Movie Background

I, Madman

A bookshop clerk's reality shatters when she begins to glimpse the disfigured killer from her beloved 1950s pulp novels, who steps from page to street and starts killing people around her.

Director(s)

Tibor Takács

Judy Saunders

Steve Cohen

Where to watch

MGM Plus Amazon Channel

MGM Plus Amazon Channel

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Cast & Crew

Christopher Kriesa

Christopher Kriesa

Sarge

Mary Pat Gleason

Mary Pat Gleason

Policewoman

Jenny Wright

Jenny Wright

Virginia

Randall William Cook

Randall William Cook

-

Murray Rubin

Murray Rubin

Sidney Zeit

Vance Valencia

Vance Valencia

Sgt. Navarro

Stephanie Hodge

Stephanie Hodge

Mona

Clayton Rohner

Clayton Rohner

Richard

Roger La Page

Roger La Page

-

Bruce Wagner

Bruce Wagner

-

Nelson Welch

Nelson Welch

Elderly Customer

Jeff Yesko

Jeff Yesko

Patrolman

Raf Nazario

Raf Nazario

Lyle

Tibor Takács

Tibor Takács

-

Vincent Lucchesi

Vincent Lucchesi

Lt. Garber

Michelle Jordan

Michelle Jordan

Colette

Mary Baldwin

Mary Baldwin

Librarian

Bob Frank

Bob Frank

Hotel Manager

Kevin Best

Kevin Best

Black Actor

Steven Memel

Steven Memel

Lenny

Tom Badal

Tom Badal

Composite Artist

James Quincey Hendrick

James Quincey Hendrick

Bus Driver

David P. Lewis

David P. Lewis

Officer

Marty Levy

Marty Levy

Detective Fisk

Stan Roth

Stan Roth

Forensic Expert

Judy Saunders

Judy Saunders

-

Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

-

Details

GenresHorror, Thriller
Runtime1h 29 mins
Released on07 Apr 1989
Languageen
Produced InUnited States of America
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Reviews

Wuchak

6/10

**_An infatuated Frankenstein-like killer is loose in the City of Angels_** A secondhand book store clerk & aspiring actress (Jenny Wright) becomes aware that what she sees in her imagination while reading books by a weird pulp author is coming to life in the form of a madman who murders people for body parts. Clayton Rohner plays her detective beau and Stephanie Hodge the owner of the book shop. Shot in November, 1987, but not released until 1989, “I, Madman” mixes elements of the Frankenstein story with the popular slasher genre along with the milieu of an attractive bookworm in downtown Los Angeles. In short, don’t expect a formulaic or one-dimensional slasher. Also, while the titular madman is grotesque and his slayings are shocking, don’t expect grim seriousness. The artistic proceedings are decidedly cartoonish, which is to be anticipated with the colorful pulp fiction angle. The remake of "Maniac" (2012) was obviously inspired by it, just grimmer and more arty. Jenny Wright is a highlight as the protagonist. She was a rising star in the 80s with “Near Dark” (1987) to her credit, but “I, Madman” was her last major role, although she had a memorable part in “Young Guns II” (1990). Her career fell apart shortly after due to substance abuse, but she thankfully overcame eventually, although she lost interest in acting. Michelle Fozounmayeh is notable in a bit part. The film runs 1 hour, 29 minutes, and was shot in Los Angeles. GRADE: B-

GenerationofSwine

10/10

I'm a bit shocked that this doesn't have a cult following, but it is yet another example why Tubi is my favorite of the streaming services. I can just subsist off of what Tubi has to offer and have most of my entertainment needs met. It's low budget as all get out, but what it lacks in budget it makes up for in atmosphere. You really get sucked into it on that... and a bit on the lack of budget too, the snippets you get of the book while our protagonist is reading it are just off enough, just staged enough to work as someone's imagination. And despite the budget you have little details, cop cars parking outside the window of a police station, little moans coming form the adult theater on the street, etc, that let you know there is more thought behind each scene than your average B-Movie. The acting is fair to middling. It has just enough camp to fit the budget, none of it seems to take itself too seriously they are all aware of what sort of movie they are making, what genre it's going to fill, and approach it accordingly. It's never too much camp to loose you and never too serious to seem out of place. It walks that line. The idea isn't new, book and reality merging, but it's not so overdone that you've seen it a thousand times so even decades on it still feels fresh enough to enjoy. This is a movie that is screaming for a cult following, but, unfortunately, doesn't have one yet. Hopefully Tubi will change that and it will get the following it deserves.

All Trailers

I, Madman Official Trailer #1 (1989)
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