IN THE MOUTH OF MADNESS (1995: Dir. John Carpenter)
The year was 1995 and writer-director John Carpenter's career was faltering, yet again. Having recently experienced his most dispiriting studio production, the Chevy Chase debacle Memoirs of an Invisible Man (1992) and experimented with the entertaining but slight Body Bags (1993), a cable TV horror anthology for Showtime, designed in the style of Tales from the Crypt with the director himself in ghoulish make-up as a cadaverous host, Carpenter knew he needed to get back to what his fans and he himself knew were his strengths as a filmmaker, scaring people's socks off. He found his opportunity with a script written by young New Line Cinema studio executive Michael De Luca. If many of Carpenter's previous films had cleverly cherry-picked devices from the seminal fantastique literature of H. P. Lovecraft, he now took the opportunity to re-embrace with his horror roots by making an all-out Lovecraft pastiche. Lovecraft's mythology posited the existence of old gods returning from their trans-dimensional imprisonment to punish humankind for its misdeeds. De Luca's script takes that premise as the underpinning for a story about the disappearance of a Stephen King-like author whose writings not only drive readers insane but are in fact opening a portal to the dimension where Lovecraft's demonic deities await their resurrection. An insurance investigator played with smarmy charm by Sam Neill is the audience's cynical alter-ego, whose sanity slowly disintegrates as he witnesses reality itself being pulled apart. Tapping into the burgeoning millennial anxiety of Western culture at the time, Carpenter created his ultimate meta-film statement about the artistic responsibility of creative people and how their work is often shamelessly exploited despite the harm this does to the artist and public alike. These charismatic profiteers are amusingly parodied in the casting of a righteous Charlton Heston as the publisher who hires Neill, a benignly evil-enabling role which foreshadows Heston's own future as a messianic president of the NRA. Perhaps not unexpectedly In The Mouth of Madness was largely overlooked during its initial release but as with nearly all of Carpenter's work, its value was eventually recognized by critics and fans on DVD and Blu-Ray despite being accompanied by a most tedious technical commentary from Carpenter and his director of photography Gary Kibbe. It was to be the pinnacle of his work during the Nineties and remains his last great feature film to date. BLU-RAY REGION A