Asylum of Darkness backdrop
Asylum of Darkness

Asylum of Darkness

There Is Evil Inside Us All

4.8 / 1020121h 57m

Synopsis

Mental patient Dwight Stroud escapes from an asylum and is mistaken for a motivational speaker named Artemis Finch who has money and women at his command. Dwight accepts the craziness of the situation, but as strange faceless figures begin to hunt him down, Dwight must deal with an escalating spiral of supernatural danger and hallucinations.

Genre: Horror

Status: Released

Main Cast

Nick Baldasare

Dwight Stroud

Amanda Howell

Amanda Howell

Ellen

Richard Hatch

Richard Hatch

Dr. Shaker

Tim Thomerson

Tim Thomerson

Detective Kesler

Tiffany Shepis

Tiffany Shepis

Hope

Frank Jones Jr.

Van Gogh

John Hawk

Artemis Finch

Patricia McBride

Patricia McBride

Jackie

Scott Summitt

Oscar Werner

Trailer

User Reviews

Wuchak

**_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