An above-average shocker from Down Under, Patrick
employs the creepy premise of a seemingly comatose character using supernatural
means to terrorize those around him. Specifically, Patrick (Robert Thompson)
has been a resident in a special hospital for several years, ever since he
murdered his mother and his lover. Patrick’s cynical caretaker, Doctor Roget
(Robert Helpmann), refers to the inert patient as “160 pounds of limp meat
hanging off a comatose brain,” but sensitive nurse Kathy Jacquard (Susan
Penhaligon) treats Patrick with compassion and
respect. This being a horror movie, things don’t go well for her. Yet the
plot, which also includes some romantic-triangle stuff involving Kathy’s
estranged husband and her new would-be boyfriend, is of secondary importance, even though Everett De Roche’s script is logical, suspenseful, and tight.
What makes Patrick exciting to watch
is the way Aussie director Richard Franklin, who cut his teeth on episodic
TV and raunchy comedy features, builds a sense of realism around fantastical
events.
Franklin and his collaborators get things started with a good
jolt, then take their time developing characters, locations, and mood
before unleashing the heavy pyrotechnics. The filmmakers also lace the picture
with unsettling details, all of which feel germane to the world they’ve created.
A good example is the central location of the
hospital where Patrick resides. Instead of using the predictable visuals of an
antiseptic, institutional building, the filmmakers set the action inside a
large Victorian house, complete with soaring gables and a wraparound porch.
Juxtaposed against the welcoming décor of the building is the cold behavior of
the doctor and his head nurse. This combination of seemingly disparate elements
creates both specificity and the necessary quality of uneasiness—something
feels fundamentally off even before violent things happen. Similarly, the psychic-phenomena stuff starts slowly and builds steadily, giving
the viewer time to accept wild notions of telekinesis and the like. It also
helps that Franklin and his collaborators spice the movie with grounded
gross-out moments, such as the fate of an unfortunate frog used in a scientific
demonstration.
Helpmann is the obvious standout among the cast, giving an
urbane quality to the role of a healer hiding horrible tendencies, and
Penhaligon acquits herself well as a damsel in distress. Still, much credit is
due to Thompson, whose intense gaze makes the title character memorable even
though he’s motionless and speechless. An unauthorized sequel, the Italian
production Patrick Still Lives, was
released in 1980, and a remake, again produced in Australia and again titled Patrick, hit theaters in 2013.
Patrick:
GROOVY
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