In order to secure a job at a mental institution, a young psychiatrist must interview four patients inside the asylum.In order to secure a job at a mental institution, a young psychiatrist must interview four patients inside the asylum.In order to secure a job at a mental institution, a young psychiatrist must interview four patients inside the asylum.
- Awards
- 2 wins total
Barbara Parkins
- Bonnie
- (segment "Frozen Fear")
Richard Todd
- Walter
- (segment "Frozen Fear")
Sylvia Syms
- Ruth
- (segment "Frozen Fear")
Peter Cushing
- Smith
- (segment "The Weird Tailor")
Barry Morse
- Bruno
- (segment "The Weird Tailor")
Ann Firbank
- Anna
- (segment "The Weird Tailor")
John Franklyn-Robbins
- Stebbins
- (segment "The Weird Tailor")
Britt Ekland
- Lucy
- (segment "Lucy Comes to Stay")
Charlotte Rampling
- Barbara
- (segment "Lucy Comes to Stay")
James Villiers
- George
- (segment "Lucy Comes to Stay")
Megs Jenkins
- Miss Higgins
- (segment "Lucy Comes to Stay")
Herbert Lom
- Byron
- (segment "Mannikins of Horror")
Patrick Magee
- Dr. Rutherford
- (segment "Mannikins of Horror")
Robert Powell
- Dr. Martin
- (segment "Mannikins of Horror")
Geoffrey Bayldon
- Max
- (segment "Mannikins of Horror")
Frank Forsyth
- Asylum Gatekeeper
- (segment "Mannikins of Horror")
- (uncredited)
Daniel Johns
- Otto the Dummy
- (segment "The Weird Tailor")
- (uncredited)
Sylvia Marriott
- Asylum Head Nurse
- (segment "Mannikins of Horror")
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
I never realized how hot Britt Ekland is!
I must admit that when I read the box and saw the cast of "Asylum" includes Peter Cushing, Britt Ekland and Herbert Lom, I thought to myself "Dr. Van Helsing, Peter Sellers's ex, and Insp. Clouseau's boss in a horror flick. Whoa." It turns out that while parts of the movie come out a little flat, it's some pretty cool entertainment. Portraying a neophyte doctor coming to an insane asylum and having to guess which patient is the former head doctor, they know how to do most things right.
The vignettes show two people plotting to kill a woman who, unbeknownst to them, practiced voodoo; a tailor having to make a most unusual suit; a woman and her "friend"; and a mannequin maker. Ah, but wait until you find out who the former doctor is! Not that this really relates to anything, but I never realized how hot Britt Ekland is! I've seen her in a few movies, but in none has she sent my hormones as wild as she did here. Of course, I just go crazy for any of those blonde actresses from the '60s (others include Barbara Eden and Elke Sommer).
So, this movie isn't any kind of masterpiece, but it doesn't pretend to be. Just nice, silly entertainment. Also starring Patrick Magee (the wheelchair man from "A Clockwork Orange") and Charlotte Rampling.
The vignettes show two people plotting to kill a woman who, unbeknownst to them, practiced voodoo; a tailor having to make a most unusual suit; a woman and her "friend"; and a mannequin maker. Ah, but wait until you find out who the former doctor is! Not that this really relates to anything, but I never realized how hot Britt Ekland is! I've seen her in a few movies, but in none has she sent my hormones as wild as she did here. Of course, I just go crazy for any of those blonde actresses from the '60s (others include Barbara Eden and Elke Sommer).
So, this movie isn't any kind of masterpiece, but it doesn't pretend to be. Just nice, silly entertainment. Also starring Patrick Magee (the wheelchair man from "A Clockwork Orange") and Charlotte Rampling.
Quality horror anthology with noteworthy cast
One of my sci-fi/horror/fantasy reviews written 50 years ago: Directed by Roy Ward Baker for producers Milton Subotsky and Max Rosenberg. An Amicus production distributed by Cinerama Releasing. Screenplay by Robert Bloch, photographed by Denys Coop. Starring Charlotte Rampling, Richard Todd, Sylvia Syms, Robert Powell, Ann Firbank, Britt Ekland, Barbara Parkins, Barry Morse, Peter Cushing, James Villiers. Herbert Lom, Patrick Magee and Geoffrey Bayldon.
Another fine episodic horror film from Amicus, with a brilliant star-studded cast and consistently lighthearted cuteness making up for director Baker's lack of style. Highlights: the femmes' beauty and warmth, especially Rampling; perfect Peckinpah slow motion for Cushing's death after his fine straight acting; fabulous Rampling/Ekland mirror trickery; and impressive new white Jaguar.
List of episodes: "Frozen Fear", "The Weird Tailor", "Lucy Come to Stay" and "Manikins of Horror".
Another fine episodic horror film from Amicus, with a brilliant star-studded cast and consistently lighthearted cuteness making up for director Baker's lack of style. Highlights: the femmes' beauty and warmth, especially Rampling; perfect Peckinpah slow motion for Cushing's death after his fine straight acting; fabulous Rampling/Ekland mirror trickery; and impressive new white Jaguar.
List of episodes: "Frozen Fear", "The Weird Tailor", "Lucy Come to Stay" and "Manikins of Horror".
Adapting Robert Bloch
4 short story adaptations of Robert Bloch stories. I will look at them in order they appear...
"Frozen Fear": short story of a man who attempts to cut himself off from a loveless marriage in order to take up with his mistress by a rather inventive means of murder only some things don't seem to want to stay dead. Short, but effective and creepy with a terrific ending even if we are required to suspend disbelief quite a bit in a few scenes.
"The Weird Tailor": a tailor desperate for money agrees to, at the request of an unusual elderly customer (played by Peter Cushing), to make a special suit out of a very strange type of fabric. Only when he delivers it, he discovers the elderly customer actually has no money to pay and even more shocking is the true purpose of this bizarre suit. This is the best of these tales. However, to be honest, I much prefer the adaptation from the "Thriller" series.
"Lucy Comes To Stay": a tale of psychosis as Lucy (Charlotte Rampling) returns home from the mental hospital, presumed cured, only it seems the naughty girlfriend who landed Lucy in trouble to begin has started to visit her in secret as well. Actually this is not at all bad, it just runs a little too long for my liking. Still there's some quality about Charlotte Rampling I find irresistible.
"Mannikens of Horror": the framing story for the others in the series as a new doctor visits a mental hospital and discovers that the Doctor who called him there is now a patient in the ward. He's told he can have the job if he can identify which patient upstairs is that Doctor. Finally he comes to believe the individual is a strange fellow who makes small lifelike figures, into which he plans to place his conscience and use as his means of escape. A number of startling twists here, fine stars like Patrick Magee and Herbert Lom, make this both entirely unpredictable and honestly quite good.
"Frozen Fear": short story of a man who attempts to cut himself off from a loveless marriage in order to take up with his mistress by a rather inventive means of murder only some things don't seem to want to stay dead. Short, but effective and creepy with a terrific ending even if we are required to suspend disbelief quite a bit in a few scenes.
"The Weird Tailor": a tailor desperate for money agrees to, at the request of an unusual elderly customer (played by Peter Cushing), to make a special suit out of a very strange type of fabric. Only when he delivers it, he discovers the elderly customer actually has no money to pay and even more shocking is the true purpose of this bizarre suit. This is the best of these tales. However, to be honest, I much prefer the adaptation from the "Thriller" series.
"Lucy Comes To Stay": a tale of psychosis as Lucy (Charlotte Rampling) returns home from the mental hospital, presumed cured, only it seems the naughty girlfriend who landed Lucy in trouble to begin has started to visit her in secret as well. Actually this is not at all bad, it just runs a little too long for my liking. Still there's some quality about Charlotte Rampling I find irresistible.
"Mannikens of Horror": the framing story for the others in the series as a new doctor visits a mental hospital and discovers that the Doctor who called him there is now a patient in the ward. He's told he can have the job if he can identify which patient upstairs is that Doctor. Finally he comes to believe the individual is a strange fellow who makes small lifelike figures, into which he plans to place his conscience and use as his means of escape. A number of startling twists here, fine stars like Patrick Magee and Herbert Lom, make this both entirely unpredictable and honestly quite good.
Very entertaining horror anthology with a first rate cast.
'Asylum' holds a special place in my heart as watching it on TV as a kid in the 70s is one of my earliest horror memories, along with Rod Serling's almost forgotten series 'Night Gallery' and the underrated Cushing/Lee movie 'The Creeping Flesh'. I watched 'Asylum' the other day for the first time in oh, twenty years at least, and while it wasn't anywhere near as scary as I remember it to be, it's still one of the better horror anthologies of the period. It's helped considerably by having Robert Bloch adapt his own stories, Roy Ward Baker ('The Vampire Lovers', 'Dr Jekyll and Sister Hyde') as the director, and it features a first rate cast including horror legends Peter Cushing, Patrick Magee, and Herbert Lom. The most effective stories for me were the two in the middle - the one with Barry Morse as a tailor with a mysterious client (Cushing), and the other with a fragile Charlotte Rampling being led astray by the sexy Britt Ekland. 'Asylum' has a few flaws sure, but it's still a very entertaining film, and horror buffs will enjoy it.
A lost classic
Very good photography, acting, dialog set this horror anthology above most others. There is a clever beginning which then evolves into 4 separate stories of individuals inside an asylum. The 1st story is the most gruesome. The 2nd story is the most intriguing and also has Peter Cushing in it doing a excellent job as usual. The 3rd story is the weakest and the 4 th story ties into the twist ending. With each story only lasting an average of 15 minutes, they keep the viewers interest. This also has a nice soundtrack { something almost totally missing from todays horror crap,remkaes and sequels} . For those of us who like style, originality and solid acting in our horror films, this deserves a look.
Did you know
- TriviaVermicelli was used for the robots' insides.
- Goofs(at around 27 mins) When Bonnie is being chased by a severed arm crawling along the floor, a crew member's hand is visible, holding the arm to make it appear as if it is moving.
- Quotes
[explaining why he's in a wheelchair]
Dr. Rutherford: Never turn your back on a patient.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Stephen King's World of Horror (1986)
- How long is Asylum?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 28m(88 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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