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In the Mouth of Madness [DVD]

4.6 out of 5 stars 6,326 ratings
IMDb7.1/10.0

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January 1, 1997
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$14.95
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Genre Mystery & Thrillers, Action & Adventure
Format Anamorphic, Dolby, Closed-captioned, Color, NTSC, DVD, Full Screen, Widescreen
Contributor Charlton Heston, Frances Bay, Jrgen Prochnow, Kevin Rushton, Bernie Casey, Wilhelm von Homburg, John Carpenter, Peter Jason, Julie Carmen, Sam Neill, Michael De Luca, Gene Mack, John Glover, David Warner See more
Language English
Runtime 1 hour and 35 minutes

Product Description

Product description

The mind-bending worlds of author H.P. Lovecraft have long interested horror directors, but the films have rarely successfully captured his nightmarish mix of madness and mythology. John Carpenter's In the Mouth of Madness is not directly based on

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The mind-bending worlds of author H.P. Lovecraft have long interested horror directors, but the films have rarely successfully captured his nightmarish mix of madness and mythology. John Carpenter's In the Mouth of Madness is not directly based on Lovecraft's work, but screenwriter Michael De Luca draws his inspiration from Lovecraft's Cthulu mythology and then adds his own ingenious twists. John Trent (Sam Neill), an insurance investigator recently fitted for a straightjacket, tells his story to a psychiatrist. Hired to track down the missing pop-horror phenomena Sutter Cane, a Stephen King-like author whose fans are literally made for his books, Trent finds the supposedly fictional Hobb's End. He watches the town collapse into madness, murder, and monstrous transformations: the fantastic horrors of Cane's novels played out in front of his eyes. "Reality isn't what it used to be," deadpans one zombielike townsperson. In fact, it is how Cane writes it--but is he Devil, dark oracle, or simply a preacher in the service of an evil that grows stronger with every soul his books convert? The script never quite gets a grip on the blurry relationship between fact and fiction, but those details fade in the face of Carpenter's demented imagery, shiver-inducing twists, and dark wit. It's more eerie mind game than straight-out horror, a portrait of a world gone mad, and Carpenter relishes every hallucinatory moment. --Sean Axmaker

Product details

  • Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ 2.35:1
  • Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ R (Restricted)
  • Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.5 x 5.5 x 0.75 inches; 3.2 ounces
  • Director ‏ : ‎ John Carpenter
  • Media Format ‏ : ‎ Anamorphic, Dolby, Closed-captioned, Color, NTSC, DVD, Full Screen, Widescreen
  • Run time ‏ : ‎ 1 hour and 35 minutes
  • Release date ‏ : ‎ January 1, 1997
  • Actors ‏ : ‎ Sam Neill, Jrgen Prochnow, Julie Carmen, David Warner, John Glover
  • Subtitles: ‏ : ‎ English
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), English (Dolby Digital 5.1), Unqualified
  • Studio ‏ : ‎ New Line Home Video
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 078062856X
  • Writers ‏ : ‎ Michael De Luca
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 6,326 ratings

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4.6 out of 5 stars
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Awesome Shout! Factory Collectors Edition Of John Carpenters in the Mouth of Madness
5 out of 5 stars
Awesome Shout! Factory Collectors Edition Of John Carpenters in the Mouth of Madness
I wanna start off by saying too many people on here think this is their own personal movie 🎥 critics lounge 🍿 it’s actually a store where people come to buy products that’s what you’re given an actual product review not a movie review with that being said let’s get started. This review is for Shout! Factory collectors edition Blu-ray DVD of John Carpenter’s in the Mouth 👄 of Madness It’s an excellent HD transfer and very good audio, it also has an assortment of special features check out my pictures above to see exactly what comes on the Blu-ray Disc.!! Thank you sincerely JTriplett
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2009
    According to John Carpenter, "In the Mouth of Madness" is the capstone of his "Apocalypse Trilogy" - Part 1 begun in 1981 with his masterful reinvention of 50's B horror classic "The Thing," where a long-frozen, world-conquering alien "force" is unthawed in Antarctica, with potentially global-annihilative results.

    Part 2 according to Carpenter came six years later, with his "heady, post-graduate-minded Einsteinian horror classic," - PRINCE OF DARKNESS, a wonderfully inventive, thoughtful, if not entirely "logical" (well, isn't that the point of the "horror" genre anyway? "Abandon all logic, all haven, all hope for salvation ... Ye who [foolishly] enter here!"). In "Prince," Carpenter once again designs a "modern" world, not unlike "The Thing," only set in sunny, mostly upscale California, with a team of university physicists, radiologists, mathematicians, linguistics scholars, philosophers and a priest (underplayed brilliantly, as usual, by the incomparable, late Donald Pleasance) - pitted against a "secret which can no longer be kept" - namely, "Satan's son," trapped for over 7 million years inside of a weird, metallic cistern, which, creepily enough, "can only be opened from the inside." Triggered by a super nova perhaps (we're never entirely sure), Satan's son, having been buried in the Middle East long ago after his father was somehow, "banished to the darkside," is now awakening, and proceeds to slice, dice, and "water gun" its way through the team of stalwart scientists. Here again we see shades of "The Thing," with the scientists on the short end of the "magic wand" to repel it.

    Now enter Part 3 - "In the Mouth of Madness" - the FINALE! Because the end is TRULY nigh. Whereas in parts 1 and 2, the "unspeakable beast" only wreaked "local havoc" (with major caveats), NOW we are, as a race - WHOLLY DAMNED!! And Carpenter makes no ambiguity of our fate. As John Trent (Sam Neill) muses ruefully from the sanctum of his padded cell to his pychiatrist (David Warner): "Every species can smell its own extinction. The last ones left won't have a pretty time of it. In ten years, maybe less, humanity will be nothing more than a bedtime story to 'them,' a myth they tell to their children..."

    "ITMOM" is a difficult film in that so much of it is ... ostensibly random, "diaboli dictu;" many of the scenes underline incredulity, and the plot is ostensibly, almost irrelevant. What IS relevant is that the world is going to hell, and everyone who reads "Sutter Cane" (a not-so-subtle play on "Stephen King") SPEEDS along the return of "nameless, shambling things; The Old Ones" ala H.P. Lovecraft.

    Carpenter piles on "the works" without worry of logic or storytelling coherence, because - as we're told - "reality isn't what it used to be anymore." It sure isn't. As Trent is on a bus back to Manhattan, Sutter Cane mysteriously appears in the seat next to him, and - because Cane is "God" now (self prescribed) - it is axiomatic that he can do anything. So he says to Trent, "Did I ever tell you that my favorite color is blue?" Cut to the next scene, where Trent wakes up, and the entire bus and passengers are gelled in a blue filter. Naturally, Trent screams and is awakened by his fellow passengers, who try to comfort him, "Hey mister, it's okay. You just had a bad dream."

    Lots of clever tropes infuse "Madness" throughout, although this 3rd installment, by DESIGN, is THE LEAST easy to take of the 3 "apocalypses." Nevertheless, the brilliance of Sam Neill (remember him as grownup Damien from "Omen 3?") more than carries this finale. In fact, "In the Mouth of Madness," or so I have discovered for my own viewing purposes, has a FAR GREATER appeal to me NOW, on DVD, than when I first saw this film back in 1993 at the Theatre. Dark spirits only know why?

    But it can't be coincidence that Carpenter laid out his trilogy - very numerologically NEATLY so. Every film, from "The Thing" to "Madness," was made 6 years apart (1981, 1987, 1993) - 666! Or, more correctly, 66... unless Carpenter's oevre up until "The Thing" might be considered his "first 6." Another trope. Another mystery. Another thing to make us go, "hmmmmmm ...".

    But to be certain, as Sutter Cane (well rendered by Jurgen Prochnow) tells Trent, "My first books were something. But this next one is going to drive the whole world ABSOLUTELY MAD!" And the addition of late cinematic maven Charlton Heston as Arcane Publisher Jason Harglow, is revealing. Remember Heston's earlier career when he was in such apocalyptic roles as "The Planet of the Apes" could inspire? Coincidence here? In Carpenter's able horror-craft hands, we would do well not to question "The Master."

    This one is for PURE HORROR ENJOYMENT strictly! Abandon ALL logic. The scientists and wonks from Parts 1 and 2 are probably all dead by now anyway. "Do YOU read Sutter Cane?"
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  • Reviewed in the United States on July 26, 2018
    John Carpenter's 1995 film "In the Mouth of Madness" is in my opinon his most underrated directorial effort. Featuring a cool story of H.P. Lovecraftian inspired intrigue and mayhem, the film has grown in stature over the years after initially bombing theatrically. It also features one of actor Sam Neill's best and most entertaining performances to date.

    Previously released on blu-ray by New Line back in 2013, that disc was actually no slouch at the time featuring a good transfer and an encode usually topping out in the upper 20's in terms of megabits per second. It was pretty bare bones however featuring a commentary track with John Carpenter and the beyond bored sounding and uninterested cinematographer Gary B. Kibbe. Carpenter tries his best but Kibbe just sounds like he does not want to be there. The theatrical trailer was also included.

    Leave it to the fine folk at Scream Factory to give the film some collector's edition attention 5 years later. Their new disc features a new 4K transfer from "original film elements" which I am assuming would be the original negative if they went with a full 4K transfer and not the interpositive which is odd that SF would list it that way. Regardless this transfer is a marked improvement on the original 2013 disc. Color saturation is much better and more natural. It also features a higher bit rate staying around 35 mbps. One other thing that I noticed doing direct comparisons between the two discs is that the SF edition features more picture information on all sides of the frame, most noticeably on the bottom. The 2013 disc looks zoomed in comparison. No digital sharpening or noise reduction appears to have been done on the new disc as well. Detail is immaculate on the new transfer. Audio is presented in lossless 5.1 sounding full and well balanced. English subtitles are also included.

    As for the rest of the disc, here is the full list of specs:
    NEW 4K Scan Of The Original Film Elements
    NEW Audio Commentary With Director John Carpenter And Producer Sandy King Carpenter
    NEW Horror’s Hallowed Grounds – A Look At The Film’s Locations Today
    NEW The Whisperer Of The Dark – An Interview With Actress Julie Carman
    NEW Greg Nicotero’s Things In The Basement – A New Interview With Special Effects Artist Greg Nicotero Including Behind The Scenes Footage
    NEW Home Movies From Hobb’s End – Behind The Scenes Footage From Greg Nicotero
    Audio Commentary With Director John Carpenter And Cinematographer Gary B. Kibbe
    Vintage Featurette – The Making Of In The Mouth Of Madness
    Theatrical Trailer
    TV Spots

    While the extras are definitely more plentiful on the new disc, it still feels a bit light for it to be labeled a collector's edition. However all of the new stuff is quite informative and the new commentary track is a huge improvement on the original one which was also included.

    This new edition of this often underappreciated film is well worth double dipping on if you have the 2013 disc. The new transfer is immaculate and the host of new special features are most welcome too.
    161 people found this helpful
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  • Ben30
    5.0 out of 5 stars THE U.S. SCREAM FACTORY REISSUE IS THE BEST BLU-RAY TO GET
    Reviewed in Australia on August 5, 2018
    John carpernter's lost classic IN THE MOUTH OF MADNESS has finally been given the respect it deserves
    by U.S. company Scream factory
    first of all Scream factory gave the film a new 4k restoration 2:35: HD transfer which looks incredible quality 10/10
    plus the sound mix is also excellent with new 5.1 master mix
    EXTRAS lots of new extras
    a new audio commentary with John carpenter & producer wife Sandy carpenter
    a new interview with Actress Julie carmen
    a new interview with special efects master Greg nicotero
    plus lots of behind the scenes special effects footage courtesy of Greg nicotero
    pus stills Photo Gallery, plus the original trailer in new HD quality
    plus the old extras carried over from the very old region 1 dvd
    which is the old dvd commentary with John carpenter & on the set behind the scenes interviews
    this new blu-ray reissue is the best version to get of this classic Horror film no Doubt about it
    10 times better than the old dvd version
    but you need all regions blu-ray player for sure, Scream/shout factory is a small company from Los Angeles
    who's blu-ray reissues are only region A locked
    so 5 stars all the way but any Aussie buyer needs a all regions blu-ray player for the Disc to work.
  • Mario
    5.0 out of 5 stars Basada en un relato de H.P. Lovecraft.
    Reviewed in Mexico on October 9, 2023
    Buena adaptación de la historia de Lovecraft. Varios idiomas de audio y en los subtítulos.
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  • 近藤 茂.
    5.0 out of 5 stars 懐かしい映画
    Reviewed in Japan on March 28, 2022
    最初に観た時はVHSでしたが、DVD化されて良かったです。

    ジョン・カーペンターの作品はホラーだけじゃなくて不思議な世界観があるので楽しんで観ます
  • Amazon Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best!
    Reviewed in Canada on December 6, 2023
    One of the best from John Carpenter! With an H.P. Lovecraft twist!
  • David Palomar
    5.0 out of 5 stars Una joya de película
    Reviewed in Spain on January 2, 2025
    Me encantó su ambientación y misterio, no puede faltar en tu colección si te gusta el terror, misterio de antaño.