![]() The Psycho house, including a bat added by animation, is seen here in 1971 in the Psycho House Set in the Night Gallery installment "A Question of Fear" (1971) This photograph of the rear of the Psycho house set was shot in 1971Ĭourtesy of and Copyright © Nguyen Ngoc Chinh from his Flickr photostream- used with permission The Psycho House in the 1965-66 television series Laredo (thanks to Dennis Dickens for Invitation to a Gunfighter details) The Psycho house is seen here in the mid-1960's, now with a right-side wall which wasĬonstructed specifically for the set's appearance in the 1964 film Invitation to a Gunfighter. Psycho House Set and Laramie Street mid-1960's Removed in 1959 and used in the construction of the Bates home set for Psycho.Īlfred Hitchcock and Bates home set - from the film's trailerĪlfred Hitchcock and Bates Motel - from the film's trailer The tower section of the Harvey/Allison House on the backlot's "Colonial Street" was The "Harvey" House on Universal's "Colonial Street" Psycho's Bates home set is seen here as originally constructed, with no right-side or rear wall. ![]() The set for Psycho's Bates home in the early 1960's Internet Options / Security / Internet Zone / Custom Level, then go to Scripting and set To enable JavaScipt in Internet Explorer, select Tools / To use this site, you will need toĮnable JavaScript and reload the page. WARNING: JavaScript is not enabled on your browser. Has accompanied the home on the backlot and as a part of the studio tour for decades. The original Bates Motel set no longer exists, but a reconstructed version of the motel Stands on the Universal backlot fifty years later, although modified and twice relocated over (including two Psycho sequels), television shows and advertisements. The "Psycho House" became an iconic symbol of eerieness, and has appeared in countless films ![]() The Bates home, or "Psycho House" as it has come be known, was built as a two-walled exterior facade, as it would be filmed only from a vantage point within a 90 degree span. Partly constructed from studio "stock units," including in the case of the Bates home, a towerĪnd front wall portion borrowed from an existing house set on the backlot's Colonial Street. It was filmed on a tightīudget, and accordingly, the exterior sets built for the film.the Bates Motel and home.were Alfred Hitchock's 1960 cinematic masterpiece Psycho, although originally distributedīy Paramount, was financed by Hitchcock himself, and filmed at Universal Studios using the Revue Studios television crew from Alfred Hitchcock Presents.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |