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Elmer le remue-méninges

Titre original : Brain Damage
  • 1988
  • 16
  • 1h 24min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
14 k
MA NOTE
Rick Hearst in Elmer le remue-méninges (1988)
One morning, a young man wakes to find that a small, disgusting creature has attached itself to the base of his brain stem. The creature gives him a euphoric state of happiness but demands human victims in return.
Lire trailer1:15
3 Videos
73 photos
Body HorrorDark ComedyComedyHorrorSci-Fi

Un matin, un jeune homme se réveille et découvre qu'une petite créature dégoûtante s'est attachée à la base de son tronc cérébral. La créature le plonge dans un état de bonheur euphorique, m... Tout lireUn matin, un jeune homme se réveille et découvre qu'une petite créature dégoûtante s'est attachée à la base de son tronc cérébral. La créature le plonge dans un état de bonheur euphorique, mais exige en retour des victimes humaines.Un matin, un jeune homme se réveille et découvre qu'une petite créature dégoûtante s'est attachée à la base de son tronc cérébral. La créature le plonge dans un état de bonheur euphorique, mais exige en retour des victimes humaines.

  • Réalisation
    • Frank Henenlotter
  • Scénario
    • Frank Henenlotter
  • Casting principal
    • Rick Hearst
    • Gordon MacDonald
    • Jennifer Lowry
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    14 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Frank Henenlotter
    • Scénario
      • Frank Henenlotter
    • Casting principal
      • Rick Hearst
      • Gordon MacDonald
      • Jennifer Lowry
    • 85avis d'utilisateurs
    • 126avis des critiques
    • 61Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos3

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:15
    Trailer
    Brain Damage: Murder On The Toilet
    Clip 1:38
    Brain Damage: Murder On The Toilet
    Brain Damage: Murder On The Toilet
    Clip 1:38
    Brain Damage: Murder On The Toilet
    Brain Damage: Train Ride
    Clip 1:44
    Brain Damage: Train Ride

    Photos72

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 66
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    Rôles principaux21

    Modifier
    Rick Hearst
    Rick Hearst
    • Brian
    • (as Rick Herbst)
    Gordon MacDonald
    • Mike
    Jennifer Lowry
    Jennifer Lowry
    • Barbara
    Theo Barnes
    Theo Barnes
    • Morris
    Lucille Saint-Peter
    Lucille Saint-Peter
    • Martha
    Vicki Darnell
    Vicki Darnell
    • Blonde in Hell
    Joseph Gonzalez
    Joseph Gonzalez
    • Guy in Shower
    • (as Joe Gonzales)
    Bradlee Rhodes
    Bradlee Rhodes
    • Night Watchman
    Michael Bishop
    Michael Bishop
    • Toilet Victim
    Beverly Bonner
    Beverly Bonner
    • Neighbor
    Ari M. Roussimoff
    • Biker
    • (as Ari Roussimoff)
    Michael Rubenstein
    • Bum in Alley
    Angel Figueroa
    • Junkie
    John Reichert
    • Policeman
    Don Henenlotter
    • Policeman
    Kenneth Packard
    • Subway Rider
    Artemis Pizarro
    • Subway Rider
    Slam Wedgehouse
    • Mohawked Punk
    • Réalisation
      • Frank Henenlotter
    • Scénario
      • Frank Henenlotter
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs85

    6,514.1K
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    10

    Avis à la une

    10paintedwallpaper

    campy original horror at its best.

    you know, i just went to see House of Wax the other day, and ten years after scream came out why are the same boring plots with the same boring characters doing the same stupid mistakes our only option for horror these days.

    i suggest going back 20 years to the 70's and 80's if you want to find some great horror. horror then was low budget but imaginative. the movies had interesting story lines and were not shy about blood and gore. a good stepping stone for this sub-genre is one of my current favorites, Brain Damage. It starts off on a very surreal note, but mixes its strangeness with an accurate portrayal of a young man hopelessly addicted to the mother of all drugs. his dealer is perhaps the most unique little monster in all of horror, Aylmer (pronounced "elmer").

    Aylmer is a purple cucumber shaped alien with a tiny smiling face and a soft warm voice. he finds a host, and injects his host with a blue liquid that comes out of one of Aylmer's fangs. this "brain juice" jacks up its host into a hullucionary state. while the host is in la-la land, Aylmer makes a victim of whoever the host comes in contact with, eating the victims brains.

    as vile as all that sounds, it is hard to see Aylmer as evil. he is just such a nice little guy. plus he is unique in his appearance, personality, and attacks, which all go a long way with me in a modern world of horror villains pushed off an assembly line.

    this movie is not winning an Oscar. it is strange and campy and violent. but if that is what you desire in a film, this hidden gem may become one of your favorites!
    7PredragReviews

    Feed your head.

    Are you tired of the sameness of Hollywood's over-priced commercialized dross? Check out Mr. Henenlotter's work today. This is a weird film, but in a good way. Elmer is a parasite who will get you high in exchange for brains. The problem was the old people was feeding him animals brain, so Elmer decide to find a new host. The young man was getting so high that he didn't know what Elmer was up to. Elmer didn't care just as he was getting human brains.

    The film is also a moral warning about the effects of drugs - they make you feel great at first but before long you're addicted to them, you've screwed your life up and you'll do literally anything to get the fluids you're now dependent on. A very black form of comedy with a serious edge to it, and the inner-city locations provide an excellent atmosphere. Very original, with good writing, and neat visuals for such a low budget.

    Overall rating: 7 out of 10.
    6gavin6942

    Henenlotter's Third Best Film

    One morning a young man (Rick Hearst) wakes to find a small, disgusting creature has attached itself to the base of his brain stem. The creature gives him a euphoric state of happiness but in return demands human victims.

    After "Basket Case", Frank Henenlotter wanted to do a project called "Insect City", but that fell through due to funding and other issues... so he instead went for a twist on 1950s science fiction. He posited the idea: what if someone had a parasite, but one they actually wanted? This is an interesting concept, and was fleshed out to the idea of an "aylmer", this creature that was passed down from great ruler to great ruler for centuries. The story was so well-written that you feel it must have been at least partially based on some legend. Nope, just Henenlotter's genius.

    The film is now widely seen as a metaphor for drug addiction, or addiction in general. But interestingly, this seems to be an afterthought. Henenlotter said the idea came to him like this: first, he thought of a creature attached to someone who needs to kill. But then, going with the concept of a "welcome" parasite, he wondered why the host would allow this, so he came up with the drug aspect. So rather than this being a story about the side effects of drugs, it is actually quite the other way around...

    And, of course, as a selling point we have Henenlotter gore. While this film ranks beneath "Basket Case" and "Frankenhooker" as far as overall quality, it has some of the best gore... with scenes that had to be cut (for both the MPAA and the distributor!) but have since resurfaced. For those who love extreme films, the alley scene can only be enjoyed uncut.

    As a bonus for horror fans, we even have the voice of Zacherle. Interestingly, Zacherle worked uncredited because he was in SAG and could not be in a non-union film at the risk of getting fined or tossed out of the union. His voice being so recognizable, some saw his lack of credit as an insult, but just the opposite was true: to give him credit would have opened him up to great punishment!

    The legacy of "Brain Damage" cannot be ignored. Like all other Henenlotter films, it has acquired a cult following. Not as much as "Basket Case", but more so than "Bad Biology". And lead actor Rick Hearst has done well for himself, going from this independent production to becoming the king of daytime television, becoming a regular on no fewer than five soap operas! Quite the change of pace from low budget gore.

    But most interesting is probably editor James Kwei, whom most people have never heard of. Kewi had been in horror for a while with "Christmas Evil", "Maximum Overdrive" and others. But after this, he increasingly became associated with the films of Martin Scorsese, including "Goodfellas". While he had already been with Scorsese since "After Hours" (1985), it was at this point (1988) where he really switched gears.

    The Arrow Video Blu-ray is crammed fuller than Mr. Creosote. There is a brand new audio commentary by Frank Henenlotter and several featurettes. We have "Listen to the Light: The Making of Brain Damage", a brand new documentary featuring interviews with actor Rick Herbst, producer Edgar Ievins, editor James Kwei, first assistant director Gregory Lamberson, visual effects supervisor Al Magliochetti and makeup artist Dan Frye. There is "The Effects of Brain Damage" with FX artist Gabe Bartalos, and "A Look Back" with assistant editor Karen Ogle.

    And still more... "Elmer's Turf: The NYC Locations of Brain Damage", sort of a supplement to the tour Henenlotter gives on the "Basket Case" Blu-ray. The interesting "Tasty Memories: A Brain Damage Obsession" interview with superfan Adam Skinner. A "Brain Damage" Q&A with Henenlotter recorded at the 2016 Offscreen Film Festival. And certainly not least of all, "Bygone Behemoth" (2010), an animated short by Harry Chaskin, featuring a brief appearance by John Zacherle in his final on screen credit.
    doktor d

    Juice me up! Henenlotter's most entertaining work

    Frank Henenlotter's 'Brain Damage' (1987) is easily the director's best film, esp. when considering the solid performances, technical proficiency and fascinating storyline. Aylmer, a rather large, penis-shaped parasite, gives unsuspecting Brian brain damage by getting him hooked on an hallucinogenic, blue fluid that Aylmer himself produces. Oh, the colors! But the thousand-year-old worm-like parasite demands something in return for the buzz - human brains! Aylmer and his actions seem to be a metaphor for drug use and addiction and convey very graphically how substances foreign to our bodies can alter our own thoughts and actions.

    Henenlotter adds context and meaning to the proceedings by creating a history for Aylmer. The parasite was sold and stolen over the centuries, until it finally ended up in the possession of Brian's neighbors. But the neighbors deprived Aylmer of his needs in order to keep him weak, and that's where the story begins. Henenlotter's films are never without heavy doses of sick humor, and the perverse highlight here is a sequence depicting a disco-whore getting her brains screwed out - literally - through her mouth. If that's not enough, the special effects in the restaurant scene, complete with spaghetti and brainballs, are particularly polished and satisfying. Ultimately, the director outplays his hand and is left with nowhere to go. Despite this weak ending, 'Brain Damage' is an odd, effective story and film, a major step up from the director's debut, 'Basket Case', but every bit as twisted. >
    8preppy-3

    Bloody, gory, sick, FUN!

    Brian (Rick Herbst) a young, handsome 22 year old is "possessed" by a talking, independent parasite (named Aylmer--NOT Elmer) which lives in his clothes and injects him with a mind-inducing drugs in exchange for brains! Brian tries to get rid of it, but realizes he's hooked on the drugs. What will he do?

    Very strange, very gory horror film with obvious drug overtones (although writer/director Frank Henelotter says Aylmer represents a penis). In terms of dialogue and characterization, this is amateur night (you know next to nothing about the characters), but the film does work.

    Herbst (now Herst) is very good-looking and pretty good as Brian. Also Gordon MacDonald as his brother/roommate is also very handsome and gives a very good, sympathetic performance. Also, each has scenes with their clothes off--not that I'm complaining! However, Jennifer Lowry as Brian's girlfriend is pretty lame.

    This was heavily cut for an R rating back in 1987--the complete version is available on DVD. It looks great, sounds great and some incredibly sick scenes are in it--all played for laughs. It's a great low-budget horror film. Worth catching.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      During the fellatio scene, the crew walked out on the production refusing to take part. A similar incident happened during the shooting of Frère de sang (1982).
    • Gaffes
      When Brian wakes up bloody, the blood on his left hand disappears and reappears between shots.
    • Citations

      Aylmer: This is the start of your new life Brian, a life full of colors, music,light and euphoria. A life without pain, or hurt or suffering.

    • Crédits fous
      In the end titles, listed under "Historical Research" is BABE WOZENTHAL. According Frank Henenlotter on the DVD's commentary, this was a joke about Jerry Lewis in "The Errand Boy."
    • Versions alternatives
      Paramount video release deletes the gory nightclub fellatio and ear-pulling scenes to avoid an 'X' rating.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Cinemassacre's Monster Madness: Brain Damage (2010)
    • Bandes originales
      Corruption
      by J. Calder, A. Boston, J.E. Garnett, B. Elsey, & B. Burton

      Performed by The Swimming Pool Q's

      Courtesy of Irving Music, Inc.

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Brain Damage?Alimenté par Alexa
    • What are the differences between the R-Rated cut and Unrated version of the movie?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 25 mai 1988 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Sin control
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Palisades Partners
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 900 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 24 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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