The Mansion of Madness

The Mansion of Madness

197399 min
4.8/10
Horror

Plot Summary

The inmates of an insane asylum take over the institution, imprison the doctors and staff, and then put into play their own ideas of how the place should be run.

▶️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (49)

Claudio Brook

Claudio Brook

Dr. Maillard / Raoul Fragonard

Arthur Hansel

Arthur Hansel

Gaston LeBlanc

Ellen Sherman

Ellen Sherman

Eugénie

Martin LaSalle

Martin LaSalle

Julien Couvier

David Silva

David Silva

Cult Priest

Mónica Serna

Mónica Serna

Blanche

Max Kerlow

Max Kerlow

Dr. Maillard

Susana Kamini

Susana Kamini

Cult Priestess

No Image

Pancho Córdova

Pseudo-Marshall

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Roberto Dumont

Character

No Image

Jorge Bekris

Henri - the Coachman

No Image

René Alís

Character

🎬Crew

Director

Juan López Moctezuma

Writers

Carlos Illescas, Juan López Moctezuma

Producers

Roberto Viskin

🖼️Gallery (2 images)

The Mansion of Madness backdrop 1
The Mansion of Madness backdrop 2

🏷️Keywords

mental asylum

💬Reviews (1)

W

Wuchak

6/22/2025

**_Surrealistic sanatorium of lunacy_** In southern France, 1845, a journalist returns to his home country (Arthur Hansel) to visit an asylum that, reportedly, uses revolutionary techniques to treat the mentally ill. The head doctor (Claudio Brook) gives him a tour of his vast institution, but will he make it out alive and sane? A Mexican production shot in the summer of 1971, “The Mansion of Madness” is also known as “Dr. Tarr’s Torture Dungeon,” based on a short story by Edgar Allan Poe. It combines the Star Trek episode “Whom God’s Destroy”—which was also no doubt inspired by the same Poe yarn (albeit unofficially)—and mixes it with a standard story set-up of Hammer and AIP horror flicks (a visitor arrives at a remote mansion or castle and learns the horrors thereof, à la Jonathan Harker going to Dracula’s castle). There’s a sequence reminiscent of Fritz Lang’s duology "The Indian Tomb" and "The Tiger of Eschnapur.” I’m talking about Debra Paget’s dance sequence in both films. Yvonne Craig had a similar scene in the aforementioned “Whom Gods Destroy” whereas this movie features Ellen Sherman in the dance episode as Eugenie. While Sherman has a certain appeal, she just can’t compete with either Paget or Craig IMHO. The visuals are superb with vibrant colors and a flair of surrealism. It’s worth seeing just for this. Unfortunately, the first half, which consists mostly of a tour of the fascinating sanatorium, is more compelling than the second, which devolves into lunatic goings-on. I suppose that’s to be expected, given the nature of the tale, but the script needed fine-tuning to make the last act more compelling. "Silent Night, Bloody Night" was filmed six months prior and was more imaginative with the basic plot, not to mention transferring the story to the modern day, but isn’t as visually mind-blowing. Still, it is the superior film IMHO, yet it’s worth seeing both. It runs 1 hour, 24 minutes, and was shot at Estudios America in Coyoacan, Mexico City. GRADE: B-/C+

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