hangover Square.@PaulR said:
But as you quite rightly say Bill, Joseph Stephano and indeed partly Bernard Herrmann changed what could have been just another teen horror flick into what its become today. A lot of it is certainly down to the score and as a sidenote, I think the 'actor' Evan is referring to is Anthony Perkins. Almost a cliche now, the high pitched strings in Pschyo are usually what people use as a musical reference point for the film, but for me, it is the music that accompanies the scene where Janet Leigh is blindly driving through the rain, finally winding up at Bates Motel. Fantastic music!
Evan, when you say the end scene in a previous post in this thread, are you talking about Hangover Square or Psycho. [*-)]
For me, in Psycho, the two best cues are MOPPING UP, and MADHOUSE. With MADHOUSE being the best cue in the film. And the shrieking strings are so effective of course. But there's nothign like when MADHOUSE comes in after Perkins says, "Oh, you mean a instituion? A Madhouse?" as he leans forward with aggression. Suddenly eating apeanut butter and jelly sandwich in teh back of a middle of nowhere hotel with dead animals surrounding you starts to seem a little stupider than taking a shower with your eyes closed.
Oh. Here's another Herrmann piece of trivia. He always tried ot name his cues with one word names. This was so that he could prove to himself that he found the most fundamental reason for the cue and that it was the same as the title. He sometimes used the word THE, but usually just called a cue something like KNIFE, MADHOUSE, SUBMARINE, OCTOPUS, etc.
Evan Evans