessions that go through us writers and creative
people, and the determination despite the critics and naysayers.
The movie
opens and closes in a traditional “Hitchcock Presents” style. The opening shows
a scene where Ed Gein, the real life inspiration behind the book and the movie Psycho,
kills his brother. Ed Gein becomes a character through out the movie as an
expression of Alfred Hitchcock’s darker side—or rather as we have discussed how
Hitchcock used Freudian psychology in his movies and story world—his Id. We see
how the “psychological character” of Ed Gein twists Hitchcock’s self doubt in
his ability and in his marriage to Alma Reville—perhaps his greatest supporter
in his life.
All three
elements of Hitchcock’s story world creation come into play in this movie.
While it is not a movie of suspense, it is a movie that shows us the:
- The world of reality (the Freudian Ego);
- The world of desire and in this case the world of personal fear (the Freudian Id); and
- The world of the mind (the Freudian Super Ego).
The movie showed
Hitchcock’s:
- Obsession with his leading ladies;
- His voyeurism;
- His need for control and frustration when he loses that control;
- His weight control problem—health vs. love of food vs. stress eating;
- The fear of losing everything;
- The fight to bring the vision and creation to life;
- It also shows how he marketed the movie when Paramount didn’t want to spend the money to do it.
Psycho was a movie Hitchcock
had to produce himself. The movie industry was not enthusiastic about it and
the censors at the time threatened to stop its release. Alfred and Alma put up
their mansion up for mortgage to pay for the movie to be made.
I do not
want to go into everything in the movie as I have already given too many
spoilers here—but not enough to ruin the movie. If you are a writer, regardless
of your genre, I would say this movie needs to be on your must see list. I can
promise you, if you have gone through any trials or tribulations in your
writing, you will relate. You may even see the shadowed profile of Alfred
Hitchcock himself on the wall in the mirror of your mind.
For how
this all plays out, for how the story conflicts are resolved and how the story
worlds collide—well, I am no master of suspense, but I think I will leave you
stewing in your curiosity.
For
information on the movie: http://www.foxsearchlight.com/hitchcock/
For
information on Ed Gein: http://www.whowasedgein.com/
You will find what he did to be disgusting, but I also bet you will keep
looking. Hitchcock made the same bet.
Thank you for
reading and please visit www.davidalanlucas.com and www.thewriterslens.com.
You can also follow me on twitter @Owlkenpowriter and the Writer’s Lens
@TheWritersLens. Fiction is the world where the philosopher is the most free in
our society to explore the human condition as he chooses.
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