 plumbing the
depths
1 i have
this dream
2 a flush of guilt
3 baptisms in blood
4 'psycho'
and deadly sin
5 freudian jokes
for the john
6 exploring interiors
7 the naked truth
8 dirty bits
and naughty bits


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'psycho' and deadly sinalthough the tradition of
scatological imagery in literature and the visual arts is a long one -- from Chaucer to
Burroughs, Bosch to Bacon -- before Psycho, the water closet was generally
located offscreen, a place that Hollywood movie stars rarely seemed to feel the need to
visit. As screen gods and goddesses, perhaps they were beyond the call of nature. Movies
were escapism, and there is hardly anything less escapist than the toilet. Voyeuristic
Cecil B. DeMille tub scenes aside, the camera hardly ever ventured into the bathroom. Oh,
Sybil Seely might take a little bath in Buster Keaton's short, "One Week'' (1920),
but a discreet hand reaches out to cover the lens for decency's sake. But she'd never have
been shown sitting on the toilet. That coy censoring hand was to playfully tease us with
the taboo of nudity, not the greater taboo of digestive elimination. So, perhaps
it's appropriate that it took a Catholic filmmaker, Alfred Hitchcock, to bring the
bathroom into the cinematic mainstream for the first time -- in Psycho (1960),
the granddaddy of all great plumbing movies.

in the furtive privacy of the bathroom, that which is dirty or shameful is revealed -- if only to
oneself. I mean, you can't hide from what goes on in there, which is why you close and
lock the door when you go in. It's as much to protect other people from the various
sensations (sights, sounds, and smells) you're about to uncork as it is to protect your
modesty. And in Psycho, Hitchcock at last unveiled the loo on Hollywood's
silver screen, and America's cinematic toilet taboo was finally broken. As Stephen Rebello
recounts in his book, Alfred
Hitchcock and the Making of 'Psycho' (Dembner Books, 1990), "The script is
shot through with obvious delight in skewering America's sacred cows -- virginity,
cleanliness, privacy, masculinity, sex, mother love, marriage, the reliance on pills, the
sanctity of the family... and the bathroom.'' Rubello quotes screenwriter Joseph Stephano
on the subject of primal-screen plumbing: "I told Hitch 'I would like Marion to tear
up a piece of paper and flush it down the toilet and SEE that toilet. Can we do that?' A
toilet had never been seen on-screen before, let alone flushing it. Hitch said, 'I'm going
to have to fight them on it.' I thought if I could begin to unhinge audiences by showing a
toilet flushing -- we all suffer from peccadillos from toilet procedures -- they'd be so
out of it by the time of the shower murder, it would be an absolute killer. I thought
[about the audience], 'This is where you're going to begin to know what the human race is
all about. We're going to start by showing you the toilet and it's only going to get
worse.' We were getting into Freudian stuff and Hitchcock dug that kind of thing, so I
knew we would get to see that toilet on-screen.'' Just the sight of the flushing toilet
was considered shocking enough to mildly unsettle and disorient audiences of the day.
so, Hitchcock's guilty fugitive protagonist, Marion Crane (Janet Leigh), having totaled the sum of her
indebtedness, monetary and karmic, on a slip of paper, rips up the evidence of her
culpability, flushes it down the water chute (although a telltale piece of it misses the
bowl, as Detective Arbogast [Martin Balsalm] will later discover) and steps into the
shower. Just as she's figuratively washing her the sins of her recent past down the drain,
Mrs. Bates pays her a visit with a butcher knife. Marion pays for her sins in blood. And
the image of her blood swirling into the blackness of the drain dissolves into an image of
her now-lifeless eye. Her head lies on the bathroom floor next to the toilet. For what is
a human body itself -- its arteries and intestines and organs and other viscera -- but an
elaborate piece of organic plumbing? Carrie's leaky plumbing is only natural; Marion
springs a fatal leak.
even the sloppiest
of us have the innate craving for cleanliness and order that a sanitized bathroom may
represent, and in the next few scenes Hitchcock taps into that primal urge as well: The
carve-up is followed almost immediately by the clean-up. Francois Truffaut
noted (in his landmark interview book with Hitchcock) that when Norman Bates (Anthony
Perkins) stumbles into the bathroom murder scene and begins to tidy up the evidence of his
mother's sins, our loyalties are transferred from the late Marion to Norman: "...
[A]s soon as Perkins wipes away the traces of the killing, we begin to side with him, to
hope that he won't be found out.'' And in response, Hitchcock himself adds: "When
Perkins is looking at the car sinking in the pond, even though he's burying a body, when
the car stops sinking for a moment, the public is thinking, 'I hope it goes all the way
down!' It's a natural instinct!''

so, the bathroom
is the place where all our unsanitary stuff, whether generated from within or without our
bodies, can be dealt with hygenically, in nice, clean porcelain fixtures. Few things are
upsetting as a dirty, smelly bathroom. It's no accident that that pond near the Bates
Motel resembles an open sewer: Metaphorically, at least, that's where the plumbing from
the Bates Motel empties out. And in the final shot of Psycho, superimposed over
Norman's mad face (and, briefly, a death's head), Marion's car, the evidence of his crime,
is dredged out of the murk and (almost subconsciously) out of his skull simultaneously. In
the process, our psyches (as Norman's co-conspirators) are linked to the psycho's. Like
him, we just want everything to come out, and go down, cleanly. Is the biological fact
that we have to do something as nasty as shit, and are ashamed of it, somehow related to
the concept of original sin?
the young Jesuits-to-be in The Devil's Playground (Fred Schepisi,19'76) are trained that it's a
sin to expose their bodies even while in the shower, although as one boy complains, you
can't "wash properly'' or thoroughly in swimming trunks. Ironically, the
"cleaner" the boys try to be (by keeping their privates covered), the less clean
they actually become. The boys' exterior biological plumbing (their penises) are
considered a constant source of temptation, the enemies of purity and chastity. They're
taught that no amount of bathing and showering will wash their souls clean; on the
contrary, the bathroom, like the body and the soul, is a temple of sin, which is one way
of interpreting the satanic frolicking area of the title.
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plumbing 4


Buster Keaton's hand.

Super Bowl debut:
Flushing her sins away...


The End: Norman, the skull,
and dredging up the muck
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