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IMDbPro

Asylum of Darkness

  • 2013
  • Unrated
  • 1h 57m
IMDb RATING
3.5/10
381
YOUR RATING
Asylum of Darkness (2013)
HorrorSci-Fi

After awakening in a mental asylum, a patient plans an escape to freedom, but finds an even more disturbing, supernatural world on the outside, one that threatens to keep him trapped in madn... Read allAfter awakening in a mental asylum, a patient plans an escape to freedom, but finds an even more disturbing, supernatural world on the outside, one that threatens to keep him trapped in madness forever.After awakening in a mental asylum, a patient plans an escape to freedom, but finds an even more disturbing, supernatural world on the outside, one that threatens to keep him trapped in madness forever.

  • Director
    • Jay Woelfel
  • Writer
    • Jay Woelfel
  • Stars
    • Nick Baldasare
    • Amanda Howell
    • Richard Hatch
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.5/10
    381
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jay Woelfel
    • Writer
      • Jay Woelfel
    • Stars
      • Nick Baldasare
      • Amanda Howell
      • Richard Hatch
    • 14User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos33

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    Top cast39

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    Nick Baldasare
    Nick Baldasare
    • Dwight Stroud
    Amanda Howell
    Amanda Howell
    • Ellen
    Richard Hatch
    Richard Hatch
    • Dr. Shaker
    Frank Jones Jr.
    • Van Gogh
    Tiffany Shepis
    Tiffany Shepis
    • Hope, Dwight's Wife
    John Hawk
    John Hawk
    • Artemis Finch
    Tim Thomerson
    Tim Thomerson
    • Detective Brent Kesler
    Patricia McBride
    • Jackie
    Robert Lacy
    • Morning Guard
    Matt Proctor
    • Orderly
    Scott Summitt
    Scott Summitt
    • Oscar Werner
    Liz Wheeler
    • Jackie's Neighbor
    Cash Kimmerle
    • Neighbor's Husband
    Cole Geschwender
    • Neighbor's Kid
    Tanya Hutchins
    Tanya Hutchins
    • News Anchor
    Jodiviah Stepp
    • Police Officer #1
    Josh Kalani
    • Police Officer #2
    John Kuhn
    • Event MC
    • Director
      • Jay Woelfel
    • Writer
      • Jay Woelfel
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    3.5381
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    10

    Featured reviews

    4kannibalcorpsegrinder

    Really problematic but still somewhat enjoyable

    After awakening in a mental asylum, a patient plans his escape to freedom and manages to successfully enter modern society only for his constant visions and psychological problems to continually manifest themselves in order to drag him back to the asylum and forces him to find out why.

    For the most part, this one wasn't all that bad of an effort. One of the strongest aspects here is the fact that this one generates a really impressive and somewhat disorienting atmosphere that's really engaging and appealing. The fact that majority of the first half concerns the ability to make it nearly impossible to tell what's going on here, as the atmosphere found within this section of whether or not he's really going through the insanity of the situation with his weird visions of people with distorted faces following his dreams gives the film quite an odd start. As well, the rather odd manner in which this is jokingly referred to as a normal situation by the staff despite the obvious discomfort of the visions makes for a chilling setup here. The way in which he continually experiences the strange faceless beings and creatures coming after him, from the hallucinatory chase in the house, his encounter in the cemetery or the continued visions he has with the strange creatures while being around his wife which gives this some solid work to build off of. The second half gets the creatures to interact with him a little more vigorously, letting the hospital encounter, a stellar hallucination sequence where he cuts up the members of a boardroom meeting as well as the finale in the underground bunker that resolves this nicely all giving it a solid amount of gore and solid creature make-up for the different demonic creatures here. However, none of these factors can overcome the fact that there's just no reason for anything that happens here. It just goes from one seemingly unconnected sequence to another that all supposedly feature his deteriorating mental state yet nothing is really done about making sure it all relates to anything. The fact that he's insane and supposedly living a different person's life is no excuse for why nothing here makes sense, why it goes from him in the asylum to suddenly now a husband and living with the wife despite being two different people as none of this is explained. The chance to explain it all never comes as to why they believe he's the dead person and is able to suddenly become a different person as the flimsy nature it occurs here is begging for more of an explanation yet it never occurs. Likewise, the fact that the film is so bland and lifeless doesn't really do it many favors either, taking far too long to get the switch going and featuring way too much downtime to really be of much interest. The endless scenes of him at the book-signing, trying to appeal to his wife's good side to get her to trust him following the behavior switch and in general just going around trying to uncover his true identity make this one so dreary and dull that it sloughs along at a bland clip, and with a nearly two-hour running time it really could've been put to far better use moving the pace of this one along. These two issues here are in fact so crippling that they manage to overcome much of what good this film accomplishes.

    Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence and Graphic Language.
    7jmbwithcats

    a weird, but intriguing movie.

    Watching Asylum of Darkness... it's a weird, but intriguing movie... its weirdness is actually what keeps me interested... it reminds me of the feel of Necronomicon (1993) or other Lovecraft-influenced stories, tales from the crypt, creepshow... it's pretty insane, with a lot of gory alien-ness and old B movie sci fi actors from the '70s and '80s... I have to say it's a lot better than I thought it would be... totally crazy movie...

    Richard Hatch (Battlestar Galactica) is great, and apparently this is the second film in a trilogy... Season of Darkness (2012) is part 1, this is part 2, and Heartland of Darkness which I'm not sure if it ever came out...

    This is considered the "lost" film of Scream Queen Linnea Quigley (Silent Night, Deadly Night, The Return of the Living Dead, A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master). Director Eric Swelstad abandoned the project before finding a distributor and the title has yet to be released to a mass market audience. Over the years various producers including Jim Wynorski, Rob Spera and Jody Savin have expressed an interest in putting the finishing touches on the film, with the intention of finally releasing it.

    Showing a poor 3.3/10 rating on IMDb, to me is so undeserved and likely from people who aren't embracing of low budget weird horror... but I think they're treating it unfairly... my rating: 7/10
    7Richard_Dominguez

    Strange But Interesting

    This Has A Very Love-Craftian Taste To It (Although There Is No Reference) But I Thought This Was A Bit Of A Good Surprise ... An Escaped Patient Tries To Make Sense Of The World Outside The Asylum As Everyone Sees Him As Someone He Isn't ... As The Truth Of What Is Going On Unravels Itself He Finds That To Make Things Right He Must Delve Deeper Into The Insanity ... The Acting Is Not Top Notch But The Story Is Interesting And Captivating ... Fans Of H.P Lovecraft Would Enjoy This One ...
    2medelste

    A boring, scattershot mess

    I decided to watch this because it stars Tim Thomerson and the late Richard Hatch, both sci-fi stars of yesteryear (Trancers and Battlestar Galactica respectively). The six reviews as of this writing were also above average, praising the twisty, innovative, and unpredictable plot. Well, apparently I watched a different film. This thing is a boring unfocused mess. It jumps from scene to scene with no discernible pattern or purpose, let alone character development. People are slashed, tentacled monsters crawl into orifices, and all to absolutely zero purpose. The excuse (as stated in the IMDb summary) is that the main character is committed to an asylum and therefore insane. But this proves nothing and is no reason to abandon screenplay logic. It is also childishly easy to predict which episodes aren't real. If the six critics listed call this stew "unpredictable", then I recommend viewing 1990's "Brain Dead", starring Bill Pullman and Bill Paxton. Now THAT is a disorienting and effective asylum chiller. Or if it's inspired gore you're after, try the blood-spattered "Insanitarium" from 2008 instead. Either one is preferable to "AOD".

    Now for the acting. As I said above, it was Thomerson and Hatch that initially drew me in. Somehow I think both of them knew exactly what they were signing up for, and totally mailed it in. I've seen boards that are less wooden. As for the main star (Nick Baldasare), the less said about his sleepy zombie-like acting, the better.

    Were I forced to praise something (anything?) about this film, it would be the gore and monster effects, which are fine. Blood is blood, and a gouged eyeball is a gouged eyeball. But there are far better asylum films to choose from. I strongly suggest you do so.
    5Wuchakk

    It's, um, creative

    A murderer (Nick Baldasare), who has been assigned to a mental institution after being declared "not guilty by reason of insanity," escapes the state hospital and assumes the identity of another man. Curiously, the man's wife accepts him (Amanda Howell) and the hallucinatory story proceeds from there.

    "Asylum of Darkness" (2013) was originally called "Season of Darkness" when it was screened at a festival, but the distributor adjusted the title for its 2017 release. It was written, scored and directed by Jay Woelfel for $200,000, shot in his hometown of Columbus, Ohio. Despite the micro-budget, it's artistic in its depiction of reality from the delusional mind of an insane person. The old school practical effects are mostly effective, but sometimes cartoonish and goofy.

    It's technically superior to Woelfel's spare-change budgeted "Ghost Story" (2004); and the story is more compelling compared to his "Closed for the Season" (2010). Unfortunately, it's overlong and Tiffany Shepis' role is too small; she should've played the wife IMHO.

    However, if you like artsy indies and are patient, you'll probably find something to appreciate. It's too puzzling for my tastes, but at least it's different.

    Richard Hatch and Tim Thomerson appear in peripheral roles. It runs 1 hours, 57 minutes.

    GRADE: C.

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    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in L'Empire contre-attaque (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The last film Richard Hatch completed before his death. Hatch started other films, some of which were completed, but his part in those films was less than intended due to his dying before those films were completed.
    • Quotes

      Van Gogh: There's danger in what we see. This insane reality can look back and see us.

    • Crazy credits
      The end credits roll the opposite of the standard way, scrolling from the top of the screen to the bottom.
    • Alternate versions
      Originally screened under the title "Season of Darkness" (which is the title of Artemis Finch's autobiography), but the distributor changed the name to "Asylum of Darkness."
    • Connections
      Referenced in Garch the Great: Beyond Dream's Door (2025)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 26, 2013 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Season of Darkness
    • Filming locations
      • Columbus, Ohio, USA
    • Production company
      • Season of Darkness LLC
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 57m(117 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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