Someone is murdering the great chefs..... I mean someone is murdering the patients in one of psychiatrist Klaus Kinski's therapy groups. These attacks are preceded by threats of shooting and executed by stabbings.
This should be a short in which cop Joe Regalbutto pulls out the handcuffs, arrests Kinski, and that's it. This being feature film, we need to spend some time getting to know the victims and dragging a few red herrings across the bloodhounds' path. Given the title, one expects foreboding music, a few dark-lit Dutch angle shots, and a last minute revelation. The movie delivers, but in such a mechanical fashion that I wasn't impressed.
With Christopher Lloyd as Gilbert.
Schizoid
1980
Action / Drama / Horror / Mystery / Thriller
Plot summary
Julie is an advice columnist for the city newspaper who begins to receive anonymous notes threatening murder and worse. At about the same time, female members of the group therapy session she attends are being stabbed, one by one, by an unknown assailant. Is there a connection? If so, why do the notes talk about murder with a gun, while the murder victims are being stabbed? At first, the police, her ex-husband, her therapist and her friends all assure her that the notes are probably unrelated, and hoax; but with time, it becomes apparent that someone close to her is responsible. Is it her therapist, Pieter, who has sex with his patients just before they are murdered? Or Alison, Pieter's daughter, who resents Julie for Julie's romantic involvement with her father? Is it Julie's ex-husband, who never really wanted their divorce? Or maybe Gilbert, the eccentric building maintenance man whom many people believe is a little crazy anyway? Just about everyone around her seems mentally disturbed enough to be the culprit.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
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720p.BLU 1080p.BLUMovie Reviews
Someone Is Crazy And Klaus Kinski Is The Therapist
boring horror
Newspaper advice columnist Julie (Marianna Hill) receives anonymous threatening letters. She's divorcing Doug. She attends a therapy group run by Pieter Fales (Klaus Kinski). His building has a new handyman (Christopher Lloyd). Female members of the group start getting murdered.
Non of the women are compelling and that includes the lead character. Her acting is rather stiff. The general level of acting is inferior with some outright bad. The women are nothing more than gristle for the meat grinder. It's one after another and non of it is exciting or scary. The big black guy following her into the elevator is meant to be scary but his innocence is never in doubt. Each kill unfolds without any energy. Pieter would function better if all his creepiness is kept hidden from the audience. Doug has one really bad overacting scene. All in all, it's repetitive and boring.
Not half bad slasher thriller
Newspaper advice columnist Julie (a fine and appealing performance by Marianna Hill) receives death threats in the mail from a mysterious person. Meanwhile, the female members of a therapy group run by peculiar psychiatrist Pieter Fales (a surprisingly restrained portrayal by a hilariously miscast Klaus Kinski) are being bumped off by a scissors-wielding maniac. Are these two things connected? Writer/director David Paulsen relates the compelling story at a steady pace, generates a reasonable amount of tension, delivers a satisfying sliver of bare distaff skin, and makes good use of the gritty urban locations. Alas, Paulsen skimps on the gore and Kinski is less than convincing as a womanizing heel. Moreover, Craig Huxley's overdone quivery synthesizer score proves to be more distracting than effective. Fortunately, the sturdy cast holds the picture together: Donna Wilkes as Pieter's troubled estranged daughter Alison, Craig Wasson as Julie's morose, yet amiable ex-husband Doug, Richard Herd as jaded homicide detective Donahue, Joe Regalbuto as Donahue's more sensitive partner Jake, and Christopher Lloyd as creepy handyman Gilbert. Norman Leigh's glossy cinematography provides a pleasing polished look. A rather flawed, but overall pretty solid and enjoyable little flick.