Jeremy Clarke reviews
In The Mouth Of Madness
Distributed by
Pioneer LDCE
Cat.no: PLFEB 36761
Cert: 18
Running time: 91 minutes
Sides: 2 (CLV)
Year: 1995
Pressing: 1997
Chapters: 28 (1-14/15-28) - director approved
Sound: Dolby Surround
Widescreen: 2.35:1 (Panavision)
Price: £19.99
Extras : None
Director:
(Halloween, The Fog, The Thing, Village
Of The Damned, Escape From New York, Escape From L.A. )
Cast:
Sam Neill (Jurassic Park, Dead Calm, The Piano, The Lost World )
Jurgen Prochnow (Das Boot, The Keep, Beverly Hills Cop II, The Seventh Sign )
Charlton Heston (The Ten Commandments, Ben Hur, Touch Of Evil, Planet Of The Apes )
From
inside the asylum tended by man in the white coat John Glover (The
Chocolate War, Robocop II ), John Trent (Sam Neill ) is noisily going
nuts and crayoning crucifixes all over his solitary padded cell walls.
Flashback to Trent's days as an Insurance troubleshooter hired to investigate
claims by publisher Jackson Harglow (Charlton Heston ) of the
disappearance by the latter's disappeared bestselling hack horror novelist
Sutter Cane, author of The Hobb's End Horror and the (then) upcoming In The
Mouth Of Madness . The only person to have seen Cane alive is his
agent - now a mad axeman shot dead before Trent's eyes. (Other bizarre
apparitions - or are they? - also start appearing before Cane's eyes).
Cutting up paperback covers specially designed by the author himself,
Trent stumbles onto a map of part of new Hampshire detailing the
wherabouts of the supposedly fictional Hobb's End, promptly heads down
there with publisher's reader Lindy Styles (Julie Carmen ), he convinced
the whole thing's an elaborate publicity stunt. But other occurrences in
the town (previously detailed in Cane's novels) - a procession of
strange cyclists, a covered bridge which when entered in darkness leads
to the town in daylight, a hotel clerk who murders her husband, a
possessed hotel greenhouse and Cane himself (Jurgen Prochnow ) busily
typing his manuscript about The End - ultimately convince Trent otherwise.
If there's one director whose work is suited to widescreen laserdisc,
it's John Carpenter, here (unusually) working with a script by someone
else (Michael De Luca). One of the few of his films not to feature a
helicopter (always a good test of a sound system), ITMOM nevertheless
manages plenty of creaks and bangs on its DS sound mix to satisfy most
home cinema enthusiasts, even if the score (produced in collaboration
with Jim Lang) isn't one of Carpenter's best. As in the
Carpenter-scripted Halloween III: Season Of The Witch , Quatermass And
The Pit references abound.
Picture quality is a mixture of good and bad. Be forewarned that the New
Line logo comes up in 1.85:1 before the film starts, because the feature
is correctly presented in its 2.35:1 Panavision aspect ratio, so that
heart attack you had if you didn't read this review first turns out
entirely unjustified.
The film's mid-section takes place in Hobb's End largely at night, and much
of it - especially the numerous and near-subliminal quick cuts of special
effects - are really hard to see (one of those occasions when a cinema print
scores hands down over the home cinema experience). CAV would have been a real
bonus here. The dark visual hues on the original source material (which looked
great in the cinema) appear to be just that little bit too subtle for Pioneer
LDCE's print transfer. Our advice is, watch this disc at night time under
blackout conditions.
Carpenter himself had a hand in the chapter stops - and it feels like
it, with a stop exactly where you want one every time. Even the side
break occurs at the end of a scene after a local beset with the town's
problem apparitions tells Neill, "Don't let it get to you - just get
out!" Mind you, chapters 19-28 could easily have been done in CAV, but
aren't - admittedly this would lose the nice sidebreak, but for this
particular movie, that compromise would probably have been worth it. In
the absence of CAV, Pioneer have continued the lamentable tradition with
their recent Entertainment-licensed discs of not including the film's
trailer.
While no-one would recommend ITMOM as THE John Carpenter movie to buy -
it may be better than Escape From L.A. but not a patch on either (to
name but three) Halloween, The Fog or The Thing (all of which are out on
PAL LD if not coming shortly), it's still a serviceable horror outing
packed with visual and audio shocks. Besides, anything by Carpenter has
to be worth a look.
Film: 4/5
Picture: 3/5
Sound: 4/5
Review copyright © Jeremy Clarke, 1998.
E-mail Jeremy Clarke
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