The Mad Room (1969)
5/10
It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad Room! But still not mad enough!
20 September 2022
Alright, prepare for some weird and seemingly illogical reasoning... "The Mad Room" certainly isn't complete failure, or even a terribly bad film, but considering the wasted potential and the people and source material involved, it was a bigger disappointment to me as than it would be just another bad film. Makes sense? No, didn't think so...

What I mean is that I'm 200% convinced "The Mad Room" easily could have been a lot better, and the only thing it accomplished is make me curious about tracking down the original film entitled "Ladies in Retirement", starring Ida Lupino and released in 1941.

Legendary dame Shelley Winters stars as the wealthy and eccentric widow Mrs. Armstrong. The almost equally legendary Stella Stevens stars as her secretary, and future daughter-in-law, Ellen Hardy. Troubles arise when Ellen's younger brother and sister need Ellen as their custodian and need Mrs. Armstrong's fancy big mansion as place to live. Why is this a problem? Well, because the siblings - George and Mandy - were just released from a mental institution, as they are suspected of butchering their parents at the tender ages of 6 and 8 years old!

The supposedly shocking denouement is hopelessly predictable, especially in the context of this being a late 60s horror/thriller flourishing on the tremendous success of Hitchcock's "Psycho", but that really isn't the problem. What bothers most is that "The Mad Room" is completely devoid of creativity, excitement, and sardonic humor despite all the opportunities for it! Even though featuring psychotic women aplenty, theatrical murders, and a dog wandering around with a severed hand in his mouth, the script is unfathomably dull and strictly routine.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed