"Bates Motel" just culminated its episode last week by featuring Marion Crane who reached the Bates Motel alive trying to shelter herself from the rain. Definitely, such episode made an impact among the audience.

Basically, not all episodes went exactly as planned based from the Hitchcock outline. The show director talks about reinventing the "psycho" shower scene while the producer himself wanted to explain further on how Crane survived ithe stabbing scene.

Director Phil Abraham is the person in charge of the script of the show and at the same time, he is the one teasing the audience's expectation from the show. He is known for being an award-winning Emmy cinematographer and he is currently working on two previous episodes of "Bates Motel," Hollywood Reporter reported.

Abraham also talked about the chances of reproducing the Hitchcock scene. As of this time, he was the executive producer and director of the five installments of "The Long Road Home" which is under the production of NatGeo Military miniseries.

Further, Hitchcock is a scene leading the audience to believe that they will see something they cannot see. However, the director added that today's age and days seemed to be impossible to play with such kind of scene and what he wanted the audience to show are scenes which are a little bit of gruesome like blood splattering on the wall.

On the other hand, the show producer also explained how Marion Crane survived from the hands of death. Instead of being killed, Sam Loomis became the stabbing victim of Norman. As per producer, they wanted Crane to have a different outcome from such episode, TV Insider reported.

Further, it is also part of the aim of the show to make the audience walk into the shoe of Norman. The production was very much conscious of the certain consequences in the different acts of violence that Norman will undertake in the course of five seasons of the show.