Rating: NR
Genre:
Horror
Release Date: 03/06/2001
Dubbed: English
Sound: 1
Run Time: 81 min
Distributor/Studio: Image Entertainment
An ex-butcher (
Victor Buono) escapes from an institution and wreaks havoc with a varied array of meat cutters.
~ John Bush, All Movie Guide
Heavyweight movie heavy
Victor Buono (
Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? and
King Tut on the '60s-era
Batman TV series) has a rare leading role in this macabre Italian/West German-produced
black comedy.
Buono is
Otto Lehman, a recently institutionalized Viennese butcher whose return to normal life and his beloved shop is jeopardized by the constant nagging of his wife (
Karin Field). After strangling her in a fit of anger,
Lehman disposes of her body by adding it to his sausages, which unexpectedly become a hit with the local populace. The diabolical deli man soon seasons his recipe with other troublemakers, including a prostitute and his slovenly brother-in-law, and his designs on a lovely neighbor (
Franca Polcelli), before the police and an intrepid newsman (screen strongman
Brad Harris) intervene. Directed with broad strokes by
Guido Zurli from a schticky, lurid script by co-producer
Dick Randall (
Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks),
The Mad Butcher is a largely bloodless affair, despite its gruesome premise. Most of its objectionable scenes involve
Buono leering at or pawing his female castmates while in various states of undress, making it more of a
sexploitation comedy-thriller than outright
horror.
Buono is the main reason to watch the film, showing off his considerable clowning skills in a deft parody of his deranged screen roles (in particular, his 1964
The Strangler). Though lighthearted in tone, the story is based on the unpleasant real-life case of
Fritz Haarman, who butchered young men and sold their flesh as meat in pre-World War II Germany (
Haarman was the subject of 1973's
The Tenderness of Wolves).
Image Entertainment and
Something Weird Video's letterboxed DVD presentation includes the original trailer, as well as a handful of previews from American distributor
Harry Novak's
Boxoffice International library. Two cannibal-themed shorts, including the haunting and bizarre
Cannibal Massage, are also featured.
~ Paul Gaita, All Movie Guide