I'm glad it was, if only because my own son refuses to watch any movie in black and white, so at least he gets some sense of Hitchcock's genius. Yet the commentary track, featuring Van Sant, Anne Heche and Vince Vaughn, clarifies a lot of issues on why production decisions were made and, indeed, why the movie was made at all. at least to the extent of this remake also omitting mention of the three other languages and the subtitles.Ī half-hour making-of documentary opens, cutely, with various movie shakers and movers expressing dismay that Psycho could be remade. Funnily, just as the movie so closely tracks the original, so does the packaging. Listen, particularly, to the superb sound of the rain on the car roof when Marion arrives at Bate's Motel.
The audio (featuring Bernard Herrmann's original score) benefits from the abandonment of the Academy sound (limited bandwidth, with a harsh top end) and the use of 5.1 channel Dolby Digital.
Indeed, the quality of the photography is excellent, and the print used for the transfer is superbly clean. The colour is probably necessary for a commercially viable project of the 90s, and the colours have been thoughtfully chosen. Norman's voyeurism is drawn-out and blatant in this version, while Hitchcock's trademark cameo appearance is replaced by a Hitchcock lookalike vigorously lecturing Van Sant himself. A line from Joseph Stefano's screenplay is left in, even though it was cut from Hitchcock's final print (apparently for reasons of clearing the censors). As such, not every scene is identical to the original. He had in mind the different movie interpretations of Shakespeare, for example. Gus Van Sant chose to remake Psycho precisely because it was such a fine movie. Even the titles are the same (with only the names changed and colour added). Many scenes have a second-to-second correspondence with the original even in the camera angles. Imitated as closely as any movie has yet been imitated. 'Inimitably Psycho' I said about that 1960 movie. Still, you really buy these things for the movie and that remains inimitably Psycho. Our Region 4 edition gets by with single layer encoding, compared with the Region 1 dual layer, perhaps because of the omission in our version of a documentary, 'The making of Psycho', a censored scene and some Newsreel footage.
There are good text notes on the film, biographies on six of the actors and, of course, Hitchcock, plus Hitchcock's intentionally goofy theatrical trailer in a poor quality 4:3 transfer. Just one small anomoly appears during the pan away from the dead Marion's face: the edge of the bathroom door pulsates as it crosses the screen. On a good monitor, this DVD generally looks as good as a photograph. Fortunately it cleans up rapidly so that by the end of the titles the picture is mostly clean, with just the occasional flicker of dirt.īlack and white movies, especially ones as well-filmed as Psycho, benefit at least as much from DVD's resolution (twice as good as video cassette) as colour ones, perhaps more, because it's the luminance part of the signal that carries the most information. The film print from which the conversion was made was bit of a worry during the titles, with lots of scrape marks and dust accumulation. The audio is fairly clean, although with a little background hum. Despite what the cover says, there are also Spanish, French and Italian dubs on the DVD, as well as English, French and Greek subtitles. Thankfully, just as any temptation to colourise this intentionally black and white film was resisted, so the audio has been kept in its original mono without an attempt to convert it to stereo or surround. Released in 1960 it remains Hitchcock's masterpiece, failing to date poorly. There can surely be nothing able to be said about Psycho, the original, that has not already been said. Movie: A-, Picture: A+, Sound: A, Extras: B Movie: A, Picture: A, Sound: C, Extras: C Starring: Vince Vaughn, Julianne Moore, Viggo Mortensen and Anne Heche Starring: Anthony Perkins, Vera Miles, John Gavin and Janet Leigh Region 4 DVD Reviews: Is Psycho 2 twice as Psycho as Psycho? Originally published in Australian HI-FI, Oct/Nov 2002, v.33/5 Hi Fi Writer - R4 DVD Reviews: Two Psycho movies Home Page |