The Mad Magician

1954

Action / Drama / Horror / Mystery / Thriller

12
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 59% · 3 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 59% · 250 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.5/10 10 2555 2.6K

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Plot summary

Don Gallico is an inventor of stage magic effects who aspires to become a star in his own right. Just before his first performance his act is shut down by capricious manager Ross Ormond who wants Gallico's brilliant buzz saw effect for the act of The Great Rinaldi, an established star. With this defeat, and the humiliation of having already lost his wife Claire to Ormond, Gallico decides it is time to take matters into his own hands.

Director

Top cast

Corey Allen as Gus the Stagehand
Vincent Price as Don Gallico / Gallico the Great
Patrick O'Neal as Lt. Alan Bruce
Mary Murphy as Karen Lee
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
516.09 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 12 min
Seeds 1
1.09 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 12 min
Seeds 5

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Tweetienator 7 / 10

Pure Fine Mad

There were and are not many gods that walk among us mortals - Vincent Price was for sure one of those titans. The Mad Magician is just one movie more that proofs that those horror classics of Vincent Price's legacy will stay forever young (no matter the nostalgic looks and flavor) and are a feast for generations of horror addicts still to come, and old-school hounds like me.
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Reviewed by Bunuel1976 7 / 10

THE MAD MAGICIAN (John Brahm, 1954) ***

Vincent Price's follow-up to HOUSE OF WAX (1953), the film which cemented his reputation as a horror icon, similarly revolves around a bitter – albeit resourceful – showman. Though a remake, the former (shot in Technicolor) remains the superior effort; that said, apart from some resistible comic relief, the obligatory resort to cheap gimmickry (it was another 3-D showcase) and occasional narrative shortcomings (whatever happened to the missing bag which supposedly turned up at some police station containing a severed head?), this offers more than enough Grand Guignol-type thrills and overall camp value (Price hamming it up in a variety of disguises as an inventor of illusions impersonating 'missing' star conjurers who had taken advantage of his genius) to stand on its own two feet. Incidentally, director Brahm's involvement here proves no mere coincidence – since the narrative incorporates elements from two horror titles (both starring Laird Cregar) he had previously helmed i.e. THE LODGER (1944) and HANGOVER SQUARE (1945). The young leads are played by Mary Murphy (as Price's ingénue assistant) and Patrick O'Neal (as her police detective boyfriend – curiously enough, he would himself take the lead in a similar piece, CHAMBER OF HORRORS [1966], which I have acquired just in time to serve as an encore to this one). An interesting sideline here is the latter's adoption of a novel detection technique, fingerprinting, which is crucial in bringing about Price's downfall (in a predictable but rather awkward fiery climax)…though the persistent snooping of his amateur crime novelist landlady has at least as much to do with it in the long run! Watching the star in a made-to-measure role, the film emerges a good deal of fun – particularly at a compact 73 minutes.

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