The Doppelganger Character in Psycho, North by Northwest and Vertigo

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Double or nothing? Filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock believed having a double persona in his movies made them twice as suspenseful. The motif of doubling characters is common in the Hitchcock films Psycho, North by Northwest and Vertigo; each film uses the doppelganger technique of portraying figures in the film as a double or second self. In literature, the doppelganger character is often presented as a twin, a shadow or mirror image of the central character. The doppelganger figure characteristically appears as an identical closely resembling the protagonist. By morphing of two characters in his films, Hitchcock doubled the thrill factor for his viewers.

The famous Hitchcock film Psycho depicts an encounter between a travelling secretary, Marion Crane, and troubled motel owner Norman Bates. Crane, frustrated with her life and prevented from marrying her lover due to financial issues, seeks refuge at the isolated motel after embezzling money from her employer. Tired after a long night’s drive, she pulls off the main highway and into the Bates Motel. Bates, a shy, reserved young man whose life is dominated by his worthless mother, welcomes Crane to the hotel.

Psycho uses the split personalities of two distinctive characters combined into one male figure. Throughout the film viewers are led to believe that Bates lives with his mother in the house across from the motel. Later in the film, after Crane is killed during her stay at the Bates Motel, Bates’s mother is first suspected as the murderer. We watch as Norman Bates cleans up after the murder, perhaps to protect his mother. As the investigation unfolds a new discovery is made. Detectives learn that Norman’s mother passed away years ago and Norman is immediately identified as the m...

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...aldes and Madeline. The second and main double is between Madeline and Judy. While Judy pretended to be Madeline, Elster had her act like a ghost, Carlotta Valdes, was taking over her mind and body. The doppelganger figure in Vertigo takes over the film by twisting the plot in an unpredicted way.

Some doppelganger or doubles are true characters in their own right; others are mysterious projections of the protagonist’s inner psyche. In these films, the doppelganger technique is used by the filmmaker to make visual a conflict that would otherwise be internal. As you’ve read, Hitchcock’s films expose doubles in extraordinary ways. The double trait is woven through Psycho, North by Northwest and Vertigo, affecting both the characters and the outcome of each story. From the thrill of the plot to the unexpected endings, the motif of doubling truly enhances these movies.

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