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  • The Psychopath (1973) — Captain Kangaroo Goes Full Dexter

The Psychopath (1973) — Captain Kangaroo Goes Full Dexter

Posted on August 6, 2025 By admin No Comments on The Psychopath (1973) — Captain Kangaroo Goes Full Dexter
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Let’s say you’ve got a fever dream. Maybe you binge-watch Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood and then fall asleep after reading a police blotter and an outdated psychology textbook. You wake up in a cold sweat. Congratulations, you’ve just mentally directed The Psychopath — a 1973 horror oddity so offbeat, it makes Taxi Driver look like an episode of Sesame Street.

The Plot: Mr. Rabbey’s Neighborhood of Nightmares

Meet Mr. Rabbey, a beloved children’s TV host who looks like he’s been stitched together from the castoffs of public-access cable and your weird uncle’s closet. On screen, he’s all sunshine, sock puppets, and songs about safety. Off screen, however, he moonlights as the patron saint of vengeance — a pint-sized punisher for abused kids. When young viewers send in sad stories about mean parents, he doesn’t call CPS. No. He just… shows up and murders the adults. With that logic, Barney the Dinosaur should’ve gone full Rambo by the mid-’90s.

The problem with this concept — aside from everything — is that it thinks it’s being edgy, socially relevant horror. In reality, it’s just a confused stew of late-night schlock and ’70s TV static, featuring a protagonist who looks like he should be holding a ukulele, not a knife.


Tom Basham: Method Acting or Public Cry for Help?

Tom Basham plays Mr. Rabbey with a performance best described as “chaotic milkman energy.” His high-pitched voice veers between unsettling and unintelligible, and he has a vacant stare that suggests either dangerous instability or someone trying really hard to remember their lines. Every time he speaks, you wonder if he’s going to hand you a balloon animal or ask you where you keep the knives.

Basham doesn’t act so much as twitch and giggle his way through scenes, like a children’s party clown whose van is parked outside with the engine running. It’s a performance that might have worked in a midnight movie parody, but here, it’s the entire film. Watching him is like being trapped in a 90-minute outtake reel from a failed anti-drug PSA.


The Direction: Amateur Hour with a Side of Tuna Salad

Larry G. Brown directed, produced, and wrote this mess — a triple threat of creative control that no one asked for. The pacing is erratic, the cinematography looks like someone smeared Vaseline on the lens and called it “mood lighting,” and the editing is less “cutting room floor” and more “fell out the window during a windstorm.”

There are long, meandering scenes that exist purely to test your bladder and your patience. Dialogues stretch out like therapy sessions, and nothing about the tone suggests horror, suspense, or even basic logic. It’s like watching a low-budget sitcom slowly realize it’s supposed to be a thriller halfway through production.


Kills, Thrills, and Missed Pills

Yes, there are murders, but they’re shot with all the flair of a local infomercial. Victims scream like they’re auditioning for a toothpaste commercial, and the violence is so bloodless and flat you half expect someone to pause mid-strangulation and ask if this take is lunch.

By the time the police catch on — roughly 70 minutes too late — you’re no longer rooting for justice. You’re rooting for the film to end. Or for the killer to turn his sights on the script supervisor.


Supporting Cast: Collecting Paychecks and Regrets

John Ashton — yes, the future cop from Beverly Hills Cop — shows up here as a sergeant, clearly trying to distance himself from whatever acting choices led him to this moment. Other cast members drift in and out, their performances ranging from “high school play” to “hostage video.” There’s also a nurse, a coroner, and a mother in the park who may or may not have wandered in from another production entirely.

And in a bizarre bit of trivia, the 1980 re-release removed all the murders. That’s like screening Jaws but cutting out the shark. What’s left? Basham reading letters from sad children and giggling about his puppet? Now that’s a horror movie.


The Music: Country Al Ross Brings You… Sadness

The score is credited to someone named Country Al Ross, which is either a band, a person, or a warning. It sounds like banjos left too close to a haunted xylophone. Music drifts in at odd times, as if trying to escape the movie itself. At one point, a tender melody accompanies a murder, and you’re left wondering if they mixed the reels backward. Or maybe forward. Or maybe it just doesn’t matter.


Final Verdict: Send This One to Time-Out

The Psychopath is a perfect storm of ineptitude: a ludicrous premise that thinks it’s clever, a lead performance that borders on therapy-inducing, and direction that couldn’t find a plot with both hands and a flashlight. It’s a movie made by people who clearly thought they had something to say about trauma and justice — and ended up saying, “Oops.”

The only terrifying thing about it is that someone greenlit it.

Rating: 1 out of 5 Sock Puppets
Would have been 0, but that final scene where Mr. Rabbey cradles a teddy bear and whispers murder lullabies deserves its own monument… in a padded cell.

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