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Mad Love
Overlook Pick

Mad Love

A new, a strange, a gifted personality comes to the screen!
70
User Score124 ratings
TMDB 7.016+19351h 8mEnglish
HorrorRomance

Synopsis

An insane surgeon's obsession with an actress leads him to replace her wounded pianist husband's hands with those of a knife-throwing murderer.

Director
Karl FreundFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer1 production companies
Release
July 12, 1935Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 49
Peter Lorre
Peter Lorre
Doctor Gogol
Frances Drake
Frances Drake
Yvonne Orlac
Colin Clive
Colin Clive
Stephen Orlac
Ted Healy
Ted Healy
Reagan
Isabel Jewell
Isabel Jewell
Marianne (scenes deleted)
Sara Haden
Sara Haden
Marie
Edward Brophy
Edward Brophy
Rollo
Henry Kolker
Henry Kolker
Prefect Rosset

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
John Chard
Mar 17, 2019

Chilling. Brilliant surgeon Dr. Gogol is infatuated with Horror Theatre star Yvonne Orlac. After meeting her in person and realising that she only has eyes for her husband, the renowned pianist Stephen Orlac, he buys a life size mannequin of her and dreams of doing what Pygmalion did with Galatea. When Stephen is involved in an horrific train crash and has both his hands crushed beyond healing, Yvonne pleads with Gogol to help save his well being, he does, by amputating the crushed hands and grafting on the hands of a recently executed murderer, a murderer whose speciality was knives! Mad Love is one of those amazingly old classics that is a hybrid of genre staples. At times it's surrealist and at others it's operating via a Grand Guginol pulse, whilst knowingly it laces the story with an uneasy comedic bent. Boasting camera work from Gregg Toland and Chester Lyons and directed by the impressive Karl Freund, this adaptation of Maurice Renard's novel is a chillingly memorable piece of work. Working off a plot that sees the bad Doctor driven by lustations rather than out and out insanity, Freund revels in slowly winding the coil until the spring that is Peter Lorre (Gogol) explodes (implodes), cloaking various scenes in telling shadows that themselves become integral to the plot. Peter Lorre is of course in his element, demented yet sympathetic, it's real hard to take your eyes away from his magnetic weirdness. Colin Clive as Stephen Orlac also puts in a performance of note, all twitchy nervousness and believable emotional torment, whilst Frances Drake more than adequately brings vulnerability to the centrifugal importance of Yvonne's emotional turmoil. Weird and gorgeous, and incredibly well written, Mad Love holds up very well today as a horror/romance film of vast influential worth. So see it in the dark and marvel at its various moments of cinematic excellence. 8.5/10

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