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- In 1982, Bloch wrote a sequel novel called Psycho II which satirized the slasher genre and mocked the production of the 1983 film version, which was created independently and without Bloch's input.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psycho_(franchise)
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Psycho II is a 1983 American psychological slasher film directed by Richard Franklin, written by Tom Holland, and starring Anthony Perkins, Vera Miles, Robert Loggia, and Meg Tilly. It is the first sequel to Alfred Hitchcock's 1960 film Psycho and the second film in the Psycho franchise.
Mar 19, 2023 · While relaxing, Reed joined resident horror movie buff Mindy Meeks-Martin and the two compared notes. Ironically, both agreed that Psycho II was a completely underrated sequel. They were both right and inadvertently set up the foundation that pushed Sam's story in Scream VI.
- Nicholas Brooks
- Editor
1 day ago · Psycho II was released in 1983, and despite being a sequel that some may have thought was blasphemous to make, it's much better than it should be. A horror sequel released 23 years after the first ...
Jan 9, 2024 · Psycho II might not exactly be a decade-defining masterpiece the same way the original Psycho is, but it's a horror sequel that doesn't get as much credit as it deserves.
- Jeremy Urquhart
- 2 min
- Senior Author
Oct 25, 2022 · Robert Bloch, author of the original Psycho novel, published his own sequel in 1982 with an intriguing Scream-before-Scream premise in which Norman (possibly) terrorized the set of a slasher film version of the Bates family story, but that diverged wildly from the tone of Hitchcock’s film and Universal had no interest in making it. (The ...
Jun 6, 2016 · Psycho II is not a film that was just rushed into by any means. This is a sequel that was released 22 years after the original. Hell, films weren’t even being shot in black-and-white anymore.
I don't know if that's true, but it would actually make pretty good sense of the novel. Universal did not take him up on it, supposedly hating the novel, and the 1983 movie Psycho II bore no resemblance to it. The story does indeed start with Norman Bates, some 20 years after his crimes.