Monday, 3 February 2025

Reflections on ... The Mafu Cage (1978)

 

/ Above: Carol Kane (as Cissy) and Lee Grant (as Ellen) in The Mafu Cage directed by Karen Arthur /

Recently watched: The Mafu Cage (1978). Tagline: “A terrifying love story.”  

Basically, nothing I say can prepare you for this truly disturbing and hypnotic oddity. Ellen (Lee Grant) and Cissy (Carol Kane) are two adult sisters leading an isolated, codependent existence in a palatial mansion somewhere in Los Angeles. We gradually learn that both their parents are dead; they grew up in the jungles of Africa, there’s a vague sense of unspecified trauma in their past, and that their father was an anthropologist who studied simians. Cissy still yearns for Africa and has seemingly never adjusted to life in the US. Level-headed, responsible and maternal Ellen combines her career as an astronomer at Griffith Observatory with caring for mentally fragile Cissy, who is childlike, ethereal – but also capable of shocking brutality. When Ellen develops romantic feelings for a male colleague, the sisters’ delicate equilibrium swiftly unravels with horrific consequences ... (Note that while Kane has the showier role, Grant is equally remarkable. Both actresses are exemplary). 


/ Carol Kane in The Mafu Cage /

The Mafu Cage is “horror adjacent” without being remotely kitsch, camp or exploitative: it's a deeply cerebral psychological meditation on insanity and claustrophobic, dysfunctional family dynamics. I’d argue relevant reference points would include What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962) by Robert Aldrich, Secret Ceremony (1968) by Joseph Losey, That Cold Day in the Park (1969) and 3 Women (1977) by Robert Altman and the 1975 documentary Grey Gardens. Unsurprisingly, the distributors were flummoxed about how to promote this curiosity: it was marketed as a horror flick under various titles including Don’t Ring the Doorbell (“Chop, chop … Slice, slice … Another man would be so nice!”), My Sister, My Love and Deviation. The Mafu Cage was little seen at the time but has gradually been embraced as a cult film. Warning: some of the images in The Mafu Cage will haunt your subconscious forever! A bonus: the supporting cast includes Will Geer (Grandpa Walton)!

Watch The Mafu Cage on YouTube. 

4 comments:

  1. Big fan of both actresses. Grant took no crap from anyone in the industry. Kane was simply a remarkably talented soul. This is on my next Friday to watch list. Thanks.

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  2. Okay, watched it. Ummm... disturbing beyond my wildest dreams. Great film in many ways... direction, most of the acting (James Olson fails to make much an impression - except a creepy one - his seduction of Lee Grant feels predatory rather than sensual - on purpose? I dunno), cinematography, even the script. This was a marketing failure. The film deserved better. I understand the producer went bankrupt shortly after the film's release. Kane and Grant are very good in this. It deserved more attention... and maybe a different title? l know they tried several... but, as it feels a bit like Baby Jane - why not What's The Matter With Ellen? Kizzes.

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    1. PS - I despise animal cruelty as entertainment... and it is my one bone of contention with the film - if Sissy keeps killing animals, maybe... oh, I don't know... not GIVE Sissy animals to kill? I guess Ellen must really have been blindly in love with her sister, but after the first mafu dies, I'd have been calling the men in the little white coats.

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    2. Oh I agree with everything you say! I definitely would be wary of "recommending" The Mafu Cage as it's a profoundly disturbing and even traumatic watch! But wow - a fascinating work. It's good that over the years it's being more widely seen and reappraised.

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