This time as Norman is on the phone, he's either talking to "mother" in his mind or Miss Spool because she tells him to get rid of Mary Loomis for good. He says, "No mother! Mary has been kind to me. I can't kill her," and Mary hears the conversation. She tells him to hang up the phone and goes upstairs to the extension. While she is telling Norman to hang up, Dr. Raymond comes out of Norman's room and grabs her. She turns around and shoves a butcher knife in the left side of his chest. He falls over the banister to the hall floor below. Norman says, "that's alright, I'll take care of you 'cause your my loving mother." Mary argues with him and she stabs him in the stomach, chest and both hands. They fight all the way to the furnace cellar where Mary discovers her mother in the coal pile, dead. Sheriff Hunt comes in with a deputy and just as Mary is about to fatally stab Norman in the back, the deputy shoots Mary dead.
The next scene is the police station where an officer from Bakersfield has come down to Fairdale to sit in on the proceedings. Sheriff Hunt says Mary killed her own mother over Norman. The desk man of the Fairdale Hotel is there signing papers as to what Mary said to her mother the day before. Somebody says, "everybody seems to be drinking coffee." Sheriff Hunt says, "Ready to go home now Norman?" Norman Nods a yes.
When Norman goes home, he goes down cellar and replaces the flagstone in the cellar floor where the knife, dress and wig were. He then throws three shovels full of coal into the furnace and looks at his bandaged hands that are bleeding a little. He then goes up to the kitchen. This is where the whole plot of the movie changes. ......con't
No comments:
Post a Comment