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Mr. Stitch

  • TV Movie
  • 1995
  • PG-13
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
948
YOUR RATING
Mr. Stitch (1995)
Sci-Fi

Doctor Rue Wakeman (Rutger Hauer) and his team create a young man with skin and organs taken from other men and women. The creature, Lazarus (Wil Wheaton), reads a lot of books and learns al... Read allDoctor Rue Wakeman (Rutger Hauer) and his team create a young man with skin and organs taken from other men and women. The creature, Lazarus (Wil Wheaton), reads a lot of books and learns all about the humans. But when he meets fascinating Doctor Elizabeth English (Nia Peeples), ... Read allDoctor Rue Wakeman (Rutger Hauer) and his team create a young man with skin and organs taken from other men and women. The creature, Lazarus (Wil Wheaton), reads a lot of books and learns all about the humans. But when he meets fascinating Doctor Elizabeth English (Nia Peeples), his life changes, and he decides to escape from the laboratory.

  • Director
    • Roger Avary
  • Writer
    • Roger Avary
  • Stars
    • Rutger Hauer
    • Wil Wheaton
    • Stevo Polyi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    948
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Roger Avary
    • Writer
      • Roger Avary
    • Stars
      • Rutger Hauer
      • Wil Wheaton
      • Stevo Polyi
    • 21User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos48

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    Top Cast19

    Edit
    Rutger Hauer
    Rutger Hauer
    • Doctor Rue Wakeman
    Wil Wheaton
    Wil Wheaton
    • Lazarus
    Stevo Polyi
    • Stevo
    Rowland Wafford
    • Rowland
    Richard Louderback
    • Red-Haired Skull Soldier
    Kevin White
    • Over Zealous Soldier
    Luke Stratte-McClure
    Luke Stratte-McClure
    • Thorn Gardener
    Al Sapienza
    Al Sapienza
    • Clay Gardener
    Valarie Trapp
    Valarie Trapp
    • Sandy Gardener
    Nia Peeples
    Nia Peeples
    • Doctor Elizabeth English
    Ron Perlman
    Ron Perlman
    • Doctor Frederick Texarian
    Taylor Negron
    Taylor Negron
    • Doctor Al Jacobs
    Michael Harris
    Michael Harris
    • General Hardcastle
    Ron Jeremy
    Ron Jeremy
    • Lieutenant Periwinkle
    • (as Ron Jeremy Hyatt)
    Sloane Klevin
    • Security Computer
    • (voice)
    Philip Wotton
    • Frank
    Kario Salem
    Kario Salem
    • Ornery Policeman
    Salvator Xuereb
    Salvator Xuereb
    • Deputy Dog
    • Director
      • Roger Avary
    • Writer
      • Roger Avary
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews21

    4.7948
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    Featured reviews

    dunkel_berg25

    The worst TV movie I've ever seen

    I rented this TV movie cause it had Rutger Hauer in it. I never imagined I was renting something soooo bad. The amount of flaws this movie has wouldn't fit on a grocery list. I felt sorry for Hauer, seeing him so fat and old, starring on a movie that was so bad. I think he ran away from making this movie, after seeing how bad it was turning out to be(we can only see Hauer on the first minutes of film, afterwards, he simply disappear). I know this film has had its amount of bad critics, but it is just that bad. A 0.5 out of 10.
    TToadvine

    Who gave the greenlight on this?

    How they were able to attain funding to produce this..uh..movie, has to be more of a feat than the production itself.

    I'm so glad to see Wil Wheaton didn't leave Star Trek: The Next Generation without such promising projects awaiting him.

    Wheaton plays an androgenous, Palamino-skinned Frankenstein's Monster with amnesia, who after reading one of several books, the Bible, names himself Lazarus.

    With huge vacant lab rooms, filmed using more lens gauze than Penthouse, an eventual laboratory breakout, and a crazy road trip(by the way, when did he take the 'Mad Max' driving course), 'Stitch' can only leave you asking one question? Ron Perlman had plenty of time post-"Beauty and the Beast", but what was Taylor Negron thinking?
    6Quinoa1984

    what a way to spin your Oscar glory! An obscure find that is not all unworthy

    I have an uncanny sort of respect for this one. Think about it for a moment: Roger Avary just found a spot on his mantelpiece for his Academy Award for writing one of the pop culture staples of the post-modern American cinema (or who knows where), and the next thing he signs on for (who knows how it generated but I'll imagine he pitched it) is to write and direct a weird-ass science fiction movie - the first original release for the Sci-Fi Channel no less - about a "creative" doctor who stitches together a man (OR IS IT? didn't mean to mis-gender) a-new out of 80 parts from both sexes, and then the new being named Lazarus starts to have dreams/realizes the visions of who he/she/it used to be. It takes some balls to commit to that - and by that, I mean a vision that is pretty much schlock. I am sorry if you were wondering if this was legitimately good, but I'm not sure if that's the case. Oh, Wil Wheaton and to an extent Rutger Hauer are committed to these characters, and there's a decent supporting role for the always-dependable Ron Perlman. But this has certain design elements that are familiar for sci-fi buffs - like an all-acrid all-white set ala THX-1138, and a... actually, I don't know what that GIANT EYEBALL is all about, but it is absolutely, stunningly funny and bizarre - and the dialog is stuffed with either exposition or inner-ideas and 'insights' from Lazarus and the other female doctor that he suddenly takes a liking to, and there's *more* to that.

    The point is, this does have a not-terrible idea to kick it all off, which is an updated, horror-tinged but not all-the-way horror Frankenstein riff (if it isn't obvious enough, at one point Lazarus reads Frankenstein the book, which.... hey, Johnny 5 did that in Short Circuit 2, RIP OFF!) It also goes for some hallucinatory details, some that are fun for enjoying the dated value of the special effects and tomandandy techno score, and details like that 'Chemical Weapons' door sign (I still can't get over that). At the same time, this is also kind of messy by nature of the fact that Hauer (RIP) eventually during the production decided he was bored or didn't like it or who knows, and kind of just leaves more or less about halfway through. He is a major part of the story though, and the movie loses something without him in it more (when he is there, he is trying... ish, if not seeming to dig his teeth in like on a Buffy the Vampire Slayer level). What makes it schlock ultimately is that Avary a) doesn't seem to have much of a budget to work with, aside from the Tom Savini make-up and (which is terrific, goes without saying), and a couple of car crashes that are certainly something else, and b) it really starts to become more rote as it goes along in its second half. I was at first really keyed in to, you know, a moment where Lazarus flings a bar-bell at the floating giant eyeball and it falls to the ground and deflates after being pierced (and yes, I just wrote that sentence), but it devolves into the same old 'the Creation Is Out of Control We Need to Stop it But OMG it's Taken Control On Its Own AAH' story that has cropped up over and over. And, frankly, some of the dialog (ok, a lot) is more laughable than it is clever.

    All of this said, Mr. Stitch feels like something that doesn't get looked at or talked about anymore, which is strange considering its history, who made it and who's in it (Taylor Negron has a fun supporting turn too), and it's the kind of obscure 90's work that probably could be unearthed by someone or some company (looking at you, Shout Factory?) It has some dull spots, but is overall a solid piece of so-crap-it's-a-gas material, and certainly a cut above what Sci-Fi has put out in the years since.
    5PTCfromDE

    Yikes, poor Wil Wheaton...

    This movie had potential... an interesting premise... a not too bad first half... then, in the middle, it gets really really bad... screaming out for the MST3K treatment... where did those "funny cars" come from? And the skeleton appearing in the smoke of the car explosion... and the daisies in the foreground of the car chase scene... it almost looks as if someone malicious substituted "crank footage" for the last reel in a deliberate attempt to sabotage the movie.

    But ultimately, if you are a Wil Wheaton fan, it's not THAT painful to watch. Well, ok, actually it is kind of painful, but it does have some genuinely interesting moments, and some touching scenes. Enough that you just have to feel bad for Mr. Wheaton... this COULD have been a much better film.
    7david-duncan-1

    SciFi with little Sci but some very good Fi

    All the science in this science fiction tale is of the ludicrously pseudo sort, but it is stylish, well-acted entertainment. Will Wheaton, Rutger Hauer and Ron Perlman all give the excellent performances that one expects of them. Performances by the rest of the cast are more variable -- with some very good and some a bit over the top hammy. In terms of plot, the first half of the movie is quite original and makes the best of its obviously limited budget. Some parts of the second half are more trite and predictable but still stylishly done and ornamented by Will Wheaton's excellent performance. The special effects are minimal, the production design is a striking exercise in minimalism, and the musical score is quite good without being obtrusive. It is no SF classic, but it is both entertaining and thought provoking.

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    Related interests

    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Part way through production, Rutger Hauer completely discarded the script and refused to do any scenes from it. The majority of his scenes were improvised by him. Later, Executive Producer, Writer, and Director Roger Avary was forced to re-write the remaining script to match up with Rutger's footage.
    • Quotes

      Lazarus: Where are my sexual organs?

      Doctor Rue Wakeman: You have none.

    • Crazy credits
      After the credits end, we can see Dr. English stitching someone, but we can't see who it is.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Best of the Worst: Our VHS Collection (2019)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 17, 1996 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Мистер Ститч
    • Filming locations
      • Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France
    • Production companies
      • Studio Megaboom
      • Rysher Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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