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| Index | 16 reviews in total |
14 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
Price's Best, 11 August 2001
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Author:
Orcini from Queens, NY
Even though it has one of the standard "Revenge Price Plots," this film is my favorite of Vincent Price's work. Gallico has that quality that is missing in so many horror film characters- likeability. When you watch it, you feel for him, you feel his frustration, the injustices against him, and you cheer him on when he goes for vengeance, even though he frightens you a little with his original fury. As the film goes on, his character becomes tragic. He's committed his murder, but now he must kill to cover that up. And again to cover that one up. And again... your stomach sinks with his soul as it goes down its spiral- like watching a beloved brother turn into a hood. Even if the revenge story is of old, the plot devices themselves are original- Gallico uses his tricks to kill in more and more inventive ways. A shame this one isn't available for home veiwing.
10 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
Typical Vincent Price, 2 June 2000
Author:
Hitchcoc from United States
The wronged artist is the theme of so many revenge horror movies. Going back to "The Phantom of the Opera," the unjustly maimed or wronged bring vengeance to their adversaries. No one could look more pained when victimized than Vincent Price. He is the master of the hang dog expression. In this one, he is a magician and master of high tech disguises (for the time) who has sold his talents to another man, seemingly for the rest of his life. When he decides to freelance and do his own magic show, his contract is waved in his face. Not only that, but the man who owns him also stole his wife years before. So there is even more bitterness brewing. The plan becomes to get rid of all the people who wronged him, then, through the use of clever masks, keep the people alive by impersonating them. He even "becomes" one of the great magicians of the world, showing his incredible talent. This is a silly, unbelievable movie. But who cares. I don't think I'll get it mixed up with Schindler's List. The hardest thing to swallow was why these two successful men had anything to do with Eva Gabor and why the Vincent Price character could have cared less when she ran off. She has no redeeming qualities in the movie other than her beauty, and that is so flamboyant and self centered, who cares. Every time Vincent Price was in disguise, it was easy to see who it was. Nevertheless, I've always loved Vincent's mugging from his Roger Corman films to "The Last Man on Earth." I liked the way he said "Crematorium." Why, exactly, does it have an automatic pilot that sends the body into the flames if it is not activated within a certain period of time? There is also a subplot with a mystery writer and her husband who bumble their ways into the plot. If you like the campy world of Price, watch it on the late show.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
No One Takes Revenge Like Vincent Price!, 31 December 2009
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Author:
Benjamin Gauss from Salzburg, Austria
The great Vincent Price has done many fantastic Horror films, some of
which range among the greatest genre gems of all-time. Price's greatest
achievements were doubtlessly his films in the 60s, with films such as
Roger Corman's brilliant Poe-cycle (still the greatest Horror cycle of
all-time), Michael Reeves' "Witchfinder General" (1968) or Ubaldo
Ragona's "The Last Man on Earth" (1964) marking the ultimate highlights
of this brilliant man's career. The films that made the man famous and
thereby made him the immortal Horror icon he is, however date back to
the 50s, with "House of Wax" (1953) marking his rise to stardom. "The
Mad Magician" of 1954 follows a plot that is very similar to that of
its successful predecessor. This is not to say, however, that this film
isn't an original, delightfully macabre and absolutely wonderful gem
itself. As the lines above may suggest, Vincent Price is my favorite
actor, and, while I personally would not allow myself to miss anything
the man has been in, none of my fellow fans of the man may miss this
little gem.
Price stars as Don Galico (aka. Galico the Great), an underrated master
magician and inventor of magic devices, whose boss, a sleazy
businessman, stole his wife (Eva Gabor) from him. When the boss takes
away one of Galico's ingenious inventions and gives it to his rival,
The Great Rinaldi (John Emery), Galico snaps, and a murderous spree of
revenge begins...
Don't we love Vincent Price when he's out for revenge? Some of his most
famous and greatest films such as "The Abominable Dr. Phibes" (1971) or
"Theater of Blood" (1973) were about absurd and delightfully macabre
revenge murders, and this earlier film in his Horror career is another
proof that no one takes revenge as Vincent Price does. This film
provides a wonderfully eccentric leading role for Price, who, as
always, delivers a brilliant performance, and guarantees 70 minutes of
outrageously entertaining and macabre fun for every Horror fan. Another
must-see for my fellow Price fans.
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Melodrama and magic, 6 November 2008
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Author:
lorenellroy from United Kingdom
This is essentially a variation on House Of Wax ,in both the plot and
the type of role played by the star of both movies ,Vincent Price.In
both pictures he plays a talented artist who is sent toppling over the
edge into insanity when his creations are usurped by other,less
talented and less scrupulous people .In this movie he plays a designer
of illusions for stage magicians who aspires to set out on a performing
career himself only to be frustrated when another illusionist ,the
Great Rinaldo (John Emery)insists that he honour his contract and give
him first choice of any illusions he designs.Price is already ill
disposed towards Rinaldi as his former wife is now a paramour of
Rinaldi. He deploys his talents as an illusionist and as a brilliant
mimic to avenge himself upon Rinaldi and others who thwart his plans
for recognition as a performer and a designer.
Price is pretty much the whole show here and gives a well judged star
turn as a wronged man whose predicament earns audience sympathy.The
rest of the cast are competent if colourless and the weight of the
whole venture falls on Price who carries the burden with ease .
Good solid B Movie melodrama , this is a crime movie rather than a
horror picture and is enjoyable providing you don't expect a
masterpiece .Shot in black and white it is low on gore and is best seen
as melodrama and enjoyed for the presence of its star giving an
idiosyncratic performance
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Revenge of the Magician..., 20 August 2007
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Author:
babeth_jr from United States
I just recently watched this 1954 movie starring Vincent Price for the
first time on Turner Classic Movies. Price portrays Don Gallico, a
magician/inventor who is driven to murder when his boss steals several
of his magical inventions (and also his wife, portrayed in a brief role
by the lovely Eva Gabor). Even though Price is a murderer, I actually
found myself rooting for him, he is a sympathetic character who is
driven mad by the greedy people around him who keep taking advantage of
him.
Although this movie doesn't have the "horror" factor of some of his
more famous roles (such as my favorite, "House of Wax") it nonetheless
has enough going for it to keep the viewers interest.
This is a must for Vincent Price fans.
4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
The Vigorous Vincent! The Phenomenal Price!, 8 March 2009
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Author:
Coventry from the Draconian Swamp of Unholy Souls
Basically the exact same movie as "House of Wax" - Vincent Price's first genuine horror hit released the previous year - but seriously who cares, because "The Mad Magician" offers just as many sheer thrills, delightful period set-pieces, joyous 3-D effects, sublime acting performances and macabre horror gimmicks as its predecessor! "Never change a winning team" is exactly what writer Crane Wilbur must have thought when he penned down Price's character Don Gallico, another tormented soul besieged by fate and out for vengeance against those who wronged him. Don Gallico is about to perform his very first own illusionist show as Gallico the Great and plans to exhibit the greatest magic trick in history; entitled "The Girl and the Buzz Saw". Gallico's promising solo career is abruptly ruined before it even begins when his previous employer Ross Ormond appears on stage and shoves a contract under his nose, stating that all of Gallico's inventions are the rightful property of the company. The sleazy and relentless Ormond, who by the way also ransacked Gallico's once beloved wife, takes off with the buzz saw trick and programs it in the show of Gallico's rival The Great Rinaldi. Inevitably Gallico snaps and sadistically butchers Ormond, but also being a master of creating disguises recreates his victim's image and even starts leading a double life. "The Mad Magician" is an amusing and thoroughly unpretentious 50's horror movie in Grand Guignol style, with a whole lot of improbably plot twists (the landlady turns out a brilliant crime novelist?) and a handful of fantastically grotesque gross-out moments (although they obviously remain suggestive for most part). The 3-D delights near the beginning of the film, like a yo-yo player and a goofy trick with water fountains, merely just serve as time-filler and contemporary 50's hype, but it's still fun to watch even now and without the means to properly behold them. "The Mad Magician" is also interesting from a periodical setting point of view, as the events take place around the time fingerprints were starting to get used as evidence material and the character of Alice Prentiss is an obvious reference towards famous crime authors of that era. Needless to state that Vincent Price remains the absolute most essential element of triumph in this film, as well as from nearly every other horror movie this legendary man ever starred in. Like no other actor could ever accomplish, Price depicts the tormented protagonist who gradually descends further and further into mental madness in such an indescribably mesmerizing way. You pity Don Gallico, yet at the same time you fear him enormously. You support his vile acts of retaliation and yet simultaneously you realize his murderous rampage must end in death. Vincent Price simply was a genius actor and, in my humble opinion, the embodiment of the horror genre.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Vincent Price turns to murder to protect his magic act..., 31 October 2010
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Author:
Neil Doyle from U.S.A.
The only ingredient missing in this VINCENT PRICE tale of horror is
Technicolor which might have provided even more interest in this
murderous tale of a magician who kills in order to protect his
inventive magic act.
First to go is a partner with whom he has a violent argument and is
given the buzz saw treatment. Then, JOHN EMERY, a rival magician who is
foolish enough to steal from Price and threatens to reveal what he
knows about the death of Price's partner. Emery has a grand time
matching his scene stealing tricks with Price.
Skillfully directed by John Brahm, a section of the film dealing with
the bonfire is reminiscent of a similar moment from Brahm's HANGOVER
SQUARE when Laird Cregar delivers the body of a woman to be consumed by
fire.
Acting is uniformly excellent and the script moves at a fast pace under
Brahm's direction. Once again, Vincent Price delivers a first-rate
performance in a shuddery role. The suspenseful moments lead to an edge
of your seat climax involving a crematorium device.
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
THE MAD MAGICIAN (John Brahm, 1954) ***, 23 January 2010
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
Vincent Price's follow-up to HOUSE OF WAX (1953), the film which cemented his reputation as a horror icon, similarly revolves around a bitter albeit resourceful showman. Though a remake, the former (shot in Technicolor) remains the superior effort; that said, apart from some resistible comic relief, the obligatory resort to cheap gimmickry (it was another 3-D showcase) and occasional narrative shortcomings (whatever happened to the missing bag which supposedly turned up at some police station containing a severed head?), this offers more than enough Grand Guignol-type thrills and overall camp value (Price hamming it up in a variety of disguises as an inventor of illusions impersonating 'missing' star conjurers who had taken advantage of his genius) to stand on its own two feet. Incidentally, director Brahm's involvement here proves no mere coincidence since the narrative incorporates elements from two horror titles (both starring Laird Cregar) he had previously helmed i.e. THE LODGER (1944) and HANGOVER SQUARE (1945). The young leads are played by Mary Murphy (as Price's ingénue assistant) and Patrick O'Neal (as her police detective boyfriend curiously enough, he would himself take the lead in a similar piece, CHAMBER OF HORRORS [1966], which I have acquired just in time to serve as an encore to this one). An interesting sideline here is the latter's adoption of a novel detection technique, fingerprinting, which is crucial in bringing about Price's downfall (in a predictable but rather awkward fiery climax) though the persistent snooping of his amateur crime novelist landlady has at least as much to do with it in the long run! Watching the star in a made-to-measure role, the film emerges a good deal of fun particularly at a compact 73 minutes.
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
A 3-D follow-up to HOUSE OF WAX, 19 August 2007
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The film begins with Vincent Price about to begin his performance as a
magician. However, mid-way through the very successful show, the police
come and shut him down. It seems that his old boss had cheated him out
of the tricks Price had created--even those he made on his own time at
home. As a result, Price justifiably kills the evil man. The problem is
that while the viewer understood why Price killed and most probably
thought this was a GOOD thing, because Price was a bit mad, he just
couldn't stop at one (sort of like eating Lay's Potato Chips).
The film was full of very creative and spectacular magic tricks
(including a huge circular saw and a crematorium for the shows), great
plot twists as well as exciting action. One thing you can't say about
this film is that it is dull. While it's also far from subtle, it is
fun throughout, though and well worth a look.
Had I never seen Vincent Price's version of HOUSE OF WAX, I probably
would have liked THE MAD MAGICIAN a lot more and scored it an 8 or 9.
That's because while THE MAD MAGICIAN is a wonderful film, it's highly
reminiscent of the film that preceded it (HOUSE OF WAX). The bottom
line is that since HOUSE OF WAX was so successful, the formula was
re-hashed in the follow-up film. Both were made in 3-D, both have a
plot where Price has every justification to kill but he can't stop once
he's committed the first and both are great fun to watch. The biggest
differences, and there are few, are that HOUSE OF WAX was in color and
was more of a horror film and THE MAD MAGICIAN was definitely more of a
mystery.
My advice is to see this film AND HOUSE OF WAX (the Price version
only). They are both terrific 1950s horror films.
Could Be the Most Little Known of Price's Best Work, 8 November 2010
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Author:
gavin6942 from United States
A magician (Vincent Price) is screwed out of money by a business
partner who owns the rights to his stunts. This does not sit well, and
soon a murderous streak begins...
I had never heard of this film before, and none of my horror references
books mention it. Not the general reference ones or the ones covering
the period. How it got overlooked, especially starring Vincent Price,
is beyond me.
It's a great story, with good magic tricks and a phenomenally amazing
performance from Price. Eva Gabor also appears, and there is hardly a
dull moment. The makeup and costumes department, as well as those who
built the contraptions, really deserve to be honored for this one.
To my knowledge, it has not been released on DVD... except in Germany.
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