In Psycho IV, the time is five years after III, and Norman is out of the hospital. He's a married man, and he's finally learned how to love somebody and have natural sex without killing his lover.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
If you think you don't want to play another psychopath, but the script is amazing, and the director is fantastic, and the story is incredible, then you may end up playing your third psychopath in a row.
Once during a taping there was an actor who kept blowing his lines. It happened again and again. Finally Norman Fell came out-he wasn't even in that scene. But Norman came out and you know what he did? He killed the guy with a hammer.
'Psycho' is fascinating philosophically, because the point of 'Psycho' is that everything that's bad happens because of love.
It goes all the way back to 'Psycho.' Movies with twists like that are memorable because they're so simple.
Some say that the age of chivalry is past, that the spirit of romance is dead. The age of chivalry is never past, so long as there is a wrong left unredressed on earth.
There's not a lot of arc in an actual psychopath.
Psychologists maintain that the dizzying feeling of intense romantic love lasts only about 18 months to - at best - three years.
After a man falls madly in love, he no longer cares how old she is.
What I learned from this movie, 40 Days and 40 Nights: Abstinence can be a very good thing. Especially from box offices where this film is playing.
Psycho 11 and III say, in effect, there's no way to survive with a psychological problem. If you've got it, the law can keep you locked up because there's no chance for cure.