Built around a premise that’s too gimmicky to
take seriously, Madhouse marked the
end of Vincent Price’s run as a leading star of horror movies—after this
picture, he mostly drifted into cameos and voice performances that winked at
his glory (gory?) days. Considering how many fine shockers Price made, it’s a
shame he didn’t bid adieu to the genre with a better movie, although one can
imagine that Madhouse might have
worked had a wittier director been in charge. Price plays Paul Toombes, a faded
movie star known for playing big-screen killer Dr. Death. Following a tragedy,
Toombes gets tossed into a mental hospital, thus marking him among potential employers
damaged goods. Later, bereft of better options, Toombes accepts a humiliating offer
to reprise his Dr. Death character for a tacky TV show. Once the show debuts,
someone dressed as Dr. Death starts killing people related to the program. Is
Toombes the killer? Or must Toombes unmask a murderer who’s trying to frame
him? If you watch Madhouse, you’ll be
amazed how little you care about the answers to these questions. Director Jim
Clark, a top-notch film editor who briefly left the cutting room to helm a
string of undistinguished projects, relies on such obnoxious tropes as fisheye
lenses and in-your-face camera moves. Seeing as how the story is innately
florid, juicing the action with adrenalized camerawork was not the wisest move,
because Madhouse starts to feel
grating and loud very early in its running time. It doesn’t help that Price
looks bored, or that the actor had just made a very similar film, Theatre of Blood (1973), which was
superior in both conception and execution. It’s a measure of Madhouse’s mediocrity, in fact, that
even supporting players Peter Cushing and Robert Quarry—both of whom were as
prone to onscreen flamboyance as Price—fail to make memorable impressions. Madhouse gets the job done, more or
less, by providing bloody kills and perfunctory thrills. Plus, of course, Price
is a unique presence even in the worst circumstances. But Madhouse is plagued by a been-there/done-that malaise from start to
finish. No wonder Clark gave up on directing and returned to editing—a wise
move, seeing as how, a decade later, he won an Oscar a for cutting The Killing Fields (1985).
Madhouse:
FUNKY
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