One in a series of
anthology horror films generated by UK company Amicus Productions, Asylum boasts a solid pedigree: The
picture was written by Robert Bloch, of Psycho
fame, and directed by Hammer Films veteran Roy Ward Baker. The picture also has
a solid cast, with Peter Cushing, Britt Ekland, Herbert Lom, Patrick Magee,
Barry Morse, Barbara Parkins, Robert Powell, and the elegant Charlotte
Rampling. Like most similar Amicus movies—and, for that matter, like most
anthology pictures in general—it’s wildly uneven. On the plus side, the
framing story is stronger than usual, and the overall presentation is terrific,
thanks to glossy cinematography and solid production values. On the minus side,
two of the stories are deeply silly, even by the standards of tongue-in-cheek
UK horror. Asylum has its minor
pleasures, but it’s not to be taken the least bit seriously.
In the framing
story, earnest young psychiatrist Dr. Martin (Powell) shows up to interview for
a job at a mental institution. While speaking with his would-be superior, Dr.
Rutherford (Magee), Martin is given a challenge—he must identify which of the
asylum’s patients is a former doctor, driven insane by dealing with the
institution’s lunatics. If Dr. Martin identifies the right patient, he gets the
job. Each visit with a patient occasions a flashback vignette with a gruesome
twist ending. In “Frozen Fear,” Ruth (Parkins) describes being attached by
dismembered body parts that move of their own volition. In “The Weird
Tailor,” Bruno (Morse) recalls how a mystery man (Cushing) hired him to
construct a magical suit of clothes. In “Lucy Comes to Stay,” Barbara
(Rampling) explains that she was framed for murder by Lucy (Ekland), who may or
may not be imaginary. And in “Mannikins of Horror,” Dr. Byron (Lom) reveals his
hobby of creating tiny robots bearing lifelike faces modeled after his
acquaintances.
The bits with the homicidal body parts and the violent robots
(you knew they’d get bloodthirsty, didn’t you?) are unavoidably goofy, even
though all of the actors give gung-ho performances. Conversely, “Lucy Comes to
Stay” is fairly credible, but Ekland and Rampling provide more glamour than
talent, so “Lucy Comes to Stay” gets tedious after a while. Still, Amicus had
this sort of thing down to a science, and cramming five stories into 88 minutes
ensures a relatively brisk pace. Further, Bloch provides more than enough cheap
thrills, and Baker casts the whole cartoonish enterprise in a warm glow thanks
to his dignified pictorial style. So, while Asylum
may not be particularly frightening, at least it’s bloody and colorful and
energetic.
Asylum:
FUNKY
2 comments:
I cannot remember for the love of me what this movie is, but all i remember is a scene where these crazy people are around an open grave, for some reason the man has a broom and i think the woman is wearing like a crinoline dress. I think they're mentally ill or something too? i want to say it's a 70s movie, but i could be wrong... i thought it was an alien movie, but i've looked at everything on the imdb. it could be one of those crappy low budget movies
I saw this on tv.
It moves right along.
I liked it.💀
Post a Comment