Homicidal was released theatrically in the United States on June 28, 1961. It received a theatrical run in New York City beginning on July 26, 1962. The "Coward's Corner" was a table with a nurse holding a
blood pressure cuff.
John Waters described it in his book
Crackpot. According to Castle, the gimmick worked "great," and that theaters earned an average of $20,000 weekly in box office sales, with only $100 in refunds. and placed it on its list of top ten films of the year for 1962. Other critics were not so kind.
The New York Times said "Near the end of
Homicidal, yesterday's horror entry at neighborhood theaters, the disembodied voice of William Castle, the producer-director, announces a 'fright break', during which the economy-minded viewers may return their tickets for a refund ... If the reprieve had come before the opening of this dismal imitation of
Psycho and
Mickey Spillane, it would have been a better idea."
New York Herald Tribune wrote that "Castle's shock effects are not so much of the weird or 'horror' as of the gruesome or blood-on-the-cummerbund variety."
Retrospective Though many critics were dismissive of
Homicidal upon its release, the film has since garnered a
cult following, and is regarded as one of Castle's best films.
Home media Homicidal was released on
DVD in North America by Columbia Pictures Home Entertainment in 2002. On July 19, 2016, Mill Creek Entertainment released the film on
Blu-ray as a double feature alongside Castle's
Mr. Sardonicus. In 2021 Powerhouse/Indicator Films released a high definition remaster Blu-ray, accompanied by special features. ==See also==