Picture this: you’re a hotshot young doctor, full of idealism and ambition—then told to diagnose which lunatic ran the asylum by talking to them. No résumés. No references. Just madness by monologue. That’s Asylum for you, the 1972 Amicus anthology directed by Roy Ward Baker, with four gleefully sick tales wrapped in a framing story that’s far more fun than its parts. Think of it as The Office, but if Michael Scott was interviewing inmates and occasionally got stabbed by killer mannequins.
🏥 Framing Story: Interview from Hell
Dr. Martin (Robert Powell) arrives at the notorious asylum and meets Dr. Rutherford (Patrick Magee), now paraplegic after being assaulted by the previous head, Dr. Starr. Rutherford tells Martin: to get the job, he must interview all the inmates and correctly identify which one is Dr. Starr—who’s been fully absorbed into insanity. There are no clues, just patients eager to spin their darkest stories. It’s a setup that’s equal parts Kafkaesque job screening and “guess who’s the serial killer” party game. The framing device steals the show—spooky, ironic, and surprisingly tense
🧊 Segment 1 – “Frozen Fear”: Horror in the Freezer
Barbara Parkins plays Bonnie, who helps her lover Walter (Richard Todd) murder his controlling wife Ruth (Sylvia Syms) by chopping her up and stashing the parts in a freezer. Except Ruth was dabbling in voodoo—and her dismembered corpse isn’t done yet.
This segment kicks off with brutal efficiency: one wrong shove, one wrong freeze—and then, silence. Suddenly, limbs start creeping out. The result is pure visual dread: paper-wrapped limbs, slow motion, and no scream. It’s unnerving, memorable, and makes watching your freezer on Ikea night feel uncomfortably suspicious
✂️ Segment 2 – “The Weird Tailor”: Suit Yourself—Or Die
Barry Morse is Bruno, a tailor hired by the eerie Mr. Smith (Peter Cushing) to craft a suit from magical fabric—stuff of nightmares. Smith wants a suit for his dead son, and Bruno foolishly obliges. The suit brings the corpse back, and Bruno ends that life again—only to discover the suit is off-limits.
This one has structure and swagger: slow dread, creepy mannequins, and unnerving ambiance. While the climax feels a bit rushed (suits don’t talk!), Bruno’s panic and Cushing’s ominous calm make it a standout
👭 Segment 3 – “Lucy Comes to Stay”: Friend or Foe?
Charlotte Rampling plays Barbara, haunted by her murderous (and possibly supernatural) friend Lucy (Britt Ekland). After Lucy helps kill Barbara’s authoritarian brother and their nurse, Lucy lingers—present only to Barbara.
It’s less about gore than trust and paranoia. Rampling’s performance walks the line between vulnerability and neurosis, while Ekland’s Lucy strides in like a spoiled guest who won’t leave until everyone’s dead. It’s psychological horror with a domestic knife—and genuine chills
🤖 Segment 4 – “Mannequins of Horror”: Doll Eyes, Deadly Grip
Herbert Lom plays Dr. Byron, a brilliant doctor turned obsessed creator of miniature mannequins implanted with real organs. He claims he can transfer his spirit into them. At first, it’s comedic (“killer doll!”) before becoming bizarrely creepy—ending in a tiny wax man armed with a scalpel going on its own murderous stroll.
It’s short and surreal, tying directly into the framing story—one of the few anthologies where the wraparound narrative truly matters. The doll is less Child’s Play, more abstract nightmare on a cheese budget
🎬 Roy Ward Baker’s Direction & Atmosphere
Baker, already a Hammer vet (see Quatermass and the Pit, Scars of Dracula), directs with elegance even when budgets betray him. The asylum interiors are claustrophobic; the camera glides through hallways, creeping up like uncertainty itself. The famous POV shot of Martin’s angle-shifting walk past asylum sketches is disorienting in the best way
He shifts tone expertly: icy dread in the freezer, silent menace with mannequins, and surreal fear with homicidal dolls. By the end, the framing narrative folds into its own macabre logic and the asylum’s darkest secret is revealed. Bravo for cohesion, Baker.
🎶 Music & Tone: Classical Creep
Douglas Gamley’s score, anchored by Mussorgsky’s public-domain staples—Night on Bald Mountain and Pictures at an Exhibition—elevates the film. The classical thunder frames the madness perfectly . It’s not Hammer’s gothic choir, but more because these patients don’t need a grand anthem—they need unsettling hushes and subtle piano creeps.
😂 Dark Humor & Anthology Quirks
Each segment brings its own bizarre energy:
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Paper-wrapped limbs shuffling like shivering ghosts.
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A man sewing a suit for his own death.
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Lucy’s off-kilter mayhem, played with polite venom.
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A doll stabbing a man through a dumbwaiter—doll-sized vengeance.
And Doctor Martin? He’s doing job interviews like it’s the worst HR day of his life. His incredulity becomes our anchor: Yes, this is real. No, we don’t do phone screenings.
🎯 Strengths & Weaknesses
Strengths:
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A strong, witty framing device that overshadows weaker segments.
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Visually eerie, psychologically potent direction.
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A cast that delivers: Powell’s growing dread, Cushing’s looming menace, Ekland’s unsettling charm, and Parker’s voodoo vengeance.
Weaknesses:
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Some stories feel like “promising shorts” padded into features.
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Madman identity reveal is obvious to genre pros.
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Doll segment feels throwaway—though fun.
Yet this unevenness is forgivable. The Asylum experience isn’t that every story slays—it’s that the journey is unapologetically unsettling and uneven, but never dull
⭐ Final Verdict: 4 out of 5 Insane Dolls
Asylum holds the golden key to Amicus horror: a strong wrapper, imaginative tales, and enough goosebumps to feed your nightmares. It’s like a cocktail of fear and absurdity; sometimes sweet, sometimes brutal, but never soured. It’s horror with humor, cynicism, and enough medical ethics questions to keep your night terrors educated.
So, would you take the job? Probably not. But watching is a delightfully deranged decision.

