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IMDbPro

Amok, l'homme à deux têtes

Titre original : The Incredible 2-Headed Transplant
  • 1971
  • R
  • 1h 28min
NOTE IMDb
3,6/10
1,9 k
MA NOTE
Bruce Dern, Casey Kasem, and Pat Priest in Amok, l'homme à deux têtes (1971)
Dr. Roger Girard is a rich scientist conducting experiments on head transplantation. His caretaker has a son, Danny, who, although fully grown, has the mind of child. One day an escaped psycho-killer invades Girard's home, killing Danny's father before being gunned down himself. With the maniac dying and Danny deeply unsettled by his father's death, Dr. Girard decides to take the final step and transplant the killer's head onto Danny's body. Of course, things go horribly wrong and the two-headed creature escapes to terrorize the countryside.
Lire trailer2:09
1 Video
29 photos
HorreurScience-fiction

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueDr. Roger Girard, a mad scientist who dares to combine two heads onto one body, despite serious consequences.Dr. Roger Girard, a mad scientist who dares to combine two heads onto one body, despite serious consequences.Dr. Roger Girard, a mad scientist who dares to combine two heads onto one body, despite serious consequences.

  • Réalisation
    • Anthony M. Lanza
  • Scénario
    • James Gordon White
    • John Lawrence
    • Ross Massbaum
  • Casting principal
    • Bruce Dern
    • Pat Priest
    • Casey Kasem
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    3,6/10
    1,9 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Anthony M. Lanza
    • Scénario
      • James Gordon White
      • John Lawrence
      • Ross Massbaum
    • Casting principal
      • Bruce Dern
      • Pat Priest
      • Casey Kasem
    • 47avis d'utilisateurs
    • 54avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:09
    Trailer

    Photos29

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    Rôles principaux25

    Modifier
    Bruce Dern
    Bruce Dern
    • Roger
    Pat Priest
    Pat Priest
    • Linda
    Casey Kasem
    Casey Kasem
    • Ken
    Albert Cole
    Albert Cole
    • Cass
    John Bloom
    John Bloom
    • Danny
    Berry Kroeger
    Berry Kroeger
    • Max
    Larry Vincent
    Larry Vincent
    • Andrew
    Jack Lester
    • Sheriff
    Jerry Patterson
    • Deputy
    Darlene Duralia
    • Miss Pierce
    Raymond Thorne
    Raymond Thorne
    • Motorcyclist
    • (as Ray Thorn)
    Gary Kent
    Gary Kent
    • Motorcyclist
    • (as Donald Brody)
    Mary Ellen Clawsen
    • Motorcyclist
    Janice P. Gelman
    • Teenager
    Mike Espe
    • Teenager
    Andrew Schneider
    • Teenager
    Eva Sorensen
    • Teenager
    Bill Collins
    • Highway Patrolman
    • Réalisation
      • Anthony M. Lanza
    • Scénario
      • James Gordon White
      • John Lawrence
      • Ross Massbaum
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs47

    3,61.9K
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    Avis à la une

    telepinus1525

    An awesome performance by...Larry Vincent!

    It seems funny that for all the well-deserved plaudits this grade-Z gem attracts, nobody mentioned the great performance by the actor playing Danny's father, Larry Vincent! That's right, none other than "Sinister Seymour" himself doing the honors as good old Andrew Norton, the doc's faithful gardener in one of his too-few appearances on the big screen. All I can say is, if you were too young to remember the early 70's, you definitely missed one the best things about watching late-night TV in Los Angeles. Long before MST3K or Elvira, Seymour's "Fright Night" on Saturday nights was THE thing to watch. Nowadays, if I see "-Transplant-" in the local listings, I turn it on in the first fifteen minutes (before the killer gives him a messy send-off with a garden hoe) just to watch his rare talent. Ah, Larry, you left us too soon...
    3BaronBl00d

    "Dr. Gerard Must Have Been Brewing That Jekyl/Hyde Joy Juice"

    A maniacal killer's head is fused to the lumbering, gargantuan body of a man with the mind of a small child by a scientist who just happens to specialize in fusing two-headed creatures in his spare time. Why? He says to show everyone what a genius he is. Why on Earth would anyone want to create a monster with two heads - neither containing the brain of anything remotely resembling worthiness? Such is the premise in this bizarre, fascinating, and God awful film made in 1971. Bruce Dern plays the "mad" scientist with decided disinterest. Can you blame him? He strolls around with drink in hand and never shows any real depth of character. By the film's end, his performance just caves in. The two-headed monstrosity, which battles bikers on bikes wielding chains and has a cumulative IQ of 60, is a true sight of ineptitude to behold. John Bloom, who would later get an even worse role as Frankenstein's Monster in Al Adamson's horrendous opus Dracula Vs. Frankenstein, plays Danny - a hulking man that lost his mind when he was left for dead in a mine shaft years ago. Now an adult, Danny is dutiful to his father, is treated like a mental defective by all concerned, and sweats a lot. The head of Albert Cole, a man who we see leering or laughing with crazy glee, is attached when Cole tries to rape Dern's wife(more on her in a minute) and kills Danny's father. Dern and his limp-wristed former surgeon assistant(Barry Kroeger) feel the time is right to make a two-headed freak with the body of Cole at their disposal and the mentally deficient Danny just there. This movie is a real hoot to sit through as every minute in bad - bad but fun. The story stinks. Director Anthony Lanza has little savvy. The production values virtually non-existent(although the head thing looks better here then some of the other two--headed monsters of the same era). Acting? What acting? C'mon - Casey Kasem as a doctor/hero? Dern looks like he lost a bet and had to be in the picture. Cole is annoyingly disgusting and ridiculous. Bloom is okay at best. But I really liked Pat Priest as Dern's wife. She sure didn't give a great performance, but she made a believer out of me as she fainted(several times), ran from crazy Cole, lounged in a chair by the pool, laid in bed either of her own accord or bound and gagged, and finally was tied and put in a cage in the lab - all in either a bikini, a small nightie, or some other light attire that showcased her attributes, the brightest things about this dreadful dreck. This movie is very, very bad, and I must confess I loved every minute of it. I laughed and laughed and laughed. Just hearing that soundtrack where every beat foreshadows something suspenseful will happen and rarely does. Or how about the dialog used in the picture? Whew! This is one of the all-time great of le bad cinema.
    Infofreak

    Laughably silly Seventies Drive-In schlock. Not Bruce Dern's finest hour, but still a real hoot!

    Call me demented but I loved this absolutely silly piece of 1970s Drive-In schlock! Director Anthony M. Lanza only made one other movie as far as I know, one I've been wanting to see for years, a 60s biker flick starring Dennis Hopper and Casey Kasem called 'The Glory Stompers'. Kasem returns in this one to play the concerned best friend of "mad" scientist Dr. Roger Girard played by cult favourite Bruce Dern (Kasem and Dern had previously played brothers in another 60s biker movie 'The Cycle Savages', a trash classic I highly recommend.) Dern, just like those scientists in 'Donovan's Brain', has his own lab in his home which he conducts his own private research, assisted by his crippled mentor Dr. Max ('Demon Seed'). Research, by the way, involving head transplants. So when a psychopath (Albert Cole) escapes on a rampage and kidnaps Dern's pretty blonde wife (Pat Priest of 'The Munsters'), it doesn't take long to figure out that the Doc is going to be operating on him soon. Especially when there is a handy mental defective (John Bloom, from 'The Hills Have Eyes 2') available (his caretaker's son). Now Bruce Dern is one of my favourite 1970s actors ('Bloody Mama', 'Silent Running', 'The King Of Marvin Gardens'), and I'd watch him in just about anything, but this must be the stupidest movie he has ever been involved in! Disinterested viewers who don't enjoy 60s and 70s exploitation and monster movies may find it just TOO stupid to get into, but I thought it was an absolute hoot, and loved every minute of it!
    4Boba_Fett1138

    Totally insane...that's why it's still fun.

    Obviously this is a bad movie. But what else did you expect from a movie with a title such as this one has. I'll admit, this movie its title is the only reason why I really wanted to see it and no, I also certainly don't regret I did. Yes, it's still being a bad movie but it's just one of those movies that is fun to watch, regardless of how bad things get in this movie.

    The movie does work out as fun because of its insane and silly concept. Main concept of the movie is a scientist experimenting on putting two heads on one body. But I seriously still don't understand with what purpose the professor was executing his experiments. As far as I understood it, it all had something to do with successfully transplanting limbs from one body onto another but this all doesn't explain why our dear professor and his disabled assistant are experimenting with putting extra heads onto animals bodies. But needless to say that this is simply one of those movies you really shouldn't think too much about, while watching it.

    I was really interest to see how they had done the two heads effect on one human body in this movie. The answer is; poorly. It's quite laughable actually. For certain shots they used an obvious (very) fake puppet head, that never gets shown from the front and for its close-ups it's basically the one guy standing very close behind the other guys back, to create the illusion of two heads on one body. This should pretty much sum up how this entire movie is being like. Silly, cheap, poorly done and just overall bad but you still can't help being amused by it all.

    No, it's not really a story with much good story and that also is really foremost its downfall. This movie could had still been a much better and more entertaining one if more was happening in it. Now the 'monster's rampage doesn't happen until far into the movie. It's all such a big waste and shame. Surely they could had come up with some more original and entertaining stuff than what they show in the eventual movie. They waste too much time with this movie by setting up its shallow characters and shaky plot, that is being filled with holes and inconsistencies.

    I also just love it how mentally challenged persons why behave like little kids in movies always wear dungarees. In this movie that isn't any different and he's constantly wearing the same sweater as well in this movie to complete things. I also just love how insane and over-the-top the smirking murderer is in this movie. Those two are the persons who get attached to one and the same body in this movie, so prepare yourself for lots of insane madness.

    The movie foremost sounds like a crazy B-monster movie from the '50's and for most part the movie is also really being that way but it it's actually an '70's movie, so it's still has lots of hints of the exploitation genre in it as well. The movie is not that bloody or gory but it still features plenty of killings and also some nudity. The camera-work and especially its editing are being quite experimental at times, which also makes it all the more apparent that you're watching an '70's movie here.

    Funny that somehow Bruce Dern ended up being in this mess, that foremost is still being a silly/bad fun one to watch.

    4/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    5MartianOctocretr5

    Two heads are weirder than one

    Casey Kasem, Marilyn Munster, Bruce Dern, and Seymour in a campy horror cheapsterpiece that is good for some laughs.

    Bruce Dern is a mad doctor/scientist, and of course, nobody has ever seen a mad scientist in a movie before. He concocts a plan to take a dead head off one guy, and surgically attach it to another guy. Neither he nor you will ever know why he wants to do this, but it provides the backbone for this juicy camp novelty, that looks to have been made on a budget of about ten bucks, and two S&H green stamps. Casey Kasem was not doing a top 40 show or Scooby Doo cartoon that week, so he drops by. He's a colleague of Dern, but not nuts like Dr. Dern is. I love the scenes where our hero, Dr. Kasem, turns on the radio, to listen to his own voice doing the radio news announcer. Pat (Marilyn Munster) Priest is the blonde bombshell romantic interest (of more than one character, if you catch my drift). And of course, the two-headed transplant: both actors combine to actually give this awkward looking beast some real emotion.

    They're all good, in a campy way, but a special treat this movie had was a popular local late night horror host seen here in L.A. in those days, named Larry "Seymour, the Master of the Macabre" Vincent. He used to offer up golden turkey monster flicks, in order to poke fun at their awfulness, MST3K style. He roasted himself for doing "Transplant," although his all-to-brief screen before making a routine horror film exit, was actually pretty good acting. Sadly, Seymour died fairly young, leaving this as one of his few film appearances.

    The idea is goofy, but the script has enough going on that the actors can work with it. They all seem to have had fun making the flick, too. Considering the z-budget, it's not bad at all. This can actually be entertaining if you go in expecting dumb but amusing camp.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      During a 1978 interview on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, Bruce Dern revealed he was not paid for his role in the film. He was issued a check for $1,700 during filming, and when he went to the bank to cash his check, the check bounced. When he returned to the set on the next day scheduled for filming, the set had already been shut down.
    • Gaffes
      Cass is noticeably breathing after Dr. Max declares him legally dead, and Max and Roger operate on Cass.
    • Citations

      Danny: [as the 2 headed monster wakes up] Daddy. Daddy.

      Cass: Whatta you know. He can talk.

      Danny: Who are you?

      Cass: I'm your brother.

      Danny: I don't have a, a brother.

      Cass: You do now. I don't like it any better. But until we can do something about it, I'm running this monster, understand?

      Danny: Uh, my neck hurts.

      Cass: My neck hurts, stupid. Don't you see what these maniacs had done to us?

      Danny: Stop jerking around. You and I are now one, dummy. Let's stand up. I'll show you.

      Cass: [as the monster gets up and starts walking for the first time] Aaaagh! I gotta teach the moron to walk.

    • Versions alternatives
      The "Midnight Movies" DVD from MGM has violence restored that was cut for its original "GP" rating. Most notably the death of the mentally challenged man's father with a shot of his bloody head from the garden rake and the murder of the biker has additional hits and shots of biker's face being bloody from the chain beating by the creature.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Chiller Theatre: The Incredible Two-Headed Transplant (1975)
    • Bandes originales
      Incredible
      Lyrics by Barnabus Hill

      Music by John Hill

      Sung by Bobbie Boyle

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    • How long is The Incredible 2-Headed Transplant?Alimenté par Alexa
    • How did they get Casey kasem to be in this movie?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 25 mai 1979 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Mutation
    • Lieux de tournage
      • I.P.C. Studio One - Hollywood, Californie, États-Unis(filmed at)
    • Société de production
      • Mutual General
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 354 664 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 28min(88 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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