Saturday, June 1, 2019
How Hitchcock Challenges Audience Expectations in his Film Psycho :: Papers
How Hitchcock Challenges Audience Expectations in his Film Psycho Hitchcock does very well in his frivol away with censoring of film making in the nineteen fifties as he goes right to the limits of were the film is just suitable to show the nation. He does this many times in his film, one example is where Marian gets strip and dressed. You tick her bra and knickers in this word picture, which is very unusual back then, it is worse than seeing nudity in films now. If Marian had constructn any call up else dispatch in this scene it would have been explicit nudity, in that locationfore not be able to be shown in the film. This is what I mean by how Hitchcock takes censorship to the limit. several(prenominal) other censorship themes that Hitchcock took to the boundary was expressive kissing, swearing and brutality. Hitchcock went as far as possible with censorship to grip the audience and get more(prenominal) of a feel to the film. Psycho is a fifte en in England to buy on video these days because the censorship now is nothing compared to back when the film was made, a director can do basically anything now. The audience now would say it should be a twelve or lower as there is no swearing or sexual scenes and not that much brutality and parents would not mind their children seeing this. The scenes are still scary to the audience though and it would take quite an intelligent twelve year old to wrap their head round what is about and how it develops at the end. The editing in psycho is large(p) and must have taken a week to do just one scene. It is very good for the scene and for the audience as it builds tension and creates an atmosphere. The stovepipe scene to show this as an example is the famous shower scene where Marian is murdered, whilst having a shower, by Norman dressed as his mother with a knife. thither was seventy-eight separate camera set ups needed for the shower scene from the shower head, down the toilet, from the mirror, MariansHow Hitchcock Challenges Audience Expectations in his Film Psycho cover How Hitchcock Challenges Audience Expectations in his Film Psycho Hitchcock does very well in his film with censorship of film making in the nineteen fifties as he goes right to the limits of were the film is just suitable to show the nation. He does this many times in his film, one example is where Marian gets undressed and dressed. You see her bra and knickers in this scene, which is very unusual back then, it is worse than seeing nudity in films now. If Marian had taken any think else off in this scene it would have been explicit nudity, therefore not be able to be shown in the film. This is what I mean by how Hitchcock takes censorship to the limit. Some other censorship themes that Hitchcock took to the boundary was expressive kissing, swearing and brutality. Hitchcock went as far as possible with censorship to grip the audience and g et more of a feel to the film. Psycho is a fifteen in England to buy on video these days because the censorship now is nothing compared to back when the film was made, a director can do basically anything now. The audience now would say it should be a twelve or lower as there is no swearing or sexual scenes and not that much brutality and parents would not mind their children seeing this. The scenes are still scary to the audience though and it would take quite an intelligent twelve year old to wrap their head round what is about and how it develops at the end. The editing in psycho is great and must have taken a week to do just one scene. It is very good for the scene and for the audience as it builds tension and creates an atmosphere. The best scene to show this as an example is the famous shower scene where Marian is murdered, whilst having a shower, by Norman dressed as his mother with a knife. There was seventy-eight separate camera set ups needed fo r the shower scene from the shower head, down the toilet, from the mirror, Marians
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