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March 17, 2013

The Brainerd Dispatch - Today's Entertainment Magazine

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COVER STORY 'Bates Motel' delves into the past of a 'Psycho' killer By Kate O'Hare © Zap2it In the 1960 Alfred Hitchcock thriller "Psycho," embezzling secretary Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) is on her way from Phoenix to her boyfriend's California home when a pounding rainstorm forces her to take shelter in the dilapidated Bates Motel, run by the apparently shy Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins). Unfortunately for Marion, Norman suffers from a split personality, one a browbeaten son and the other the domineering mother he killed, who comes to life in her son and goes on a murderous rampage. So do we just blame Mom for Norman's crime — or is there more to the story? On Monday, March 18, A&E Network premieres the first season of "Bates Motel," a psychological thriller that delves into Norman's past while also updating the story to the present day. Executive produced by Carlton Cuse ("Lost") and Kerry Ehrin ("Friday Night Lights"), it stars British actor Freddie Highmore ("Finding Neverland," "August Rush") as 17-year-old Norman Bates and Vera Farmiga ("Safe House," "Up in the Air") as his protective widowed mother, Norma. Also starring are Max Thieriot, Mike Vogel, Nestor Carbonell, Olivia Cooke and Nicola Peltz. On a cold, relentlessly rainy December day an hour outside of Vancouver, Canada, cast and crew are working in a replica of the Bates Motel — iconic sign and all — and the looming Bates home on the hill behind it, up a flight of "stone" steps covered in mud and wet leaves. Interestingly, wires and stakes hold up the spindly trees around the house. A crew member explains the site was a landfill, and the trees were planted to help stabilize the soil. Apparently, on a sunny day — as was the case when the scene of the Bates' arrival was shot — there is a whiff of refuse in the air. While the motel is fairly complete, the house is a roofless shell (adding a roof would force building codes to kick in) with only a bit of the interior actually created. The home's vaguely Victorian interiors are on a soundstage back in Vancouver. In one scene being shot, Norman is trying to coax a small dog out from under the porch. Unlike the cast and crew, Boomer the Wonder Dog seems perfectly happy to be running around in the wet and the mud. In the next scene, Norman is having an argument with his mother on the porch. The scene with the dog reveals Highmore's gift for facial expressions and physical comedy — judging by the laughs under the tent in "video village," home to the director, writer and video monitors — as he reacts to the dog's intransigence and then leaps out of the way as it suddenly bursts from its hiding place. Later, in the confrontation scene, Farmiga ends by shouting Norman's name and then stomping into the house, slamming the door behind her. After a few takes, her voice takes on a hysterical edge that is ironically funny. This amuses British director SJ Clarkson, who by this time in the frigid late afternoon is so tightly packed into what looks like a snowmobile suit that she can barely move. Highmore takes a break from filming in his blessedly warm and dry trailer to talk about playing a killer while he is still an innocent boy. "Everybody knows who he's going to become," he says. "Even in these 10 episodes, you get to start seeing that Freddie Highmore stars in "Bates Motel," premiering Monday on A&E Network. ple would look back and say, 'Oh, he was slightly different in this way or slightly quirky.' "The nice thing about Norman, at the start, you wouldn't necessarily pick him out as the person who's going to be in 'Psycho' in however many years' time." At the end of the shooting day, Farmiga huddles in a chilly room at the motel and defends Norma, saying, "She's a mom, ruled by her love for her child, and sometimes, that love is ... it's difficult. She is leonine. She would fight wars for her child. Nothing means more to her than his happiness, and I see her as being valiant. "First and foremost, it's what I admire about her. It's thwarted at times, because she loves him so much that it's almost suffocating. It's that very particular age that Norman's at, that push and pull, that opposite of needing distance from your mother but yearning for that closeness. "That dynamic, that opposite, is what's so juicy." As for the laughs, they're not accidents. "You've got to like the character and be emotionally invested in them," says Highmore. "They're not the kind of laughout-loud funny jokes, but there's times where you think, 'Yeah, there's that dark humor.' " change in him, from being someone who's not very different from everybody else. "That's what I found, if you look at people who've gone slightly crazy, and you think at the start, wasn't there something that set them apart? Peo- Where the lakes area turns for news and information. P.O. Box 974, 506 James Street, Brainerd, MN 56401 (218)829-4705 1-800-432-3703 2 – MARCH 17 - 23, 2013 – BRAINERD, MN/DISPATCH brainerddispatch.com 3 x 3" ad 1 x 4" ad 2 x 4" ad

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