Scarlett Johansson Reveals The Scene In ‘Hitchcock’ That Really Scared Her
Regarding the finest actors in modern cinema, thereâs no doubt that Scarlett Johansson is up there with the best. Undoubtedly better known for her role in the Marvel superhero universe, where she starred as Black Widow, Johansson has also thrived in independent cinema thanks to collaborations with the likes of Sofia Coppola, Jonathan Glazer, Luc Besson and Wes Anderson.
Rising to popularity back in the late 1990s, starring in minor roles in middling low-budget flicks, Johanssonâs career wouldnât properly kick off until the turn of the new millennium when she appeared in the quirky coming-of-age comedy Ghost World by Terry Zwigoff. Just 16 years of age at the time of filming, Ghost World would precede her seminal role alongside Bill Murray in Lost in Translation.
As the 21st century chugged on, Johansson grew into a bonafide Hollywood star, taking major roles in Woody Allenâs Match Point, Michael Bayâs The Island, and Christopher Nolanâs underrated magic thriller The Prestige. Four years later, Johansson would make her Marvel debut in Iron Man 2 and catapult her star persona into the stratosphere.
Two years after Iron Man 2, the actor took a role in Hitchcock, a biopic about the great British director Alfred Hitchcock and the making of his 1960 horror, Psycho. Directed by Sacha Gervasi, the film primarily explored the relationship between Hitchcock and his wife, with Anthony Hopkins playing the ŃÎčŃular filmmaker and Johansson taking the role of Janet Leigh, the real-life actor whose character meets her end in the filmâs iconic shower scene.
âYou have got to be brave, get into the shower, and face Anthony Hopkins as Hitchcock jabbing you in the face with a 12-inch kitchen knife,â Johansson told V Magazine about the filming of the scene. Yet, the moment turned out to be just as frightening as the final scene, with the actor recalling: âAs much as Anthony Hopkins is a pussycat, heâs terrifying. Maybe I watched Silence of the Lambs too many times when I was a kid. Maybe I was having some flashbacks. So I didnât need too much preparation for the sceneâ.
Known as one of the most influential scenes in all of horror cinema, the shower scene stands on the podium of the genreâs best moments alongside the âChestbusterâ moment from Ridley Scottâs Alien and the transformation scene from John Landisâ An American Werewolf in London.
Finalising her thoughts on the scene and her terrifying encounter with Hopkins, Johansson added: âWe only had the luxury to shoot the scene for a day, and everybody was feeling very nervous because it involved water and nobody wants the actor to get wet. They were concerned with modesty and all these things â but I donât care about any of that stuff and Janet Leigh never did eitherâ.