![]() I should add, Robert, he was not funny when I met him on the set of Family Plot, standing in the long line of journalists who came from all around the world to watch him make his final movie, which everyone expected it to be. He is best at the very beginning and at the end when he's allowed to be funny, as Hitchcock, and everyone who knows him would tell you, was enormously funny. "Well, I think Anthony Hopkins really brings people into the film. On Anthony Hopkins' portrayal of Hitchcock I could see how it could be inspired - in other words, I think it's maybe a very clever move on the part of the screenwriter - but he wasn't that kind of person, and it's linked in the film to this idea that behind this guy who makes films about serial murderers is a guy who has violent impulses, which was not the case." He was a very - you know, his dignity and his control were very important to him and to his personality. ![]() "You know, at various times, the film crosses the line for me from entertainment into something that really I think diminishes Hitchcock's genius, and this was one of the instances. On the scene in the film in which Hitchcock terrifies actress Janet Leigh into giving a believable performance in Psycho's infamous shower scene And they were creative partners, although the film goes way overboard to depict Alma as the person who bails Hitchcock out of every crisis that he's supposedly undergoing." In fact, I always say it's one of the few happy marriages I know of in Hollywood that lasted for 50-plus years. "It's not true that they had strife in their marriage. On Hitchcock's relationship with his wife, Alma, which is portrayed in the film as a creative partnership strained by jealousy He had two houses, he had vast savings, so that aspect of the movie where he's - where they're constantly worrying about money to the point of talking about, you know, saving on groceries, is foolish." If you can take out a mortgage on your house and make a movie in Hollywood - then or now, no director did who was under studio contract. On whether Hitchcock actually took out a mortgage on his Hollywood house to finance the making of Psycho ![]() So it was one of the brilliant deals of all time, and Hitchcock and his then-agent, Lew Wasserman, foresaw its value to them." Hitchcock forwent his salary and agreed to take everything on the back end, including percentages and ownership of Psycho. "Yes, he was under contract at Paramount, and the studio was horrified at the possibility of this lurid film being made. On whether Hitchcock, did, in fact, have trouble getting Psycho made, as the film suggests John F.Janet Leigh (Scarlett Johansson), Alfred Hitchcock (Anthony Hopkins) and Alma Reville (Helen Mirren) toast to Psycho in Hitchcock.The following official DVD releases contain this episode:Īlfred Hitchcock Presents: Season Four - Universal (USA, 2009) ![]() Maureen finds out that he knows and kills him with poison. Brett aware of the law dictates the story into a tape recorder. Later in her sleep Maureen confesses to murder. Maureen's husband commits suicide and Maureen marries Paul. She asks a lawyer Paul Brett what to do and is told that she cannot testify against her husband. Maureen Hughes suspects that her husband is a murderer. "A True Account" (also known as "Curtains for Me") was originally broadcast on 07/Jun/1959 as part of the fourth season of Alfred Hitchcock Presents.
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