Psycho (1960) *First Time Watching Reaction!! | Hitchcock Horror |

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  • Опубліковано 28 сер 2024
  • Psycho (1960) *First Time Watching Reaction!! | Hitchcock Horror |
    In this video we watch and react to seeing Alfred Hitchcock's 1960's horror classic "Psycho" for the very first time. Psycho is a movie about Bates Motel and Norman Bates. Psycho had a major impact on the slasher genre. Psycho stars Anthony Perkins as Norman Bates and Janet Leigh as the leading lady. Watch us watch Psycho for the first time! We also give our thoughts and rate Psycho at the end. For more reactions subscribe today!
    #reaction #firsttimewatching #psycho #alfredhitchcock
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 534

  • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
    @ForceOfLightEntertainment  10 місяців тому +35

    Share your thoughts, subscribe, give the video a 👍🏻💚 and leave recommendations!

    • @BigGator5
      @BigGator5 10 місяців тому +6

      I do highly recommend the two immediate sequels (the fourth one is a prequel). Maybe not for this year, but maybe for the next Halloween season.
      Go in Peace and Walk with God. 😎 👍

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  10 місяців тому +6

      @@BigGator5 Didn’t even realize there are sequels.

    • @mikegandalf
      @mikegandalf 10 місяців тому +1

      ​@BigGator5 no...just no

    • @chetcarman3530
      @chetcarman3530 10 місяців тому +1

      @@BigGator5 NO!!😱😱😱🤮

    • @MLJ7956
      @MLJ7956 10 місяців тому +6

      I like the 3 sequels (and I have them all on HD Blu-Ray in my home movie collection). Anthony Perkins as Norman Bates steals the show in each film. RIP Tony.
      If there is any one Psycho film I tell people that they might want to avoid, it is the Gus Van Sant 1998 shot-for-shot remake (now I like Vince Vaughn in a lot of movies but he doesn't do it for me as Norman there. Sorry not sorry).

  • @draculimpaler4507
    @draculimpaler4507 10 місяців тому +26

    Im sure someone else has already said it but you mentioned Jamie Leigh Curtis.....this was her actual mom as Marion in this movie

  • @joepowell7025
    @joepowell7025 10 місяців тому +67

    It actually wasn't meant to be a real horror movie, It was a suspense movie.

    • @zedwpd
      @zedwpd 10 місяців тому +15

      Alfred Hitchcock's famous quote about "Psycho," when he said, "I have never really made a "horror" picture before, although some of them have been pretty horrible, but I think this one will qualify."

    • @malcolmdrake6137
      @malcolmdrake6137 10 місяців тому +3

      There's no "horror" involved.

    • @joepowell7025
      @joepowell7025 9 місяців тому +2

      @@zedwpd It STILL wasn't a horror movie.

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 8 місяців тому +1

      You classified movie as horror, when Hitchcock said Suspense.
      Also "give the girl a dream" = what does the Man get in a marriage?
      After all, he is expected to work 40 plus hours at a good-paying job for what wife and kiddies want and do all heavy maintenance and all he does is give, give give.
      What a crock!

    • @VerisimilitudeFilms1
      @VerisimilitudeFilms1 5 місяців тому

      Actually, Hitchcock saw that companies like American International Pictures were making loads of cash from their horror movies, yet they weren't very good movies. So his thinking was, "what if a good director" made a movie like those. So, the horror aspect was in the back of his mind.

  • @anrun
    @anrun 10 місяців тому +39

    I'm beginning to hate the phrase "for its time." They could be more horrifying today, but not more skillful. Everything in that shower scene was brilliantly done. Going from her pulling down the curtain to the bloody water spiraling down the drain to the close-up of her dead eye is as good as it gets.

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  10 місяців тому +3

      We totally agree with the first statement and that is what was meant. Every movie is a product of its era. Doesn’t mean it wasn’t genius or innovative, but it will have less at its disposal to use.

    • @kristhomas2326
      @kristhomas2326 9 місяців тому

      @@ForceOfLightEntertainment can you please react to first blood series ?

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 8 місяців тому

      Fir it's time = what a lame statement.
      How about, in your limited untalented tomes dumb

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 8 місяців тому

      ​@@ForceOfLightEntertainmentstop say that.
      Young peeps = undeveloped frontal lobe area of cranium

    • @Fast_Eddy_Magic
      @Fast_Eddy_Magic 5 місяців тому +4

      Young people these days think movies like this are slow moving because the horror films they're used to seeing are nothing but a string of jump scares one right after the other, with no real story line or dialog. They also need to see an explanation every five minutes.

  • @Dej24601
    @Dej24601 10 місяців тому +29

    This was the first film to show a flushing toilet and Hitchcock had to fight the censorship board to let that remain in the film. It also was the first to show an unmarried couple lying completely in bed together (no more “at least one foot on the floor” as was required) and to show the main character wearing bras.

    • @alanmurray5963
      @alanmurray5963 10 місяців тому +4

      Fun Fact: The first cartoon to show a couple in bed was The Flintstones😂

    • @Dej12328
      @Dej12328 10 місяців тому +2

      Ya ba da ba doo! @@alanmurray5963

    • @MsAppassionata
      @MsAppassionata 2 місяці тому

      @@Dej12328 No wonder they liked using that expression. 😂😂😂

  • @laurab68707
    @laurab68707 10 місяців тому +36

    Hitchcock was a master of suspense. You don't need to see the actual stabbing to know what is happening. It's still horrifying. I think the acting is fantastic. Even by todays standards, I think it still holds up. Leaving things to ones imagination is way more scary. I did not see in the theater but watched later when it was shown on TV when I was an adult. I was only 5 when this came out.

    • @michaelcoffey1991
      @michaelcoffey1991 10 місяців тому +3

      Agree Hitchcock films will be amazing in 4311. Greatness has no expiration date

    • @wolandbegemotazazello
      @wolandbegemotazazello 9 місяців тому

      Actually, the classic studio system had much better actors than we have today. Today's celebrities are, for the most part, not actors. They are moderately talentless eye candy.

  • @luciolamonica
    @luciolamonica 10 місяців тому +21

    the shower scene was possible because of composer Bernard Herrmann! with almost no budget, he ignored the director's decision of not using soundtrack especifically for that scene and he resorted only to a set of violins...not everybody would have the guts to oppose Hitchcock at his best and create one of the most iconic scene in history!

    • @alanmurray5963
      @alanmurray5963 10 місяців тому +3

      Hitchcock was so impressed with the score he doubled Bernard Hermans salary to 75,000$ and said to the score improved the film massively.......Sir Alfred Hithcock was correct.

    • @macroman52
      @macroman52 10 місяців тому +1

      And the violins are muted to get a harsher sound.

  • @brandonflorida1092
    @brandonflorida1092 10 місяців тому +28

    Hitchcock was a very great director whom to this day other directors often call "The Master." He has many other brilliant movies. A few are:
    "North by Northwest,"
    "Rear Window,"
    "Vertigo,"
    "Suspicion."
    "Marnie,"
    "Strangers on a Train,"
    "The Lady Vanishes."
    "Rope"

    • @alanmurray5963
      @alanmurray5963 10 місяців тому +1

      I would add:
      Lifeboat
      Frenzy
      Torn Curtain
      Marine and many more from The Master🔥

    • @brandonflorida1092
      @brandonflorida1092 10 місяців тому +1

      @@alanmurray5963 (1) I agree about "Lifeboat." (2) I don't think "Torn Curtain" or Frenzy" are remotely his best. (3) He does not have a movie called "Marine."

    • @brandonflorida1092
      @brandonflorida1092 5 місяців тому

      @@jackthebeeenthusiast Uh....hello, this was 5 months ago. Clearly, they have no intention of doing anything from my list with or without "The Birds."

    • @MsAppassionata
      @MsAppassionata 2 місяці тому +1

      @@brandonflorida1092 I think they meant “Marnie”.

    • @MsAppassionata
      @MsAppassionata 2 місяці тому

      “The Birds”, “To Catch A Thief”, “Shadow Of A Doubt”, “The 39 Steps”, “The Man Who Knew Too Much” (James Stewart version), “Rebecca”, and “Notorious”.

  • @havok6280
    @havok6280 10 місяців тому +19

    "When Mother was still alive..." referring to Bates Motel...
    Major spoiler...😢
    Also this is not a slasher film... Often it gets mischaracterized as horror. It is really a suspense thriller...

    • @rickardroach9075
      @rickardroach9075 10 місяців тому +1

      First time watching… except I already know the mother is dead. 🙄

    • @natalieforceoflightenterta8857
      @natalieforceoflightenterta8857 10 місяців тому

      @@rickardroach9075 I was a fan of Bates Motel, but never had seen Psycho

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  10 місяців тому +1

      I didn’t spoil the movie for me. I knew nothing about the Bates or this movie

    • @normandavidtidiman9918
      @normandavidtidiman9918 8 днів тому

      Yep. At 11.47 the redhead also just casually threw in "he's insane" too! Duh! Just go the whole hog and say what happens next 😞🙄

  • @prescottlange
    @prescottlange 10 місяців тому +43

    This movie was never intended to be (gratuitously) "horrifying". It's a psychological thriller, not a slasher flick. Hitchcock never sat around wringing his hands anguishing over the idea bloody decapitations and such weren't allowed because of the time. Psycho is much smarter than that.

    • @KrazyKat007
      @KrazyKat007 10 місяців тому +3

      Wrong!!!
      Paycho is routinely cited as the genesis of the slasher genre.
      And the movie was horrifying and terrifying to audiences in 1960.
      In 1960, this horror movie went well beyond what any other scary movies were doing.
      You have no idea what you’re talking about.

    • @prescottlange
      @prescottlange 10 місяців тому +3

      @@KrazyKat007 First of all, calm down. You sound like a maniac. Secondly, everything I said is incontestably correct. Psycho's "horror" is derived almost entirely from the psychological aspect, and not the largely bloodless murder scenes. I mean, it's even in the title- PSYCHO. Further, I was addressing the reactor directly, and within the connotative context SHE was describing. To her, Psycho is undeniably tame, as she's already been exposed to ACTUAL genre-defining slasher films. What truly made Psycho a cut above the rest in 1960 (get it?) was the Hitchcockian suspense, tension, mystery that mounted over the course of the film. And not that little bit of diluted blood going down the drain, or the cartoonish flailing of arms as the PI was falling backwards on the staircase. The novel knifing scenes were mostly ancillary. Far scarier, was seeing a shadow entering the bathroom from beyond the shower curtain, or creeping up the stairs into the unknown. No blood necessary. AGAIN, gratuitous violence is NOT what made this film memorable. Nor was it Hitchcock's focus. FACTS.
      It's YOU who doesn't know what YOU'RE talking about.

    • @Great-Documentaries
      @Great-Documentaries 10 місяців тому +3

      Who are you kidding? Hitch would have loved to make an actual slasher movie. In fact he got away with all sorts of things in this movie that had never been allowed in an American movie. It's not about being smarter, it's about making a film that paying customers will actually be allowed to go and see. His was the goriest American movie of all time when it came out.

    • @prescottlange
      @prescottlange 10 місяців тому +1

      @@Great-Documentaries I don't need to kid. I'm just stating facts.

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 10 місяців тому +32

    The audacity of killing off the main character half way through and then manipulating us to begin to root for who turned out to be her killer, was an incredible move for any filmmaker. Alfred Hitchcock had no equal!
    Also, the shower scene is so well known that you expect it. It's Martin Balsam's staircase stabbing that catches people off guard!

  • @raymondtaylor5223
    @raymondtaylor5223 10 місяців тому +12

    When Psycho came out in theaters there was a condition EVERY theater had to agree upon. Each theater could not allow late comers into show. The late comers would have to wait until the next viewing. Hitchcock, by killing off the main character, realized that the movie's impact would be completely compromised, therefore, you had to show up on time.

  • @BlueShadow777
    @BlueShadow777 10 місяців тому +11

    "Psycho" (1960) deserves a 5/5 rating based on its timeless storytelling and masterful craftsmanship. Alfred Hitchcock's direction and Bernard Herrmann's iconic score create a suspenseful atmosphere that still captivates audiences today.
    The film's innovative techniques, such as the famous shower scene and psychological twists, set new standards for the horror genre.
    Exceptional performances by the cast, especially Anthony Perkins as Norman Bates, add depth to the characters.
    The meticulous attention to detail in both cinematography and editing enhances the movie's impact, making it a classic that continues to resonate with viewers, regardless of the era it was made in.

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 8 місяців тому +1

      Anyone that does not rate this as top of all time is just ignorant of facts. Period

  • @rowenatulley852
    @rowenatulley852 10 місяців тому +8

    The brilliance of this movie is that it's suspenseful without being overly graphic or bloody. On top of that, it does it with only two murders . . .

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  10 місяців тому +1

      I do like that!

    • @AaronD.Webster
      @AaronD.Webster 3 місяці тому +1

      There are 4 murders total, 2 onscreen and 2 offscreen (Mrs Bates and her lover who encouraged her to build the motel.)

    • @rowenatulley852
      @rowenatulley852 3 місяці тому +1

      @@AaronD.Webster Well, two that we see . . .

    • @fermisparadox01
      @fermisparadox01 3 місяці тому

      ​@@AaronD.Websterand 2 missing persons who happened to be young women

  • @emilykruger2844
    @emilykruger2844 10 місяців тому +7

    One of the things I love about this movie is the aerial shot of my hometown Phoenix in the 60s, it’s like a cool time capsule from the past

  • @I_ll_beer_back
    @I_ll_beer_back 9 місяців тому +4

    Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho" is truly the mother of all psychological thrillers.
    "Psycho" became one of the most discussed and influential films in cinema history. For many experts, it marks a turning point in time, and for them the premiere of "Psycho" is also the birth of the modern horror film.

  • @clarencewalker3925
    @clarencewalker3925 10 місяців тому +13

    If you've seen "Bates Motel" or any of its ilk, you already know what to expect and who's who. It's always best to watch the original first. They're like Christmas. You never know what you're going to get.

  • @chetcarman3530
    @chetcarman3530 10 місяців тому +7

    You know you're watching Janet Leigh -- Jamie Leigh Curtis' mother, right? ❤😊

  • @JoeCool7835
    @JoeCool7835 10 місяців тому +8

    "Psycho" & "Peeping Tom" laid the groundwork for slashers, but I consider the first true-blue slasher film (as we know the genre) to be "Black Christmas" from 1974. A classic I watch while gift-wrapping every Christmas! (When I'm not watching "Gremlins")

    • @MLJ7956
      @MLJ7956 10 місяців тому +1

      @JoeCool7835 - Olivia Hussey who was in Black Christmas also played Norma 'Mother' Bates in Psycho IV: The Beginning (1990). 😉

    • @Greenwood4727
      @Greenwood4727 10 місяців тому +1

      I agree Black christmas, codified a ot of the tropes and halloween polished them..

    • @DavidAntrobus
      @DavidAntrobus 10 місяців тому

      @JoeCool7835 I'd say another movie released on the same day as _Black Christmas_ had a greater influence on the genre: _The Texas Chain Saw Massacre_ .

    • @nikoking825
      @nikoking825 5 місяців тому

      Agatha Christie's "And Then There Were None," is also a bit of a proto-slasher in book form. A group of strangers are gathered on an island with no way off, their host is unknown and one by one they are killed off...

  • @stevenmoules4955
    @stevenmoules4955 10 місяців тому +5

    Peeping Tom (1960) is a good film as well!

  • @craigfuller1532
    @craigfuller1532 10 місяців тому +4

    You HAVE to see more Hitchcock. He was a true master.

  • @7thwheel
    @7thwheel 10 місяців тому +7

    They made a few sequels to this. Psycho 2 was actually pretty good and worth a watch.

  • @frankp9324
    @frankp9324 10 місяців тому +11

    Janet Lee was the only star in this movie and she was killed off less than 30 minutes into the movie. It was very shocking to audiences at that time.

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 10 місяців тому

      Its Janet Leigh, and Martin Balsam, Anthony Perkins and certainly Vera Miles were not exactly "newbs". Vera was in John Ford's The Searchers and other westerns, and was in Hitchcock's The Wrong Man with Henry Fonda. She was supposed to star in Vertigo, but I think she got pregnant.

  • @jessejleafty
    @jessejleafty 10 місяців тому +5

    This movie set the movie start times in theaters. Before this movie there was no start times. Movies played like on a loop. Psycho you can't come in the middle of the movie. Also they called Alfred Hitchcock crazy for killing off the main character. Nobody had ever done this before.

    • @lisathuban8969
      @lisathuban8969 10 місяців тому +1

      Hitchcock actually topped that with 1939's "Rebecca". The main character is never seen.

  • @user-sy5vv4ze3h
    @user-sy5vv4ze3h 8 місяців тому +2

    Hitchcock movies are not horror movies; they are suspense movies. The object is not to scare, but to create tension (suspense). The shower scene had tremendous impact in 1960, but not so much today because people are jaded now. Similarly, the psychological explanation at the end seems a bit long today, but few people were familiar with this kind of thing back then.
    You are right about how odd it was to kill off the main character halfway through. To cover for that, the advertising stunt was that you could get your money back if you left the theater before the halfway mark. Also, they said they had medical personnel on hand for people who faint. I was six in 1960, so I didn’t see it until a few years later, but I remember the conversations I heard. Many women were afraid to shower for a while. Indeed, I myself was quite nervous once, as an adult, to be alone in a small, deserted motel (six empty units) situated high on a mountainside above a roadside restaurant (where the office was).
    Despite all the hoopla, “Psycho,” in my opinion, is not one of Hitchcock’s best movies. I would rate it probably 3.5 out of 5. If you want to see more of his work, take a look at “The 39 Steps,” “The Lady Vanishes,” “Suspicion,” “Lifeboat,” “Foreign Correspondent,” “Spellbound,” “Notorious,” “Rear Window,” or “North By Northwest.”

  • @KrazyKat007
    @KrazyKat007 10 місяців тому +5

    Bates Motel was a great series.
    But the single most underrated series in the history of television is the HBO series
    “Oz”.
    There has never been a TV show of higher, stellar quality that got less recognition for it.
    Now there’s a reason for that.
    And if you ever watch the series, you’ll quickly pick up on it.

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  10 місяців тому

      Never heard of it.

    • @KrazyKat007
      @KrazyKat007 10 місяців тому

      @@ForceOfLightEntertainment Exactly my point. LOL
      “Oz was the first Dramatic series ever produced by HBO. Debuting in 1997, even before
      The Sopranos.
      Audiences were able to wrap their heads around The Sopranos and that show took off.
      Where as Oz was just too much, too intense, too insane.
      “Oz” is a series about a maximum security prison.
      If you guys ever do reaction series to a TV show, “Oz” would be a great choice.
      This show has such a strong variety of complex characters from all walks of life with some insane plots.
      I promise you, you have never seen anything like this TV series.

  • @ianlawn9836
    @ianlawn9836 9 місяців тому +2

    A film that grips yo7 from start to finish. A very rare accomplishment for any movie.

  • @DougerSR
    @DougerSR 10 місяців тому +4

    Hitchcock is the bomb. You owe it to yourself to see more Hitch!!!

  • @bigredtlc1828
    @bigredtlc1828 2 місяці тому +2

    Filming in black & white enhances the movie, IMO, as you stark contrasts in lighting and things like the "pond" you don't really know if it's water or oil or whatever. My Mom (now in her 80's) saw it when she was a teen and didn't shower for a week after. It was very scary for moviegoers back then. Thanks for reacting!

  • @therealstephentv
    @therealstephentv 10 місяців тому +9

    Psycho, such a good classic horror. Thank y'all for bringing us down this classic journey. Have y'all thought about any other classic horrors like Creature from the Black Lagoon?

  • @davidwalsh7128
    @davidwalsh7128 10 місяців тому +3

    Nice job. Read up on what happened in theaters when this came out in 1960...

  • @parsifal40002
    @parsifal40002 10 місяців тому +4

    Anthony Perkins was absolutely brilliant as Norman Bates. Great movie!

  • @PhlintheartGloomgold
    @PhlintheartGloomgold 5 місяців тому +1

    That was the "coppiest" looking cop I've ever seen. Vera Miles is a beauty.

  • @phila3884
    @phila3884 10 місяців тому +2

    If this were a secret game- you two would have won! You are the ONLY reactors who did not express trepidation about this being a black-and-white movie!. On watching this again for the umpteenth time, it's how "modern" the script is that strikes me again and again, It's how you or I would talk if we were asking about a missing loved one today.. Amazingly modern for 1960. It's a different reaction knowing something about the story. But you touched on it- it is just a great movie and the "horror" factor is actually not what makes it great.

  • @vodriscoll
    @vodriscoll 10 місяців тому +3

    Hitchcock wanted you to think that Marion was the lead character, but in actuality it was Norman.

  • @AbhinavS.R.
    @AbhinavS.R. 6 днів тому +2

    In most of the reactions, I've also heard people say that Norman Bates was charming and smart too, though awkward. Not just only creepy, psychopathic.

  • @jwoodard29
    @jwoodard29 10 місяців тому +2

    "I feel like we have a lot of time left and she's the main character." This is the idea -- the audience is forced to identify with a real creep because there is no one else.

  • @robertjewell9727
    @robertjewell9727 10 місяців тому +2

    My friend Dorothy's dad did the music for this film. Great reaction.

  • @kevaunmitchell1316
    @kevaunmitchell1316 10 місяців тому +2

    It also have 3 sequels which start 23 years late in 1983-1990

  • @MLJ7956
    @MLJ7956 10 місяців тому +5

    Great reaction ladies....Sir Alfred Hitchcock, as a director, was know by many audiences as the master of suspense (and for good reason). He has directed over 53 movie in long career and numerous episodes of his TV show 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents'...my own personal top 20 Hitchcock films are - Vertigo,Psycho, North By Northwest, Rear Window, The Birds, Dial M For Murder, The Man Who Knew Too Much, The 39 Steps, Rope, The Lady Vanishes, Strangers On A Train, To Catch A Thief, Shadow Of Doubt, Lifeboat, Notorious, Saboteur, Rebecca, Marnie, Suspicion & Frenzy. By all means feel free to add them to your movie watch lists, they are all good ones.
    Psycho movie fun facts:
    That's my momma & what's in a name? - Janet Leigh (who played the ill-fated Marion in Psycho) is the real life mother of 'Halloween' franchise actress Jamie Lee Curtis and she even did a cameo in Halloween H20 (1998) with her daughter and drove the same color, make & model car that she drove in Psycho. Also the character of Dr. Sam Loomis (played by Donald Pleasence) in 'Halloween' (1978) is named after the boyfriend in Psycho (that was director John Carpenter's homage & tip of the hat to Sir Alfred Hitchcock).
    Good catch! - After the infamous shower scene, during the close up on Janet Leigh face, it was Alfred Hitchcock's wife who was the only one who saw, during an editing test screening before the film's national release, that Janet Leigh actually took in a breath of air when her character was supposed to be dead. None of the editors or Hitchcock himself saw that at first. He later took his wife out to dinner as a thank you for catching that almost film flub error.
    Bird vibes! - There are several references to birds throughout in this movie: the opening shot of the film after the starting credits the camera swoops down into the window, just like a bird. Marion's surname is Crane, which is a type of bird. Norman's hobby is mostly stuffing birds, because he says that they look most likelife stuffed and Norman even states that Marion eats like a bird. Ironically, Alfred Hitchcock's next movie was, in fact, The Birds (1963).
    How low can you go? - Psycho was mostly made on a low budget (due to a dare that one of the studio heads said to Hitchcock, that he couldn't make an entertaining film on a low budget - because at the time most low budget movies/B-movies weren't very good) on the Universal studio backlot with the TV show crew (because Hitchcock need a film crew who could work fast & cheep as well as not have that glamorized Hollywood look that big studio films & professionals used). It was filmed in black & white (not just due to the overall cost of the film itself even though it was cheaper to film in black & white over color at the time. It is just the opposite nowadays), it was because Hitchcock also felt that the movie might look very gory in color and might get banned by the studio for such, so black & white it was. Only the exterior and a partial facade of the Bates house was actually built on the backlot (all the interiors were shot in a studio soundstage) and it still remain there today (and is still part of the Universal Studios Hollywood California tram tour).
    If you're late, you can't come in! - Every theater that showed this movie had a cardboard cut-out installed in the lobby of Sir Alfred Hitchcock pointing to his wristwatch with a note saying "The manager of this theatre has been instructed at the risk of his life, not to admit to the theatre any persons after the picture starts. Any spurious attempts to enter by side doors, fire escapes or ventilating shafts will be met by force. The entire objective of this extraordinary policy, of course, is to help you enjoy PSYCHO more. Alfred Hitchcock" & other cutouts even had the extra lines "PS - It is of the upmost importance that you not revealed many of the shocking points of interest within the movie of PSYCHO or of the ending to anyone and we mean anyone. Not to your family, to your friends, to your co-workers, even to the pope, the president of the United States or the queen of England. God bless her!". Thus creating one of the first 'spoiler alerts'. (Of course it was done in humorous jest to help preserve the audience's enjoyment of the movie and to not give away the fact that Janet Leigh, who was a huge movie star at that time, wasn't going to be in the entire picture and for anyone wondering 'where is Janet?' if they somehow missed the infamous shower scene).
    An angry letter! - After this movie's release, Hitchcock received an angry letter from the father of a girl who refused to have a bath after seeing Diabolique (1955), and refused to shower after seeing his movie. Hitchcock, sent a humorous note back simply saying, "Well send her to the dry cleaners then."
    What about the sequels? - After fears of being typecasted, it took Anthony Perkins (Norman) 22 years to agree make the (underrated) sequel Psycho II in 1983 (which was directed by Hitchcock student Richard Franklin & written by horror writer/producer/director Tom Holland - of Fright Night, Child's Play and Stephen King's Thinner & The Langoliers fame). It was Perkins who also convinced Vera Miles (who was retired from acting at that time) to reprise her role as Lila (Marion's sister from the first movie). Pat Hitchcock (who had a cameo in the original Psycho as Marion's co-worker) and real life daughter of Alfred Hitchcock, said her father would have enjoyed the sequel very much. Perkins would play Norman again in Psycho III (which he also directed in 1986) and one last time in Psycho IV: The Beginning (1990), before his death in 1992. Psycho IV - was a both a sequel and a prequel made for the Showtime cable network (written by the original Psycho screenplay writer Joseph Stefano. It also featured Henry Thomas, Elliot from ET as a young Norman Bates, Olivia Hussey from the original Black Christmas as Norma 'Mother' Bates and it was directed by Mick Garris - Director/writer/producer of Critters 2, Batteries Not Included, Hocus Pocus, Unbroken, Stephen King's: Sleepwalkers, The Stand, Desperation & Riding The Bullet). Psycho IV sadly didn't get a theatrical release because Psycho III underperformed at the theatrical box office but for Psycho/Norman Bates fans, Psycho IV does bring closure/finality to the series and it is always enjoyable to see Anthony Perkins as Norman Bates one last time. The sequel movies are also worth checking out in my opinion.
    Ugh, Remake! - Director Gus Van Sant did make a shot-for-shot remake of the original Psycho in 1998 and in color instead of black & white. It uses the exact same shooting script with hardly any changes and much of the same exact dialogue is used too. It flopped big time and was a pointless gash grab said by many, including myself (beside since it is an almost exact shot-for-shot remake, you really don't need to see that one, since you already seen the original anyway, and although I like Vince Vaughn as an actor & I like him in other movies, I just couldn't see him as Norman Bates. That certainly didn't work for me at all). Best to avoid that one.
    An almost TV series! - A made-for-TV movie called 'Bates Motel' (no relation to the actual TV series later on), which was originally conceived as a pilot for a possible anthology TV series premiered on TV in 1987 and would have an alternate timeline, ignoring the events of both Psycho II & III (as it also did not feature Anthony Perkins at all as well). The basic plot is that Norman passed away in the mental hospital leaving in his will to his best friend Alex (played by Bud Cort), that he met in hospital, he left him his hotel and house, which may or may not be haunted by the ghost of mother Bates. And the location of the Bates Motel would also be the focal point of other spooky goings on (which might been the set up for 'Twilight Zone/Tales From The Crypt'/Amazing Stories' style anthology TV show but NBC decided not to make it a series). The film premiered as part of NBC Monday Night at the Movies on July 5, 1987 to mixed reviews from both critics and audiences (and I personally call it an 'Eh' movie. Not great but not awful. It's ok for a lazy rainy Saturday afternoon viewing if nothing else in on TV in my opinion. Up to y'all if you ever want to check that one out). It can still be viewed on various TV/cable network stations from time to time, it pops up on various streaming services periodically and the TV movie was also included in the Universal 'Psycho Collection' DVD/Blu-Ray box set.
    And if course you know all about 5 season & People Choice Award winning 'Bates Motel' reboot prequel TV series which ran from 2013-2017 on the A&E network.
    Alfred Hitchcock cameo (in case you were wondering where Hitch was) - He's the man on the street corner wearing the cowboy hat just before Marion (Janet Leigh) walks into the real estate loan office.

    • @tranya327
      @tranya327 10 місяців тому +1

      I’ll add a few to your ‘Bird vibes!’ comment:
      - The film’s action starts in the city of Phoenix - a fabulous bird of legend.
      - Norman’s parlor contains the bodies of a number of stuffed birds.
      - When Norman (as the ‘Norman’ half of Norman’s mind) rushes in to find Marion’s body, he accidentally knocks a picture of a bird off of the wall.
      Finally:
      Just before the end of the scene where Sam leaves Lila, to go to the Bates motel by himself to try to find Arbogast, we see an interesting shot of Lila. Lila is juxtaposed against the upside-down rakes of Sam’s hardware store. The effect is to momentarily render Lila as some strange human-bird hybrid, with rakes substituting for bird plumage.

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  10 місяців тому +1

      Thanks!

  • @zenarcher9633
    @zenarcher9633 10 місяців тому +5

    One of the most influential movies of all-time, you could argue it was the birthplace of modern horror. Prior horror films were predominately "monster movies", either the "creature features" of the atomic 50's or the "Universal Monsters" of the 30's & 40's, but Hitchcock saw horror in the everyday, in "normal" people. Another great Hitchcock film that has similar vibes is "Shadow of a Doubt" from 1943.
    As a nod to Hitchcock, John Carpenter named Donald Pleasance's Doctor in Halloween after Sam Loomis from Psycho.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 10 місяців тому +1

      Shadow Of A Doubt is super.

  • @DougerSR
    @DougerSR 10 місяців тому +2

    I cannot believe yer just now seeing this!!! Looove it!!!! Plus it’s one of my faves.

  • @ianlawn9836
    @ianlawn9836 10 місяців тому +5

    A terrific suspenseful story with elements of real shock, so ahead of it’s day.

  • @PhlintheartGloomgold
    @PhlintheartGloomgold 2 місяці тому +1

    The courthouse cop who let in the cop with the blanket is Ted Knight who played Ted Baxter on the Mary Tyler Moore Show.

  • @timroebuck3458
    @timroebuck3458 10 місяців тому +2

    Alfred Hitchcock was a master story teller in his day.

  • @ChrisReise
    @ChrisReise 8 місяців тому +1

    Marion Crane played by the original scream queen, Janet Leigh...a title later held by her very own daughter, Jamie Lee Curtis.

  • @Nefarioso
    @Nefarioso 5 місяців тому +1

    Speaking of "firsts", this was the first Hollywood film to actually show a toilet being flushed.

  • @user-xj7hq1pp3x
    @user-xj7hq1pp3x 10 місяців тому +4

    It’s the granddaddy of slasher movies. You can’t compare movies that came after, that’s why classic films like gone with the wind are held in such high regard!

  • @Great-Documentaries
    @Great-Documentaries 10 місяців тому +2

    In the intro, whomever is the one on our right says "back when 'mother' was still alive".
    Well, if you know *that* then you pretty much have already seen the movie. There's no suspense and no need for the rest of us to waste our time watching a pair of women already know the huge plot twist. Thanks for saving me the trouble.

  • @awall1701
    @awall1701 10 місяців тому +4

    Nice reactions, I was just as shocked as you with the shower scene killing when I first watched Psycho but for me seeing the private investigator get killed had me frozen, I had never see anything like that before.

  • @johnmaynardable
    @johnmaynardable 10 місяців тому +7

    That shower sequence is one of the most remarkable pieces of film editing still to this day, Hitchcock plotted it out very carefully for the most impact. I love Hitchcock, he is a brilliant film maker of thrillers of all type. And yes, the fact that Janet Leigh dies in the first 30 minutes was a total shocker.

  • @zedwpd
    @zedwpd 10 місяців тому +3

    The secretary tanking tranquilizers was Hitchcock's real life daughter. Yes the money was a fat stack. The $40k she stole is worth $414,900 today. This movie had the first toilet flushed in cinematic history.

  • @ThirteenthDiget
    @ThirteenthDiget 10 місяців тому +3

    Hitchcock was a master. His TV show, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, was really good too. Janet Leigh, Marion, is the mother of Jamie Lee Curtis (Tony Curtis is her father). Janet never took a shower after this movie. Jamie Lee Curtis is the star of Halloween. This is based on the book Psycho by Robert Bloch. Glad you enjoyed the movie. At the time this broke new ground. First time a character was filmed in underwear, and I believe the first time a character was actually "showed" being killed.
    By the way this is 80HD under a new name. Looking forward to all your scary movies this month.

  • @kbrewski1
    @kbrewski1 10 місяців тому +2

    Did you know that the female star, Janet Leigh, was the mother of Jamie Lee Curtis (father = Tony Curtis), who became THE Scream Queen of the late 70s/80s starting with the original Halloween? How's that for connecting the dots?
    Its one of the most iconic signature movies of all time. Its a masterpiece of filmmaking. Hitchcock was a genius. One of the top 5 filmmakers of all time. You can't "qualify" a masterpiece like this with "for its time". That's like saying Beethoven's 9th Symphony was good I guess....for its time. The Sistine Chapel was pretty good art.....for its time. Dylan and The Beatles were pretty talented musicians......for their time. No, this was and is an incredible film. Just because everything is more modern and technologically advanced doesn't make it BETTER. There are thousands of cheap copycat slasher flicks. There is only one PSYCHO. It's the psychological thriller and suspense that make the movie, not the amount of gore or limbs chopped off.

  • @drlee2
    @drlee2 10 місяців тому +2

    Totally agree with Natalie on Bates Motel. That was a surprisingly great prequel series that lived up to the 1960 classic film. The acting from Freddie Highmore (Norman) and Vera Farmiga (Norma) was phenomenal.

  • @smenor1234
    @smenor1234 9 місяців тому +1

    It wasn’t a horror movie, it was a suspense movie.

  • @SG-js2qn
    @SG-js2qn 10 місяців тому +5

    This movie was a huge international hit when it came out in 1960. Of course audiences were familiar with detective dramas, and with abnormal psychology...as asylums, sanitariums, and assorted nut houses had been around for a long time. What was somewhat different here, I think, was the psychological murder thriller ... trying to make a True Crime type story where the killer was not just criminal and murderous, but somewhat normal until revealed to be certifiably insane and murderous. Definitely the cinematic grandfather of "Silence of the Lambs."

  • @DavidAntrobus
    @DavidAntrobus 10 місяців тому +1

    "You eat like a bird" and her name is Marion Crane. 😏 At the beginning, she is imagining all the things people might be saying about her, and she's wrestling with her conscience over taking the money, so her facial expressions reflect all of those emotions, probably including (as you both suggest) pride that she'd pulled the wool over their eyes. But in the end, she was going to return the money, although of course, she never got the chance. 😢
    Oh, and I also agree that _Bates Motel_ the TV show is massively underrated. Vera Farmiga as Norma and Freddie Highmore as Norman are exceptional, and there's a strong supporting cast too. It's also very moody. The set was built near where I live in British Columbia, an exact copy of the one in the original movie. I happened to visit near the end of filming, when they'd taken down the chain-link fence, and I managed to get some great photos unimpeded. A highlight for this movie nerd. 😅

  • @zedwpd
    @zedwpd 10 місяців тому +5

    Alfred Hitchcock's famous quote about "Psycho," when he said, "I have never really made a "horror" picture before, although some of them have been pretty horrible, but I think this one will qualify." He was definitely playing with the notion that his movie was more of a psychological thriller than a traditional "slasher" film, even though it's often included in that genre. In the film, he used suspense and mystery to terrify the audience, rather than just relying on blood and gore. I know it's tame by today's standards, but this is considered the first slasher movie.

    • @tomstanziola1982
      @tomstanziola1982 10 місяців тому

      The blood in the tub was chocolate syrup.

  • @michaelcoffey1991
    @michaelcoffey1991 10 місяців тому +2

    The greatest director of all time and one of my five favorites of all time he did. You want more suggestions, Try Rear Window, Or North by Northwest (my favorite hitchcock flick) or the Birds, or Vertigo, or Rope. You can never go wrong with any Hitchcock film of all time.

  • @ramonacosta2647
    @ramonacosta2647 10 місяців тому +2

    John Gavin, who played Sam, would eventually become US Ambassador to Mexico.

  • @johnkeenan1829
    @johnkeenan1829 10 місяців тому +1

    One of the greatest movies ever made. My second favorite behind the original "Alien". To this day Plainfield Wisconsin is not happy about their most infamous resident, Ed Gein. He was the basis for Norman, for Leatherface in Texas Chainsaw, and for Buffalo Bill in Silence of the Lambs. His crimes horrified the entire world back in 1957.

  • @katwithattitude5062
    @katwithattitude5062 10 місяців тому +2

    Anthony Perkins died of AIDS-related pneumonia in 1992. His widow, an actress named Berry Berenson, was on one of the planes that went into the World Trade Center on 9/11.

  • @SinSationNation
    @SinSationNation 10 місяців тому +4

    I’ve never seen Psycho before and now after watching your guys watch reaction I’m gonna have to watch it in full for myself. Love ❤️ watching you guys always react to movies especially during this months spooky 👻 season

    • @MLJ7956
      @MLJ7956 10 місяців тому +2

      And if you like it...there are 3 more (underrated) sequels with Anthony Perkins as Norman Bates. 😉

  • @quixote6942
    @quixote6942 10 місяців тому +4

    THE SHOWER SCENE IS SO WELL FRAMED! She was in the Shower, but you never saw her "Naughty Bits"... In ALL the attacks, you never saw actual Penetrations... and they used Chocolate Sauce for "Blood"... 99% of that attack was all left to your imagination!
    For the Sound of the Slashing, They Stabbed Melons... It's said that after hearing all the Melons being Stabbed, All Hitchcock simply said "Casabas... Definitely Casabas".

    • @conureron3792
      @conureron3792 10 місяців тому +1

      Even constructed a special shower head so the camera wouldn’t get wet.

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 10 місяців тому +2

      The quick flash of just her bare midriff and belly button was akin in 1960 to showing full spread Marilyn Chambers X nudity about 15 years later.

  • @gsparkman
    @gsparkman 10 місяців тому +2

    “New for the era” The shower scene, yes. But more importantly it was the first time a film showed a flushing toilet.

  • @Sirala6
    @Sirala6 2 місяці тому

    All horror films since 1960 owe a debt to this film. Changed movies forever.

  • @BigGator5
    @BigGator5 10 місяців тому +4

    "She needs ME. It's not as if she were a maniac, a raving thing. She just goes - a little mad sometimes. We all go a little mad sometimes. Haven't you?"
    "Yes. Sometimes just one time can be enough."
    Fun Fact: This was the highest-grossing movie of Sir Alfred Hitchcock's career.
    Music Enthusiast Fact: The score is played entirely by stringed instruments. Director Sir Alfred Hitchcock was so pleased with the score written by Bernard Herrmann that he doubled the composer's salary.
    Up Close And Personal Fact: In order to implicate viewers as fellow voyeurs, Sir Alfred Hitchcock used a 50 mm lens on his 35 mm camera. This gives the closest approximation to the human vision. In the scenes where Norman (Anthony Perkins) is spying on Marion (Janet Leigh), this effect is felt.
    Subtle Visual Cues Fact: In the opening scene, Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) is wearing a white bra and has a white purse because Sir Alfred Hitchcock wanted to show her as being angelic. After she has taken the money, the following scene has her in a black bra and black purse because now she has done something wrong and evil.

  • @quixote6942
    @quixote6942 10 місяців тому +3

    Psycho, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and even "Buffalo Bill" (from Silence of the lambs) Drew Inspiration from the REAL Story of Ed Gein, a Murderer, Grave Robber and Ghoul.
    You have to check out his story to believe it... AND IT REALLY HAPPENED!

  • @mildredpierce4506
    @mildredpierce4506 10 місяців тому +1

    As most people porn out, Janet Lee is Jamie Lee Curtis‘s mother. Jamie Lee’s father is also famous. His name is Tony Curtis.

  • @vampyre_with_a_suntan
    @vampyre_with_a_suntan 10 місяців тому +5

    A timeless gem of a movie.
    And tons of interesting trivia about it as well -- one of the funnier ones is the fact that Janet Leigh is the mother of Jamie Lee Curtis.. she passed that scream-queen baton along quite nicely.

  • @KawaTony1964
    @KawaTony1964 9 місяців тому +1

    Yeah - "Bates Motel" was excellent. I discovered it last year on some channel on my Roku, and binge watched the whole series in about 6 weeks. "Bates Motel" doesn't have a direct link to the film (it takes place in the 90s or 2000s), but is very obviously inspired by the film. I say this because when I heard about the TV series, I was turned off by the timeline not matching the film. I was wrong. I say to any "Psycho" fan out there who might be turned off of "Bates Motel": don't think that way. The TV series is great. Watch it.

  • @yasmin8851
    @yasmin8851 10 місяців тому +3

    Great review; you can tell your review was genuine. And you both have gorgeous hair!

  • @geoffm9944
    @geoffm9944 6 місяців тому +1

    This was one of Hitchcock’s finest suspense films as It kept audiences riveted to their seats throughout the film. I saw Psycho when it was first released and shooting the movie in black and white, made it even more sinister and terrifying. Great acting performance by Anthony Perkins. In my humble opinion, this was one of the best psychological suspense films ever made.

  • @zenomorph8806
    @zenomorph8806 7 місяців тому +1

    Janet Leigh… is Jamie Lee Curtis’s mother in real life. Janet was an A lister in the 60s so seeing her killed so quickly in a movie was terrifying for viewers.

  • @richardburdon3241
    @richardburdon3241 5 місяців тому +1

    Vera Miles (Lila) was in a couple of Twilight Zone episodes, "the hitchhiker" and one other with her in the bus station when she kept seeing mirrored images (don't know the title). Loved her in those.

  • @rnw2739
    @rnw2739 10 місяців тому +1

    'Psycho II' is definitely worth a look!!

  • @tomstanziola1982
    @tomstanziola1982 10 місяців тому +1

    "Bates Motel" is a great series, ladies! 👏👏👏👏

  • @pyrodiscoflash6115
    @pyrodiscoflash6115 10 місяців тому +1

    Psycho 2 is actually very good with the 20+ Years in-between Movies giving it a Atmosphere that is Integrated into the Movie, Awesome Reaction

  • @Mr-gg8ek
    @Mr-gg8ek 10 місяців тому +2

    Funny you mentioned Jamie Lee Curtis’ character in Halloween. Vivian Leigh, the actress that plays Marion, is JLC’s mother in real life.

    • @adamrichards3174
      @adamrichards3174 10 місяців тому +1

      Janet Leigh. Vivian Leigh was the actress who played Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With The Wind.

  • @BostonMarcus
    @BostonMarcus 10 місяців тому +2

    This is my first time watching you ladies react. Before the reaction, I must say your hair is fabulous! 😘

  • @3DJapan
    @3DJapan 10 місяців тому +1

    $40,000 would be a big stack of ones.

  • @megafan2000
    @megafan2000 10 місяців тому +3

    Loved Bates Motel. Wasn't crazy about the last season but loved it overall.
    I believe I read somewhere before that Marion rolling around in her bra at the start was the 1st time that was shown in a movie so it was risque for 1960.

  • @improperbostonian6722
    @improperbostonian6722 6 місяців тому +1

    The shower scene took 70 camera angles and 50 cuts in 45 seconds. The blood was Bosco chocolate syrup.

  • @DP-hy4vh
    @DP-hy4vh 10 місяців тому +1

    Fun Psycho Facts:
    1. The shower scene is why there's locks on bathroom doors
    2. Janet Leigh is the mother of Jamie Lee Curtis
    3. The officer in the police station hallway opening the door toward the end of the film is played by Ted Knight. He would later become famous as Ted Baxter on the Mary Tyler Moore show.

  • @TS-mt6bo
    @TS-mt6bo 10 місяців тому +2

    A true classic and masterpiece.
    Hitchcock was a brilliant film maker.
    Janet Leigh who played Marion is the mother of Jamie Lee Curtis.
    Great reaction ladies 😊

  • @NinaInfinity
    @NinaInfinity 10 місяців тому +1

    Great review and reactions!
    Hitchcock is the King of "subverted expectations".
    I look forward to you two watching more Hitchcock movies!

  • @PedroCastillo_1980
    @PedroCastillo_1980 10 місяців тому +2

    "A Boy's best friend is his Mother" The iconic line

  • @DougerSR
    @DougerSR 10 місяців тому +1

    Yes. Watch how you pronounce HORROR!
    LOL!!!!
    My mom introduced Psycho to me as a child!!!!

  • @brettyeamans
    @brettyeamans 10 місяців тому +4

    Great reaction. The Birds is another great Alfred Hitchcock movie I think you would enjoy.

  • @LeviAckerman-cb5ji
    @LeviAckerman-cb5ji 10 місяців тому +1

    32:36 This is Sam's "But why male models?" moment.

  • @m06een00
    @m06een00 10 місяців тому +1

    It's a pity you saw the TV show, Bates Motel before you'd seen the original, as the element of surprise would have been lost. The TV show was very good by the way. Anthony Perkins, who played the original Norman Bates here was also a singer as well as a good actor.

  • @Tusc9969
    @Tusc9969 10 місяців тому +3

    Psycho is an absolute masterpiece of technique and symbolism. The audience manipulation is amazing (you are rooting for a criminal after all, something unheard of back then). The supper scene in the parlor with the stuffed birds is incredibly tense, and worth some study.
    Anthony Perkins is AMAZING in this role, and I can't think of an actor who would have been better for the part. He took the part and made it his own and just became Norman Bates. One of the best roles in film, to be sure.
    I think the subtleties of Hitchcock's (not that he was subtle at all) are lost on many ppl today.
    Its pretty obvious whats happened to Norman Bates mind, but that Psychiatrist just sums it up, adding the last bit of horrifying atmosphere to the end of the film. Its his style of doing it...its so....twighlight zone-ish. I love it!
    Psycho 2 is not by Hitchcock but an excellent sequel nonetheless.

  • @vojtanick738
    @vojtanick738 10 місяців тому +4

    Please react to Mulholland Drive, it is amazing movie. I would like to see your reaction. I love this movie.

  • @user-qp1hh3se3o
    @user-qp1hh3se3o 10 місяців тому +1

    right as Norman enters the bathroom holding the knife, Hitchcock had the shower water changed from warm to ice cold to get more of a reaction from Janet Leigh

    • @stephw1702
      @stephw1702 6 днів тому

      The very smart decision was made as well to have a double play mother in the murder scenes. Anthony's body type was definately unique so it was thought having him do those scenes would be a give away to the audience.

  • @n.gerlach7334
    @n.gerlach7334 10 місяців тому +2

    Hitchcock never made horror. In horror the motives are known from the start (Dracula/Frankenstein). Hitchcock made suspense (thrillers). There the motives are not given ar all, or only at the end. P.S. A Variety-jury said that Psycho was 'the best picture ever made'.

  • @joepowell7025
    @joepowell7025 10 місяців тому +3

    Funny you mentioned Jamie Lee Curtis, ... That's her mom.

  • @stevenspringer1599
    @stevenspringer1599 10 місяців тому +1

    Hitchcock's 'white hat/black hat':
    Pre-theft: white underwear; Post-theft: black underwear.
    The composer Bernard Hermann's last film score was for "Taxi Driver".

  • @rabidfollower
    @rabidfollower 10 місяців тому +1

    This is the oldest movie with an R rating. Hitchcock has another R-rated movie called "Frenzy" (1972), which also has a shocking and violent scene in the middle of the movie.

  • @raymeedc
    @raymeedc 10 місяців тому +2

    $40,000 was about $400,000 in those days.