Amidst 'Monster: The Ed Gein Story' Callout From Anthony Perkins’ Son, Where Can You Stream the Original 1960 Crime Thriller?

Published 10/27/2025, 4:25 AM EDT

There are few cultural landmarks as indelible as that shower curtain that never closed the same way again. The eerie stillness of a roadside motel, an unsuspecting traveler, and a son’s echo of his father’s dark legacy all resurface in today’s conversation. As audiences mull over Monster: The Ed Gein Story, parallels surface like severed evidence to the whole story, pulling toward a 1960 crime thriller that apparently started it all. It has lured viewers back to the scene of cinematic dread, all over again. 

Checking out Psycho online is easy—finding a streaming service where Anthony Perkins' Norman will not stalk you back? Perhaps a little pretend-hard-to-get.

Revisiting Psycho's in the age of streams

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

In the wake of renewed discussion surrounding Monster: The Ed Gein Story and recent reflections from Ryan Perkins on his father’s defining role, attention has steered towards accessibility to this certain legacy. Fans eager to revisit Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho, fortunately, have no further to look than their regular streamers and platforms that house the 1960 original classic today. The suspense masterpiece is available on major servers in the United States, including Peacock Premium, Amazon Prime Video, and Apple TV for both digital rental and purchase.

Released in 1960, Psycho redefined cinema through its audacious storytelling and shocking visual choices. Directed by Hitchcock and written by Joseph Stefano, it became a box office success despite early studio reservations. The film’s infamous shower scene and Bernard Herrmann’s shrieking score etched themselves not only into the horrified minds but into the core of pop culture itself. 

Ranking Every 'Monster' Series Story on Netflix Worst to Best, Is 'Ed Gein' Really Last?

Beyond its surface terror, Psycho exposed the intimate fracture within Norman Bates—a reflection of the human psyche stripped bare and examined under Hitchcock’s unrelenting lens. But Ryan Perkins believes there is more to Psycho than meets the eye. 

Ryan Perkins argues a rewind to the original mirror of madness

Anthony Perkins immortalized Norman Bates in Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho, a role loosely inspired by the real-life crimes of Ed Gein. Decades later, with Netflix continuing its Monster anthology and spotlighting the terror caused by Ed Gein, Ryan Perkins has referenced how his father’s portrayal forever shaped Hollywood’s fascination with killers drawn from reality. The younger Perkins reflected on how his father brought empathy and dread together in a single, disturbed gaze that defined psychological horror.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

For viewers rediscovering Psycho through modern screens, the experience endures as both study and ritual. Streaming it today places audiences within that uneasy silence of the Bates Motel once more, confronting questions that are never fully answered. Over sixty years later, Alfred Hitchcock’s 1960 film proves that terror can remain timeless, suspended between reel and reality as generations ebb to and fro. 

'Monster: The Ed Gein Story' Rides Outrage to Enter Netflix Top 10, Here's The Entire List 

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

Are you all geared up to face the Psycho now on the streamers? Let us know in the comments below!

SHARE THIS ARTICLE :

ADVERTISEMENT

Adiba Nizami

836 articles

Adiba Nizami is a journalist at Netflix Junkie. Covering the Hollywood beat with a voice both sharp and stylish, she blends factual precision with a flair for wit. Her pieces often dissect celebrity narratives—both on-screen and off—through parasocial nuance and cultural relevance.

Edited By: Itti Mahajan

ADVERTISEMENT

EDITORS' PICK