VideoDetective.com
Anguish (1986)
Released By: Anchor Bay Entertainment   Rating: R   In Theaters: N/A
Your video will start shortly...



More Videos:
Preview Details
User Reviews
Studio: Anchor Bay Entertainment
Genre: Horror
MPAA Rating: R
Director: J.J. Bigas Luna
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Michael Lerner, Zelda Rubinstein, Talia Paul
Published ID: 412102
UPC: 013131111392, 827058112499,
Plot: Poltergeist-purger Zelda Rubinstein toplines this interesting, twisty psycho-thriller from Spain, which makes clever (though repetitive) use of its movie-within-a-movie premise. As the star of the horror film The Mommy, Rubinstein plays a mother who hypnotizes her son (Michael Lerner) into seeking more victims to supply her growing collection of human eyeballs. The Mommy seems also to exert a weird hypnotic effect on the audience watching it, particularly one impressionable fellow who mirrors Lerner's actions by stalking fellow movie patrons... just as the onscreen murderer is entering a movie theater to do the same thing. If this sounds confusing, that's probably because it is. The interesting premise wears thin about halfway through, with the relentless attempts at viewer disorientation becoming more tiresome than frightening. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Anguish? Yeah, that's about what I was feeling while watching this
Added 12/16/2007

Malformed, distorted, misshapen, deformed... all words that could be used to describe the plot and delivery of this (as well as starring actress Zelda Rubinstein... I know, I shouldn't have gone there), 1989's little known "horror" film Anguish. A somewhat interesting premise that features a movie inside of a movie angle, where the film that we initially are watching turns into the background of a second story taking place within a movie theater (think 1985's Italian splatterfest Demons for a good example of this), ultimately gets bogged down by an unintelligible script filled with unapealing characters (to downright obnoxious... Zelda, I'm talking to you again). In the first film, Michael Lerner (Barton Fink, Maniac Cop 2, Elf) stars as an unstable eye doctor who is hypnotized by his mother (Zelda)to kill... and also to remove the eyes of the victims. Some decent scenes of grue take place but more time is wasted on the scenes of hynotization which try REALLY hard to be unique and artistic but David Lynch this ain't (with Zelda spewing lines of psychobabble such as, "you once where like a snail... hidden... happy"). The second part involves a man obsessed with the movie loosing it inside the theater while the first film plays on in the background. Fairly tame from this point forward as our new antagonist's weapon of choice is a silenced pistol (and he has no interest in removing the victims eyes... bah!). Maybe the director was attempting to make a visionary piece of filmaking about how life can imitate art? Maybe... but this is schlock through and through (the "twist" ending solidifies this statement), whether you want to put a fancey bow on top of it or not (at least movies like Friday The 13th know exactly what they are). Looking at the other reviews on here, Anguish has a following that feel it's a really good film (although so does Boogeyman...)so there may be something I'm missing, but if you are on the hunt for anything mildly scary or disturbing I'd look elsewhere... though those looking for something with a little originality, or in the need of a Zelda Rubinstein fix, could certainly do worse (you could just watch Poltergeist again though?).
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
A Movie Worth Experiencing
Added 7/10/2006

They sure did a great job at cleaning up the picture and sound for this 1986 flick. Zelda Rubinstein is a trip in this movie. Well the movie itself is quite a trip. This movie deserves more credit than what it received. You can really tell that alot of effort and thought went into making this movie. So as a viewer and customer of the dvd I can appreciate that. You should try too.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Way cool frights, but listen!
Added 12/31/2005

I saw this in the movie theatre when it came out. I was looking around in my seat a bit. You had to see it in the theater to really appreciate it, and if you did you know what I mean. Also, Michael is a close personal friend of mine, so for me, it was especially frightening to think that my good buddy..."gulp"...would...do that...could do that...to ME while I watched it in the theater was intensely wierd. I have paranoid schizophrenia, as well, so it was gripping, and very hard for me not to acknowledge the "real" possibility of a grand-scale evil joke being played on me personally. Whew! It's hard to explain, but in the end, all things considered, I decided it was a way cool experience. I am going to buy it for nostalgia's sake, and also because I like watching movies with people in them that I know, especially strange people like Michael. His very strange personality also shines through in "Barton Fink", and an episode of some serial show like "Dark Shadows" or something like that, I can't exactly remember though, in which he plays a unique sort of ice cream man. Oh gross!
3 out of 5 people found this helpful.
A Bit Different
Added 1/17/2004

This hypnotic horror film from 1986 is for the movie fan with a different taste. The cheap blood and guts scenes are worse off because of the roller coaster movements. The interesting but nauseating movements of the camera are intense if you�re stuck in the eighties. In my opinion they could have cut the fat and made this a short 30 min. T.V. show. One plus is that it�s a little freaky which makes it scary to a degree. The other plus is it get boring when you give up trying to understand the movie in a movie concepts they intend to entice you with. I watched this with my girlfriend so when she got bored with the movie or somehow scared by the odd images, I was there to hold.
1 out of 4 people found this helpful.
AN EYE FOR AN EYE
Added 11/18/2002

A middle-aged momma's boy runs rampant in a movie theater cutting out patron's eyeballs, while the movie onscreen depicts the same man as an optometrist who is driven to his evil acts by his overbearing, overweight squeaky-voiced mother. (The film's movie-within-a-movie THE MOMMY).
An interesting idea is well played out even if the end result is rather awkward. There is one funny scene of one of the victim's slobbering before having his throat slit with a scalpel. Presumably it's just a matter of taste. All in all, ANGUISH isn't a bad movie, I just expected it to be a lot better.

1 out of 2 people found this helpful.
Anguish? Yeah, that's about what I was feeling while watching this
Added 12/16/2007

Malformed, distorted, misshapen, deformed... all words that could be used to describe the plot and delivery of this (as well as starring actress Zelda Rubinstein... I know, I shouldn't have gone there), 1989's little known "horror" film Anguish. A somewhat interesting premise that features a movie inside of a movie angle, where the film that we initially are watching turns into the background of a second story taking place within a movie theater (think 1985's Italian splatterfest Demons for a good example of this), ultimately gets bogged down by an unintelligible script filled with unapealing characters (to downright obnoxious... Zelda, I'm talking to you again). In the first film, Michael Lerner (Barton Fink, Maniac Cop 2, Elf) stars as an unstable eye doctor who is hypnotized by his mother (Zelda)to kill... and also to remove the eyes of the victims. Some decent scenes of grue take place but more time is wasted on the scenes of hynotization which try REALLY hard to be unique and artistic but David Lynch this ain't (with Zelda spewing lines of psychobabble such as, "you once where like a snail... hidden... happy"). The second part involves a man obsessed with the movie loosing it inside the theater while the first film plays on in the background. Fairly tame from this point forward as our new antagonist's weapon of choice is a silenced pistol (and he has no interest in removing the victims eyes... bah!). Maybe the director was attempting to make a visionary piece of filmaking about how life can imitate art? Maybe... but this is schlock through and through (the "twist" ending solidifies this statement), whether you want to put a fancey bow on top of it or not (at least movies like Friday The 13th know exactly what they are). Looking at the other reviews on here, Anguish has a following that feel it's a really good film (although so does Boogeyman...)so there may be something I'm missing, but if you are on the hunt for anything mildly scary or disturbing I'd look elsewhere... though those looking for something with a little originality, or in the need of a Zelda Rubinstein fix, could certainly do worse (you could just watch Poltergeist again though?).
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
A Movie Worth Experiencing
Added 7/10/2006

They sure did a great job at cleaning up the picture and sound for this 1986 flick. Zelda Rubinstein is a trip in this movie. Well the movie itself is quite a trip. This movie deserves more credit than what it received. You can really tell that alot of effort and thought went into making this movie. So as a viewer and customer of the dvd I can appreciate that. You should try too.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Way cool frights, but listen!
Added 12/31/2005

I saw this in the movie theatre when it came out. I was looking around in my seat a bit. You had to see it in the theater to really appreciate it, and if you did you know what I mean. Also, Michael is a close personal friend of mine, so for me, it was especially frightening to think that my good buddy..."gulp"...would...do that...could do that...to ME while I watched it in the theater was intensely wierd. I have paranoid schizophrenia, as well, so it was gripping, and very hard for me not to acknowledge the "real" possibility of a grand-scale evil joke being played on me personally. Whew! It's hard to explain, but in the end, all things considered, I decided it was a way cool experience. I am going to buy it for nostalgia's sake, and also because I like watching movies with people in them that I know, especially strange people like Michael. His very strange personality also shines through in "Barton Fink", and an episode of some serial show like "Dark Shadows" or something like that, I can't exactly remember though, in which he plays a unique sort of ice cream man. Oh gross!
3 out of 5 people found this helpful.
Photos


There are currently no photos.
Shopping
IDPriceImageUrlPurchaseUrlIdTypeBindingStore
VHS
$3.98 @ Amazon
VHS
$58.69 @ Amazon
DVD
$24.60 @ Amazon
DVD
$13.49 @ Amazon