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Asylum
Robert Patrick stars as a private investigator traumatized by his father's suicide who goes undercover in a mental institution to uncover the murderer of his psychiatrist.
Release : | 1997 |
Rating : | 4.9 |
Studio : | |
Crew : | Art Direction, Production Design, |
Cast : | Robert Patrick Malcolm McDowell Sarah Douglas Debra Wilson Henry Gibson |
Genre : | Drama Horror |
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just watch it!
I'll tell you why so serious
Beautiful, moving film.
By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
This is bad. Really, really bad. Not the so bad, it's good - it's more of so bad I'd rather pluck out my own eyes than finish watching this type of bad - just plain awful.How on earth did they get Malcom McDowell to do this one? He's way too good of an actor for a crappy role and film like this!! I tried to watch - really I did. I had to hit the fast-forward button not to long after the film started. I'm sorry but I can't watch this. This one is too awful for me to view... I'm gonna find another "B" horror to watch... I hope to get at least a few giggles and eye rolls from it.1/10
Not the first thriller to take place in a mental institution, but one of the better. Leading man Patrick does a nice job as an unstable P.I. who goes undercover to find the killer of his shrink. Nice mix of suspense and humor - might have been better without all the laughs.Malcolm McDowell is fun to watch as a murderous patient named Rane. Is he the killer or does he hold the secret to the mystery?? Good acting outshines the slick camerawork. Nice surprise thriller.
If you're the kind that likes watching bad movies (for instance, if you enjoyed "The Postman" in only the most ironic sense), this is a keeper. A ridiculous script is only the start, and you also get Robert Patrick staying in the laxest insane asylum in the world (undercover in the guise of a patient, he seemingly has no problems at all finding access to the staff's private fax machines, computers, satellite dishes, etc.), develops a drippy camraderie with a fellow inmate that leads to some of the more strained, "heartfelt" moments of the film, and a ridiculous character by Acting's own Prince of Ever-Diminishing Returns, Malcolm McDowell. Reviewing this film makes me feel like I'm admonishing the dog for peeing on the rug. "For shame! Bad, bad, bad..."
There is a very interesting plot and one or two reasonably good actors but the script is average and most of the performances are not very convincing. The Idea of something fishy going on in a mental home has been there since the invention of mental homes and should by now have reached a higher level. The shockers in this movie are plump and the pace is really slow. And who has not guessed from the very first that the guy in the surgical clothes was Rane? And who was silly enough to believe that Rane was the bad guy? Who would have considered the director of the mental home (the poor rotter in the wheelchair) to be good and sane? It is altogether rather obvious. I really do not know what kept me watching this movie. Perhaps it was just the hay-fever that prevented me from sleep.