Friday, February 17, 2017

Psychomania (1972)



Director: Don Sharp        

Notable Cast: Nicky Henson, Mary Larkin, George Sanders, Beryl Reid, Roy Holder, Robert Hardy

Psychomania just makes sense. Perhaps not in its narrative because that is generally all over the place, but combining the thrills of the 70s biker movie with the 70s occult flick seems like common sense. You’re now hitting two genres with exploitative appeal and doing it at the same time. Psychomania does just that and does it with decent effect. The results can be a bit mixed overall, occasionally unfocused in how it wants to present its characters or even logistics when it comes to its hodge podge of occult/supernatural elements, but this film was ultimately much better than expected. It’s an enjoyable piece of cinema, powered by a lot of quirky pieces and an oddly engaging love story, but it touches on a lot of great concepts that span over the themes of both genre styles that ought to please a lot of cult cinema fans. Psychomania is the perfect addition to Arrow Video’s gems from the cult cinema past.


Tom (Henson) is quite simply a wild child. Coming from a rich family complete with medium mother (Reid) and their all knowing butler (Sanders), Tom spends most of his days riding around with his girlfriend Abby (Larkin) and their motorcycle gang The Living Dead. When Tom finds out that he can survive death and never be hurt or die again once he comes back, he kicks off a series of events that will leave their town in shock and a slew of bodies in his wake.

Screaming for vengeance.
There is a kind of ambitiousness to Psychomania that elevates the material. As the film starts, it presents the audience with the standard kind of biker flick drama using the cliché ‘young gone wild’ of that era as a foundation to establish the gang. It’s not particularly ambitious in this area as Tom is the rebellious boyfriend, his girlfriend Abby is the one that truly drives the narrative as the character that connects with the audience the most, the rival girl who is more akin to the leader in personality and constitutes a rival, and there is a hodge podge of throw away secondary cast. However, the execution of its cast is better than expected with both Henson and Larkin delivering some fun romantic teen drama and decent onscreen presence. This bleeds into the supernatural elements of its plot, which do blend the ideas of youth running against authority or the establishment nicely as Tom and the gang decide to fight back against death itself, and for the most part Psychomania balances its themes nicely as it runs through hints of psychedelic tone and a classic horror feel. Director Sharp coats the film in a nice gothic tone that gives it a fun feel, particularly when partnered with the awesome psychedelic score, and for this I found the film quite entertaining and unusually smart in a lot of ways.

Most of the problems arise from where Psychomania pulls away from going further with its themes and characters. In an attempt to be more entertaining or action packed, the film tends to meander off the path and throws in a subtle use of dark humor to try to make it work. There are action scenes that don’t necessarily go with the tone which includes an entire portion of the second act where the various gang members are killing themselves to submit to the “undead” ritual that includes one guy who leaps into a river with cartoonishly large locks and chains to drown himself and another leaps out of a plane with no parachute. The film is weird, certainly, and I would be speechless to try and explain the use of frogs or what the “hidden room” that divulges the information to Tom about how to beat death that’s left intentionally vague, but the narrative flow doesn’t always benefit from it. There are moments where it seems to work, including a dream sequence for Abby that is oddly unsettling with its use of dark humor, but it can be distracting from the overall themes that are pushed to the wayside for these moments.

"And this frog medallion. Cause...he liked it. Yeah. It was his favorite...or something."
Still, Psychomania is a rather shockingly fun film that rises above the expectations I had going into it. The new Arrow Video release is packed with special features (listed below) and it shows in the love that there is out there for the weird quirks and oddly satisfying themes that this film touches on as it smashes two beloved cult genres together. Go in with the right expectations for a film with subtle dark humor, psychedelic touches of gothic atmosphere, and loads of youth gone wild biker mischief and you will have a blast with Psychomania. This is a film one will want to revisit again and again just for the oddities of its plot and charismatic presence of its loaded cast. 

ARROW VIDEO FEATURES

  • 2K restoration from preservation negatives
  • High Definition (1080p) and Standard Definition DVD presentations
  • Original 1.0 mono audio (uncompressed on the Blu-ray)
  • Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard-of-hearing
  • Brand-new interview with star Nicky Henson
  • Return of the Living Dead, an archive featurette containing interviews actors Henson, Mary Larkin, Denis Gilmore, Roy Holder and Rocky Taylor
  • Sound of Psychomania, an archive interview with composer John Cameron
  • Riding Free, an archive interview with Riding Free singer Harvey Andrews
  • Hell for Leather, a brand-new featurette on the company who supplied the film s costumes
  • Remastering Psychomania, a look at the film s restoration from the original 35mm black and white separation masters
  • Theatrical trailer
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by the Twins of Evil
  • FIRST PRESSING ONLY: Collector s booklet containing writing by Vic Pratt, William Fowler and Andrew Roberts


Written By Matt Reifschneider

1 comment:

  1. Thanks kindly for adding more of the Blu-ray details in with your review! :)

    ReplyDelete