I, Madman

1989

Action / Drama / Fantasy / Horror / Thriller

7
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 67% · 6 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 40% · 1K ratings
IMDb Rating 5.9/10 10 3801 3.8K

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Plot summary

A bookshop clerk starts seeing the disfigured killer from her favorite 1950s pulp novels come to life and start killing people around her.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
April 01, 2016 at 10:42 PM

Director

Top cast

Clayton Rohner as Richard
Jenny Wright as Virginia
Bruce Wagner as Pianist
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
648.24 MB
1280*694
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
Seeds 2
1.35 GB
1920*1040
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
Seeds 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by lathe-of-heaven 7 / 10

Great, creepy throwback with a nice Retro style. Atmospheric, old-fashioned, and entertaining... Rewatchability: High Blu-ray: Quite Good A:9 V:9

I fully agree with my pal WoodyAnders' review above. This is a nice, old-fashioned Retro style Horror Thriller with great creepy atmosphere and mood. The film uses an effective style with old-fashioned makeup and effects. YES, the stop-motion is a little rough, but if you are into films like this, you won't mind :)

You DO need a good imagination and ability to suspend disbelief to enjoy this film, since this has an almost Dark Fairy Tale type feel to it at times. I frigg'n LOVE how she comments that the book she is reading makes Stephen King look like Girl Scout stories (or something like that...)

The entire film has a real Retro feel to it and the story is DEFINITELY created along the lines of old-fashioned Horror films. So, if you DO like that type of movie, then you will likely enjoy this one. BUT... If you like your Horror more like the modern films, full of Brutal 'Realism' and sadistic gore, you probably will find this one pretty boring. But, if you DO really like your Horror a bit more old-fashioned, then you might really enjoy this movie...

Reviewed by udar55 7 / 10

Creative idea with some great creepy bits

Bookstore worker Virginia (Jenny Wright) finds herself the target of a slashing madman (FX guy Randall William Cook) when she starts reading the horror books of Malcolm Brand. The killer is utilizing pieces of his victims in order to reconstruct his mangled face, so this means anyone around Virginia is fair game. Naturally, no one believes her story including her detective boyfriend Richard (Clayton Rohner). Director Tibor Takacs followed up his surprise hit THE GATE (1987) with this interesting horror tale. While it never fully delivers on its awesome premise, I, MADMAN has enough good bits to make it worth seeing and Takacs gets inventive with the camera at times. Look for an in joke where Wright passes a movie theater showing METAL MESSIAH, Takacs' first film. Cook, who also worked on the FX in THE GATE and would go on to win Oscars for THE LORD OF THE RINGS series, is good as the unusual killer and also provided some stop-motion work here. Lead Wright was a bit of a horror staple back in this time period, having done this and NEAR DARK (1987). She hasn't done anything since the late '90s and, sadly, it appears she has a bad substance abuse problem nowadays.

Reviewed by BandSAboutMovies 8 / 10

I love this movie

How is this movie forgotten? It boasts a director whose other movie is well-known - Tibor Takács also made The Gate - and it straddles the line between the fantastic, a slasher and giallo all at once without falling apart. It also has artistic pretensions, as it's based on Julio Cortázar's La Continuidad de Los Parques (The Continuity of the Parks), a short story that is at once three stories that all are aware of one another in a place where fiction meets meta-fiction.

Man, I love this movie. I want you to love it, too.

Virginia (Jenny Wright from Near Dark) has become obsessed with Malcolm Brand's (Randall William Cook, a special effects man whose career stretches from Laserblast to Peter Jackson's Tolkein films) book I, Madman. Within this story within the story, the deformed Dr. Kessler (also Cook) is attempting to win over actress Anna Templar by killing people and adding their faces to his own.

The more our heroine reads the book, the more she realizes that it is real and that Kessler has entered our world. Virginia is exactly the kind of lady who would be content to sit in the back of a musty used book store, reading her way through seedy pulp novels and gothic horror fiction and dreaming of being part of those worlds until she truly is.

Bruce Wagner, who plays the piano player, used to be married to Rebecca De Mornay. He wrote Maps to the Stars, the book that Cronenberg based his movie on, as well as the graphic novel and TV series Wild Palms, co-produced and helped write Tracey Ullman's State of the Union, has a story credit on A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors and wrote Paul Bartel's Scenes from the Class Struggle in Beverly Hills. Even cooler, after interviewing Carlos Castaneda for Details magazine in 1994, Wagner became part of the mystic inner circle of the shaman, using the name of Lorenzo Drake.

Writer David Chaskin was also behind A Nightmare On Elm Street 2 and The Curse, which has Ovidio G. Assonitis as an executive producer and Lucio Fulci as an associate producer and special optical effects designer.

This is one strange movie that sadly no one really remembers. It doesn't have the body count that some slasher fans look for and it may be too dream logic for many - the ending is completely out of reality and beautifully poetic - and it may honestly be just too much a piece of artwork when it should have been commerce.

Maybe this isn't a movie that everyone can love and that's just fine. However, I do recommend you watch it and become part of its world. Just watch out. If reality is truly a continuity of parks, Kessler could become part of your world.

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