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Psycho - Parlor Scene

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    - I've caused you some trouble.
    - No, uh...
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    Mother...
    My mother, uh...
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    What is the phrase?
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    She isn't quite
    herself today.
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    You shouldn't have bothered. I really
    don't have that much of an appetite.
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    Oh, I'm sorry.
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    I wish you could apologize
    for other people.
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    Don't worry about it.
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    But as long as you've fixed
    the supper, we may as well eat it.
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    It, uh... It might be, uh, nicer
    and warmer in the office.
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    Well, it stopped
    raining.
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    Uh, eating in an office
    is just... just too officious.
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    - I have the parlor back here.
    - All right.
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    - Sit down.
    - Oh, thank you.
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    You're very kind.
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    It's all for you.
    I'm not hungry. Go ahead.
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    You... You eat like a bird.
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    And you'd know,
    of course.
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    No, not really.
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    Anyway, I hear the expression
    "Eats like a bird"...
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    is really a fal...
    false... falsity.
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    Because birds really
    eat a tremendous lot.
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    But I really don't know anything about
    birds. My hobby is stuffing things.
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    You know, taxidermy.
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    And I guess I'd just rather
    stuff birds because...
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    I hate the look of beasts
    when they're stuffed.
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    You know,
    foxes and chimps.
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    Some people even stuff dogs and cats,
    but, oh, I can't do that.
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    I think only birds
    look well stuffed because...
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    Well, because they're kind
    of passive to begin with.
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    It's a strange hobby.
    Curious.
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    - Uncommon too.
    - Oh, I imagine so.
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    And it's... it's not as expensive
    as you'd think. It's cheap, really.
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    You know, needles
    and thread, sawdust.
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    The chemicals are the only
    thing that, that cost anything.
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    A man should have a hobby.
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    Well, it's...
    it's more than a hobby.
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    A hobby's supposed to
    pass the time, not fill it.
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    Is your time so empty?
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    No. Uh...
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    Well, I run the office...
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    and tend the cabins
    and grounds...
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    and do little, uh,
    errands for my mother...
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    the ones she allows
    I might be capable of doing.
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    Do you go out with friends?
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    Well, a boy's best friend
    is his mother.
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    You've never had an empty moment
    in your entire life, have you?
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    - Only my share.
    - Where are you going?
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    I didn't mean to pry.
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    I'm looking for
    a private island.
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    What are you
    running away from?
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    - Why do you ask that?
    - No.
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    People never run away
    from anything.
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    The rain didn't last long,
    did it? You know what I think?
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    I think that...
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    we're all in
    our private traps,
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    clamped in them, and none of us
    can ever get out.
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    We scratch and...
    and claw,
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    but only at the air,
    only at each other.
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    And for all of it,
    we never budge an inch.
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    Sometimes we deliberately
    step into those traps.
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    I was born in mine.
    I don't mind it anymore.
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    Oh, but you should.
    You should mind it.
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    Oh, I do, but I say I don't.
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    You know, if anyone ever talked
    to me the way I heard...
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    the way she spoke to you...
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    Sometimes when she talks
    to me like that,
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    I feel I'd like to go up there and
    curse her and, and leave her forever.
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    Or at least defy her.
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    But I know I can't.
    She's ill.
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    She sounded strong.
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    No, I mean... ill.
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    She had to raise me all by herself,
    after my father died.
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    I was only five and it,
    it must've been quite a strain for her.
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    I mean, she didn't have to go to work or
    anything. He left her a little money.
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    Anyway, a few years ago,
    Mother met this man.
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    And he... he talked her
    into building this motel.
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    He could have talked her
    into anything.
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    And when he died too, it was
    just too great a shock for her.
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    And the way
    he died...
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    I guess it's nothing
    to talk about while you're eating.
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    Anyway, it was just too great
    a loss for her. She had nothing left.
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    Except you.
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    Well, a son is a poor substitute
    for a lover.
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    Why don't you go away?
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    To a private island,
    like you?
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    No... not like me.
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    I couldn't do that.
    Who'd look after her?
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    She'd be alone up there.
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    The fire would go out.
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    It'd be cold and damp
    like a grave.
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    If you love someone, you don't do that
    to them, even if you hate them.
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    You understand, I...
    I don't hate her.
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    I hate what she's become.
    I hate the illness.
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    Wouldn't it be better
    if you put her... some place?
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    You mean an institution?
    A madhouse?
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    People always call
    a madhouse "some place," don't they?
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    Put her in "some place."
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    I'm sorry. I didn't mean it
    to sound uncaring.
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    What do you know
    about caring?
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    Have you ever seen the inside
    of one of those places?
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    The laughing and the tears...
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    and the cruel eyes
    studying you.
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    My mother there?
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    But she's harmless.
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    She's as harmless as one
    of those stuffed birds.
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    I am sorry.
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    I only felt...
    It seems she's hurting you.
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    - I meant well.
    - People always mean well.
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    They cluck their thick tongues
    and shake their heads and suggest...
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    oh, so very delicately...
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    Of course,
    I've suggested it myself.
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    But I hate to even think about it.
    She needs me.
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    It... It's not as if she were
    a... a maniac, a raving thing.
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    She...
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    She just goes
    a little mad sometimes.
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    We all go a little mad
    sometimes.
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    Haven't you?
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    Yes.
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    Sometimes just one time
    can be enough. Thank you.
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    Thank you, "Norman."
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    Norman.
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    Oh, you're not... you're not
    going back to your room already?
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    I'm very tired.
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    And I have a long drive tomorrow,
    all the way back to Phoenix.
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    Really?
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    I stepped into a private trap
    back there...
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    and I'd like to go back and try
    to pull myself out of it...
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    before it's too late
    for me too.
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    Are you sure you wouldn't like
    to stay a little while longer?
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    - I mean, just for talk.
    - Oh, I'd like to, but...
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    All right. Well,
    I'll see you in the morning.
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    I'll bring you some breakfast,
    all right?
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    - What time?
    - Very early. Dawn.
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    All right, Miss, uh...
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    - Crane.
    - Crane. That's it.
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    Good night.
Title:
Psycho - Parlor Scene
Description:

Analysis Directions - View the clip, giving careful consideration to the film techniques used. Fill in the given rubric according to your observations. Once you have done this, write a group commentary about the clip, using the details from the rubric for evidence.

Look at lighting, sound, editing technique, camera work, framing, and mise-en-scene. In this particular scene, cast a critical eyes towards symbolism, framing, and resulting character development.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Film & TV
Duration:
12:27

English subtitles

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