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Schizoid

Schizoid

  • Status: Released
  • 01-09-1980
  • Runtime: 89 min
  • Score: 5.2
  • Vote count: 48

When Dr. Pieter Fales' patients start receiving ominous letters and getting murdered by an unknown black-clad assailant, he and his daughter both come under suspicion.

Klaus Kinski

Dr. Pieter Fales

Donna Wilkes

Alison Fales

Marianna Hill

Julie

Craig Wasson

Doug

Richard Herd

Donahue

Joe Regalbuto

Jake

Christopher Lloyd

Gilbert

Flo Lawrence

Pat

Kiva Lawrence

Rosemary

Claude Duvernoy

Françoise

Cindy Donlan

Sally

Jon Greene

Archie

David Assael

Barney

Richard Balin

Freddy

Fredric Cook

Willy

Kathy Garrick

Maxine

Gracia Lee

Bruce

Tobar Mayo

Fritz

Jonathon Millner

Fritz's Friend

Frances E. Nealy

Housekeepe

Kimberly Jensen

Girl on Motorbike

Jay May

Boy on Motorbike

Cindy Riegel

Secretary (uncredited)

Tony Swartz

Bartender (uncredited)

JPV852

Satisfying and somewhat effective mystery-thriller. It's another 1980s-era movie that's not entirely special but kept my attention throughout. Also fun to see Christopher Lloyd in a film early in his career (though had been on Taxi for a couple years before this release). **3.25/5**

tmdb76622195

Who is killing the women in Marianna Hill's therapy group? Is it the creepy psychiatrist Klaus Kinski? His troubled yet cute daughter Donna Wilkes (who has a brief nude scene that I had been dreaming about since McLean Stevenson's forgotten sitcom "Hello Larry")? Marianna's grinning ex-husband Craig Wasson? What about a young Christopher Lloyd, the bitter handyman? Or even the even younger looking detective Joe Regalbuto? Hill plays an advice columnist who is having more problems than a week's worth of Ann Landers letters. She is receiving death threats, and someone is killing the women in her group with a large pair of scissors. The killer, whom I figured out right away, wears a fedora and coat, a striking silhouette in the un-scary killing scenes. Hill is also messing around with the chain smoking Kinski, resulting in a sex scene I could have gone all my life without seeing. Kinski is sleeping with a stripper/patient, and he, uh, "analyzes her feelings" against a hot water heater, resulting in another sex scene I could have gone my whole life without seeing. The finale takes place in Hill's newspaper office, as the film makers drag the proceedings out by assembling all of the suspects together, like an Agatha Christie novel, except with shootings and stabbings instead of a parlor full of upper class Brits and a brilliant detective. Filmed and released in 1980, this has all the makings of a slasher film. The few killings here are not all that gory, but violent. The name cast try their best. Paulsen's direction is void of suspense as he hopes his mediocre script will carry the film. Instead, it becomes gimmicky and silly, but trudges along like this is Shakespeare. Between the awful synth score (the scissors have their own theme when they appear) and Kinski's overbaked performance, a viewer must take this with a grain of salt. I cannot recommend this.