Reflecting its storyline about a mad scientist
who gene-splices people and plants to create monsters, this lurid UK flick
offers two movies for the price of one. The putative main story is an
unintentionally hilarious stinker, with Donald Pleasence phoning in his bad-guy performance while the film’s special-effects team delivers
laughably bad monster costumes. However, a major subplot about the mad
scientist’s deformed henchman has a certain degree of pathos and suspense,
especially because the subplot borrows many elements from the 1932 cult classic
Freaks. Set in modern-day England, The Mutations stars Pleasence as
Professor Nolter, a psycho who envisions a new race of humans imbued
with plant characteristics. Nolter’s accomplice is Lynch (Tom Baker), a
deformed giant who abducts young men and women for Nolter to use as test
subjects. Lynch is the leader of a group of circus freaks living at an
amusement park, yet while the other circus performers are harmless, Lynch is a
self-loathing psychotic. Thus, while Nolter tempts fate by taking his experiments too
far, Lynch is driven to madness by waiting for Nolter to deliver on promises
of correcting Lynch’s deformity. (The picture also features perfunctory
material involving attractive students either investigating the disappearances
of their classmates or becoming victims of Nolter’s weird science.)
As helmed
by Jack Cardiff, a master cinematographer who occasionally directed, The Mutations has a colorful look and
one or two genuinely creepy scenes, notably the Freaks-influenced conclusion of Lynch’s storyline. The acting is
generally bland, but Baker (beloved by many for his long run on the UK TV
series Doctor Who) does well playing
Lynch in the Vincent Price mode of a killer besieged by inner demons. The
film’s other noteworthy performance comes from the diminutive Michael Dunn, familiar
to American TV fans for his work as Dr. Loveless on the ’60s show The Wild Wild West. He plays the little
person who represents the conscience of the circus-freak community. Furthermore,
starlets including the scrumptious Julie Ege provide major eye candy while
clothed and otherwise, and The Mutations
benefits from an eerie music score that utilizes dissonant classical music—a truly unsettling flourish. FYI, The Mutations sometimes
carries the alternate title The
Freakmaker.
The
Mutations: FUNKY
I'm glad you mentioned Michael Dunn. He apparently had a very high I.Q. and the first dwarf actor to be nominated for the Academy Award in 1965 for 'Ship of Fools'. This was his last movie he died during filming. Always found 'Wild Wild West' to be a very unique one-of-a-kind series. Did you ever see it?
ReplyDeleteGot this set for dvr on tcm in a bit. Tell ya my thoughts when I get to it.
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