John Carpenter’s ‘In the Mouth of Madness’ is Deliciously Twisted

John (Sam Neill) is an insurance investigator with a dim view of humanity. He’s hired by a publishing company to track down its star writer Sutter Cane (Jürgen Prochnow), who has disappeared with the last half of his new book, In the Mouth of Madness. John and editor Styles (Julie Carmen) take off for small-town New England, thinking he’s hiding in Hobb’s End, the town where his books take place. Turns out Cane’s new book is about “the end of everything”—and it’s not fiction.

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One of the more striking aspects of the film is the recalcitrant author’s resemblance to Stephen King—at least in terms of popularity, a cult-like following, and his work regarded as “horror crap.” Stylistically Cane is actually more like H.P. Lovecraft, who also wrote about New England. The name Pickman, used in the film, is plucked from Lovecraft’s work. Cane’s tone, dialogue, use of tentacle creatures and description of “the old ones” is also more like Lovecraft. As Styles says, regarding Cane’s massive book sales, “You can forget about Stephen King.”

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Sutter Cane…wonder what makes people immediately think of Stephen King?

Something else interesting is the film’s gloomy tone, often dimly lit and frequented by nightmare sequences. John is cheerful enough in his misanthropy, but overall it seems like people are depicted as violent brain-dead sheep, ready to riot at any given moment. Then there’s the chilling motif throughout of reality vs. unreality (as John says, “I’m not a piece of fiction”) and sane vs. insane. As Styles points out, when the insane are the majority, then the sane would by default be insane. John agrees, volunteering to live in a mental hospital, claiming, “It’s safer in here now.”

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Look, it’s John Glover!

I really don’t have any complaints about the movie. Cane’s creatures are left to the imagination for the most part, but the special effects aren’t bad for the mid-90s—I particularly like the scene when Cane rips himself like paper to reveal the portal for the old ones.

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Ooh, he’s gonna feel that in the morning

My favorite scene is when John watches the movie version of In the Mouth of Madness. He watches footage of his own exploits and laughs hysterically, his eyes bulging with mirth—and madness. Give it a look if you’re in the mood for some mid-’90s creepiness.

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Not the exact image I wanted–picture him 10% more crazed

Published by GhoulieJoe

I'm a mom who loves horror movies, the '80s, and the library. I write about the above three topics more than is healthy. I've got reviews, listicles, lil nonfiction pieces, and random bits of whutnot. I also included some pretentious as hell microfiction (don't worry, it's at the bottom). Because horror is life and vice versa.

2 thoughts on “John Carpenter’s ‘In the Mouth of Madness’ is Deliciously Twisted

  1. As a Carpenter lover I do have to admit I’ve only seen this (and The Ward) once. I saw it in the theater so along ago and don’t remember loving it maybe because it was so bleak towards the end or maybe I just didn’t like Prochnow. Now I think I should give both of those things a look again because I miss him making movies.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lol I just saw They Live for the first time a couple weeks ago. It’s easy to get caught up in a director’s best and brightest until they can’t make any more movies. I’ve never seen The Ward, I should watch it too!

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