Mildly enjoyable in that
familiar so-bad-it’s-good sort of way, schlocky supernatural thriller Asylum of Satan marked the directorial
debut of William Girdler, whose later output includes the fabulously silly
shockers Grizzly (1976) and The Manitou (1978). While this first
effort lacks the gloss of those subsequent pictures, Asylum of Satan has Girdler’s usual attributes of far-out
situations and zippy pacing. Put less gently, the movie is fast and stupid but
without the compensatory quality of slick production values. The shaky premise
goes something like this—after beautiful Lucina Martin (Carla Borelli) suffers
an emotional episode of some sort, her doctor inexplicably transfers her to an
asylum run by Dr. Jason Specter (Charles Kissinger). Populated by zonked-out
patients wearing white-hooded robes, the asylum is a staging ground for
Specter’s weird medical experiments and torture sessions. For reasons that defy
understanding, Specter occasionally kills patients in ridiculous ways, such as
releasing a vicious snake into a swimming pool so it can kill a patient in the
water, or trapping a woman in a room full of bugs. (The image of cheap-looking
plastic bugs “moving” across the patient’s body by way of stop-motion animation
is particularly laughable.) While Specter terrorizes Lucina, her boyfriend,
Chris Duncan (Nick Jolley), tracks her down, only to get rebuffed when Dr.
Specter somehow disguises his asylum as abandoned building. One idiotic scene
follows another until the climax, when Dr. Specter reveals his ultimate goal of
sacrificing Lucina to Lucifer, played by a woman wearing the least convincing
devil costume in movie history. Crap-cinema connoisseurs will relish Asylum of Satan, but mere mortals are
advised to steer clear. In fact, here’s the best part, just to save you the
trouble: During his search for Lucina, Chris learns from a cop that Dr. Specter
“was picked up several times for devil-worshipping.”
Asylum of Satan: LAME
3 comments:
Revealed! The true reason why Lucifer was consigned to the underworld: He's shoddy middle management.
I would love to find that Satan costume. If anyone knows where to find it let me know
In the same shamelessly plagiaristic way, William Girdler was the low-brow, grindhouse answer to Peter Bogdanovich. But Girdler copied films that were actually fun, and knew how to turn a buck.
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