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"There's No Place Like Home"
Series Bates Motel
Season 4, Episode 7
Air date April 25th, 2016
Writers Philip Buiser
Director Nestor Carbonell
Producers Scott Kosar; Erica Lipez; Christopher Nelson; Tim Southam; Jamie Kaye Wheeler; Tom Szentgyorgyi; Justis Greene; Steve Kornacki; Alyson Evans; Vera Farmiga; Tucker Gates; Kerry Ehrin; Carlton Cuse; Cory Bird; Heather Meehan; Pete Whyte; Mark Wolper; Roy Lee; John Powers Middleton
Starring Vera Farmiga; Freddie Highmore; Max Thieriot; Olivia Cooke; Nestor Carbonell
Episode guide
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"Unfaithful"

"There's No Place Like Home" is the seventh episode of season four of the psychological thriller series Bates Motel, and the thirty-seventh episode of the series overall. It was directed by Nestor Carbonell with a script written by Philip Buiser. It first aired on A&E on Monday, April 25th, 2016 at 9:00 pm. In this episode, Norman Bates learns about the marriage between his mother and Sheriff Romero and plans to get himself out of Pineview. Dylan Massett continues to learn more disturbing information about Emma's mother, Audrey Ellis, and suspects the worst. Alex Romero concludes his dealings with Rebecca Hamilton and buys a large-screen TV for Norma.

Cast[]

Principal Cast[]

Guest Stars[]

Co-Stars[]

Crew[]

Notes & Trivia[]

  • This series is based on characters from the novel Psycho by Robert Bloch, and as portrayed in the theatrical film Psycho.
  • This episode is rated TV-14. It contains violence and strong language.
  • This episode had a viewership of 1.345 million people, which is up by .019 from the previous episode. It scored .49% in the 18-49 age demographic.

Allusions[]

  • The title of this episode is taken from a famous line of dialogue from the 1939 MGM classic film The Wizard of Oz. In the film, Dorothy Gale clicks the heels of her magic shoes and repeatedly chants, "There's no place at home", until she leaves the land of Oz and awakens in her bed in her sepia-filtered world of Kansas. In this episode, Norman Bates also gets to go home, but he doesn't need any stinkin' magic shoes to do it.
  • One of the DVDs that Alex Romero holds up is the 1949 film The Third Man. The movie was directed by Carol Reed and stars Joseph Cotten, Alida Valli, Orson Welles, and Trevor Howard.

Appearances[]

  • This is the fourth appearance of Julian Howe. He appeared last in "Refraction".

See also[]

External Links[]