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  • Anguish (1987): Cinema Eats Itself Alive

Anguish (1987): Cinema Eats Itself Alive

Posted on August 25, 2025 By admin No Comments on Anguish (1987): Cinema Eats Itself Alive
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Movie, Inside a Movie, Inside a Nervous Breakdown

If most horror films are roller coasters, Anguish is a funhouse mirror dropped on your head. Bigas Luna’s metafictional experiment is a horror movie that watches you watching it. It’s Inception for people who think dreams should involve scalpels and optometry. The structure is absurd: a movie (The Mommy) about a killer hypnotized by his domineering mother plays to a theater audience… which itself becomes the target of a lunatic with a gun… which itself is eventually revealed to be another movie the audience is watching. That’s not just breaking the fourth wall; it’s bulldozing the theater.

And somehow, it works.

Zelda Rubinstein, Angel of Death (With a Shrill Voice)

Zelda Rubinstein, best known for declaring “This house is clean” in Poltergeist, here weaponizes her small stature and commanding voice into something ferociously grotesque. As Alice Pressman, she’s not a kindly medium but an overbearing, psychic-mother-from-hell who hypnotizes her poor, diabetic, near-blind son into murdering strangers for their eyeballs. It’s as though Norman Bates’ mother finally got billing above the title — and then demanded you hand over your corneas.

Whatever reputation Rubinstein may have had offscreen — sweet, bitchy, or both, depending on who you ask — on screen she’s an operatic terror. She doesn’t so much play Alice as she possesses her. Watching her bark hypnotic commands at Michael Lerner is like watching a tyrant train a golden retriever to commit felonies.

Michael Lerner: Killer Optometrist’s Assistant

Michael Lerner, bulbous and sweaty, gives John Pressman a perfect pathetic menace. He’s a killer who shouldn’t be scary but is — partly because he looks like your ophthalmologist’s receptionist, partly because he’s always panting, twitching, and stabbing at people’s eyes with the shaky precision of a toddler learning to use chopsticks. He’s a schlub turned slasher, the kind of man you wouldn’t suspect at the DMV until he lunged across the counter with a scalpel.

The Rex Theater: Popcorn and Panic

The genius of Anguish lies in its second layer: the audience inside the Rex theater watching The Mommy. Their panic mirrors our own. As the killings in The Mommy escalate, patrons in the Rex feel ill, grow restless, check watches, fidget. And then the real terror begins: a man in the Rex, clearly unhinged, pulls out a gun and starts murdering patrons, syncing his actions with the killings in The Mommy.

It’s one thing to watch a horror film about a maniac in a theater. It’s another to sit in an actual theater watching Anguish, wondering if the sweaty guy three rows back is about to act out. In 1987, this was creepy. In today’s world of real-life theater shootings, it’s flat-out prophetic. The movie folds reality into itself like origami — except the paper is smeared with buttered popcorn and blood.

Patty and Linda: Final Girls Squared

Talia Paul, as Patty, embodies the panicked, crying teenage girl who can’t articulate why she’s so scared until reality confirms her instincts. Her friend Linda (Clara Pastor) is braver, escaping to get help — only to nearly be forgotten in the chaos. They’re not complex characters, but they don’t need to be. They’re anchors, pulling us through a story that’s constantly threatening to collapse in on itself. Patty’s climactic “vision” of John gouging her eye is horrifying not because it’s real, but because it doesn’t matter whether it’s real — trauma is trauma, hallucination or not.

Bigas Luna, Trickster Director

Bigas Luna never lets you breathe. Every time you think you know which layer of reality you’re in, he yanks the rug. Just when you’re sure you’re safe in the Rex, you’re not. Just when you’re sure the horror is over, it turns out that was a film within a film. And just when you’re ready to laugh at the trick, he leaves you queasy, wondering if you’ll ever trust a movie screen again. It’s exploitation dressed as art-house, or maybe art-house dressed as exploitation. Either way, it sneaks up behind you with a scalpel.

Why It Works (and Why It Shouldn’t)

On paper, Anguish sounds ludicrous. A hypnotized son carving out eyes? A copycat killer slaughtering theater patrons in sync with the movie onscreen? A final twist that reveals we’ve been watching yet another audience watch all of this? This should be incoherent. It should be a parody. But Luna’s commitment is absolute. He shoots The Mommy like a grainy, schlocky American horror film — all lurid close-ups, sweaty faces, and surgical blades. Then he shoots Anguish’s theater segments with documentary precision, the camera lingering on nervous faces, popcorn bags clutched too tightly. The juxtaposition is unsettling: one half trash, the other half art. Put together, they burrow under your skin.

Zelda, Again (Because How Could We Not?)

Let’s be clear: without Zelda Rubinstein, this doesn’t work. Her mother-from-hell performance is the anchor in the madness. Even when she’s overacting, she’s riveting. She turns the line “Bring me their eyes!” into both a demand and a prophecy. If you ever had a boss, a nun, or a terrifying mother-in-law who could make you wilt with one sentence, you understand Alice Pressman. Zelda was small, but her presence loomed large enough to bend the movie around her.

Dark Humor in the Gory Details

There’s a streak of wicked comedy running through Anguish. John hunting people for their eyes is grotesque, but also absurd — you half expect him to open a contact lens shop with the results. The theater patrons panicking are us, squirming in our seats, but also a send-up of horror audiences who claim they’re too tough to be rattled. Luna is laughing at us even as he’s scaring us. And that final reveal — that we too are just another audience in another theater — is a cruel joke. Congratulations, you paid money to be mocked.

The Real Horror

Watching Anguish today is unsettling in ways Luna couldn’t have predicted. Theater shootings aren’t a gimmick anymore; they’re a nightmare ripped from headlines. That gives the film an unintentional modern resonance, making it more disturbing now than in 1987. What was once experimental metafiction now plays like a grim prophecy.

Final Curtain

So is Anguish good? Yes, perversely, it is. It’s messy, overblown, and sometimes unintentionally funny, but it’s also unique. It’s not just a horror movie; it’s a commentary on horror movies, audiences, and the uneasy relationship between screen violence and real violence. Zelda Rubinstein may have had a reputation offscreen, but onscreen she was unforgettable, and Anguish is her wickedest showcase.

In the end, Anguish isn’t just about eyes being gouged out. It’s about cinema itself staring back at you — and asking if you’re sure you want to keep watching.

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