In
looking at making a list of werewolf films that appeal to me, I discovered that
they are few and far between. Of the standard monster tropes out there, the
werewolf is indeed the poor cousin to vampires, re-animated horrors, and
spectral bad-guys. The main approach that Hollywood takes with this creature
nowadays is to posit it as a symbol of adolescent maturation, the change
brought on by puberty and all of its scary and bewildering ramifications. Thus
we have a slew of ‘teenaged werewolves’ movies and TV shows which,
by-and-large, are fairly poor-quality, inordinately focussed upon sex, and
usually comedic.
A
problem with werewolves is that they only appear at certain times, ie. whenever
it’s a full moon, which makes them rather predictable. This is especially so
when it comes to television series based upon them. Conveniently, there’s
always a full moon out when things go down on TV, whether it’s “Buffy the Vampire Slayer”, “Being Human”, “True Blood”, or “Teen Wolf”.
This can often get in the way of an audience’s ability to suspend disbelief.
Fortunately, everyone seems to agree that silver is bad for werewolves, unlike
vampire shows where nobody can seem to make up their minds about how best to
get rid of them.
The
type of werewolf film which appeals to me are the ones which take as their raison d’etre the notion of the ‘beast
within’, moving beyond the simple appearance of secondary sex characteristics
and into the realm of uncontainable rage and bestial impulses. Here, things get
far more interesting (and way less
funny). Given my preference, the list of movies narrows down even more, and, in
order to make this exercise worthwhile, I’ve had to move beyond the merely
lupine and embrace a wider scope of material which encompasses people turning
into all sorts of other creatures. Hopefully, I’ll be able to string this out
to a list of ten!
Again,
the list is completely chronological, not a ranking by quality.
Waggner, George (1941), “The Wolf-Man”
This
is the seminal Universal Horror film that really kickstarted the whole werewolf
movie genre. Lon Chaney Jr. arrives at the ancestral British seat of his
family, bringing his brash but adorable American ways to a quaint English
village. He settles in and begins to woo the daughter of the local antiques
dealer. Things are going swimmingly until the gypsies come to town and, after a
romantic evening at the gypsy fair, our American hero is bitten by a ‘wolf-like
creature’ while defending his potential new girlfriend from its ministrations.
Of course we all know what comes next...
Lon
Chaney had big shoes to fill, what with his father being the infamous “man of a
thousand faces”, and he doesn’t disappoint here in his transformation. As a
human being his distress is palpable and the audience is immediately drawn to
his plight. On the flipside, Bela Lugosi plays the first werewolf who bites
Chaney and is killed by him (with a silver-headed walking stick): this is
Dracula ‘phoning it in. Lugosi was alternately good and bad in roles, but this
is a stinker; fortunately, he’s not in it for long. They didn’t even bother to
give his character a different name!
The
plot is twisty and unnerving, leaving the viewer on their seat’s edge until the
final, tragic, scene. On top of it all, there’s a nice piece of doggerel which
gets drummed into your consciousness and which will stay with you forever:
“Even a man who is pure in heart
And says his prayers by night,
Will become a wolf when the wolfsbane
blooms
And the Autumn moon is
bright.”
Tourneur, Jacques (1942), “Cat People”
Producer
Val Lewton and Director Jacques Tourneur were brilliant when it came to making
scary movies. They never had a lot to work with, in terms of script, plot,
scenery, actors, or special effects, and yet they always came up with the
goods. On one occasion, Lewton was thrown a copy of Jane Eyre and told to “do something with this, but call it ‘I Walked With A Zombie’”; even with
those crippling limitations he made an excellent film.
Cat People is a text-book example of the sort of
magic these two could work together. The premise is crazy – man impulsively
marries an Eastern European woman he barely knows, only to regret his decision
when it turns out that she’s from a village of people cursed to turn into
panthers after dark – and yet, Tourneur and Lewton make it work. In fact, it
worked so well that RKO Pictures, the
company for which they toiled, was pulled out of an economic nose-dive and back
into the black.
The
trick they used was to let the imaginations of the audience do all of the heavy
lifting. While there is a panther in
this film, it’s in a cage at the zoo and doesn’t really cause much mayhem (a
little, not a lot). For the rest of the film, we are fed only the suggestion of
a stalking night-time menace - shadows and low rumbling growls - and yet the
presence of the werecat is palpable. Especially great is the scene at the
swimming pool where the cat bails up the hero’s new girlfriend.
The
sequel to this masterpiece is, typically, not as satisfying, but it has its
moments; Nastassia Kinski was in a re-make of this flick in 1982: ignore it,
and go for the real deal.
Cocteau, Jean (1946), “La Belle et la Bête (Beauty and the Beast)”
The
classic Perrault tale brought to life by a visionary film-maker. There is a
problem about filming this story that always makes it a tricky proposition: at
the end of the tale, just when we’ve learned to love the Beast, he turns into
some ordinary-looking guy who doesn’t quite live up to the fantasy version of
‘the hero behind the mask’ which we’ve built up in our imaginations.
Nevertheless, Belle falls into his arms and everyone lives happily ever after.
Very unsatisfying. Cocteau realised this problem early on and deals with it in
an effective, interesting and – no doubt – cost-saving manner: Belle’s evil
suitor, sworn to kill the Beast, swaps bodies with the creature, thus ensuring
that the attractive physical form and the beautiful personality are locked
together (and also that hero, villain and creature are all played by the one
actor). Belle herself comments upon the transformation that it might take some
getting used to. Interestingly, while the body swap doesn’t happen in the
Disney version, a similar sentiment is expressed by Belle in that film.
Aside
from this issue, the rest of Cocteau’s film is a sumptuous and, in places,
scary movie. The Beast’s castle is dreamlike and eerie with statues that come
to life and arm-shaped torch holders that move as the guests do. At all times
the surreal fairy-tale quality of the story is maintained. The Beast himself is
played as if reining himself in from his most bestial impulses, which restraint
and adoration are always effectively conveyed, despite layers of makeup. There
is a hair-trigger atmosphere about this film that makes it feel like a house of
cards, ready to come down at any minute, and it makes watching and re-watching
it very worthwhile.
Majewski, Janusz (1970), “Lokis – A Manuscript of Professor Wittembach”
An
excellent piece of crazy straight out of Eastern Europe. This time, there are
no canines or felines; things take more of an ursine turn and werebears are our
monster du jour. Again, most of the
horror is implied and the whole story turns on an ‘is he, or isn’t he?’
premise; however, there is a large cast of backwoods characters who do things
to each other (and to animals) which will shock you along the way. This is high
concept and very clever movie-making with a moodiness and dreaminess that
sometimes borders on the Hammer horror, but not enough to break its spell.
I
wrote an extended review of this film a couple of years ago; check it out for a
fuller overview as to why you should watch it.
Landis, John (1981), “An American Werewolf in London”
When
this movie first came out it was widely touted as the next big thing in movie
special effects. It was also noteworthy for being part of the new
‘horror-is-funny’ movement that was catching on at the time. No longer could a
horror movie be made with serious intent; if there wasn’t a heaping side-order
of humour to go with it, the studios wouldn’t even touch it.
What this film has going for it is high production values. The humour nestles within the horror, not displacing or leavening any of the drama, but – like the gate-keeper in “Macbeth” - serving as a release valve for the audience, so that they can de-pressurise before the next onslaught. As the movie theatre slowly fills up with the werewolf’s wisecracking victims and they slowly start to decay around him, we gain a psychological insight into the character, along with the horror that only rotting corpses failing to lie down can offer. The transformation scenes – so quintessential to modern werewolf fare – are excruciating and it’s a relief when they’re over.
This
movie rests securely on its debt to the previous Lon Chaney Jr. vehicle,
following in the footprints left by that earlier film. There is no happy ending
here but there are a lot of laughs and screams before the bitter end.
Jordan, Neil (1984), “The Company of Wolves”
With
this movie, we’re back in metaphorical territory. This film is based on a short
story from Angela Carter’s collection The
Bloody Chamber, a feminist re-working of many fairy-tale tropes. In this
tale we encounter Little Red Riding-Hood, but an R-rated version in which the
blood flows and keeps on flowing.
There
are a number of werewolves in this film and they each transform in unique and
interesting ways, primary amongst these is the one featured on all the posters
and promotional material, where the wolf emerges from the mouth of its human
counterpart. It’s as if the director threw down the gauntlet to his production
crew, challenging them to innovate and to keep on innovating until he called
time on the whole exercise.
The
film is a portmanteau of several
stories narrated by characters within the initial set-up: we drift from
narrative to narrative, taking the lessons to be learned and moving back to our
central players. The focus here is once more on the nature of the change from
child to adult, but not in the sophomoric “I
Was A Teen-Age Werewolf” sense. Here the purpose is to discuss gender
stereotypes and we learn that, while the men in this fairy-tale often turn out
to be monsters, the women change also and they can more than meet that
challenge.
Gans, Christophe (2001), “Le Pacte des Loups (Brotherhood of the Wolf)”
France,
probably more than any other country, is the home and source of werewolf
legendry. During the Middle Ages and into the Enlightenment, the place ran red
from supposed werewolf activity and there are many court records of people
being burnt at the stake for being shapeshifters, alongside all of the witches
that were being rounded up as well. You’d expect there to be some kind of
filmic capitalisation on this source material, but there isn’t much. This film
goes a long way towards rectifying that.
This
movie kicks off as a moody period piece; however, in short order, the director
tears a page out of Luc Besson’s playbook and it morphs into a full-on action
adventure. It’s chop-socky meets 18th Century Europe: fists and feet
(and tomahawks) fly, guns roar and swords flash; there’s damsels in distress,
suavely evil Counts to bring to justice...oh, and werewolves!
The
story revolves around the always-prepared Grégoire de Fronsac, sent by the King
of France to get to the bottom of all the rumours about werewolves running amok
in the province of Gevaudan. With his Native American manservant, Mani, they ride
into town and mayhem ensues. There’s something for everyone with this film –
it’s a guaranteed crowd pleaser.
Marshall, Neil (2002), “Dog Soldiers”
A
bunch of British SAS troopers head out into the forest for some wilderness
survival training. An accident happens, they re-group, a stranger appears and
an altercation takes place. Next thing, the soldiers are being taken out
one-by-one by something familiar with their training and weapons, and those
that don’t die seem to switch sides...
It
says something about the impact of a movie when a throwaway line uttered by a
second-string character becomes lodged in the pop-cultural consciousness to
such a degree that an entire film can be generated using that scrap of dialogue
as the punchline. That movie was “The
Matrix”; the line was “there is no spoon”; and the film it spawned was this
one. Many people hate this movie because it’s seemingly predicated upon this
one joking reference; however, I think that they’re missing the irony: isn’t a
werewolf flick supposed to be a
shaggy-dog story?
With
the exception of this one aspect, this movie has a lot going for it. The
excitement and tension are visceral; the acting is good; and the
transformations are superb. The characters are rounded, they make choices based
on their desperate situations, and the narrative flows believably from these
choices. Okay, they might be clones of roles from “Aliens” or “Predator” but,
for what this film’s trying to do, they work. After all that, for anyone who
still objects to the presence of this movie in my list, I have two words for
you: “The Howling”.
Isaac, James (2006), “Skinwalkers”
I
have an aversion to horror movie franchises and for some reason the werewolf movie
seems to lend itself to an endless parade of sequels. It seems as though it’s
not enough to make a bad lycanthrope film and quietly walk away from it; no, it’s
like there’s an unwritten law that you have to keep hammering away at it in a
pathetic attempt to improve upon the concept. Thus we have endless “Underworld” movies, an array of “Ginger Snaps” flicks and the above
mentioned slew of “Howling” films
that reached a definite nadir with “Howling III – the Marsupials”. It’s reached a stage where my eyes glaze over if
there’s even a possibility of a
werewolf in a horror film, but fortunately I wasn’t too jaded to catch this
one.
What
makes this film tick is that it’s about two sets of werewolves – a “good” clan
who have settled into town and keep their affliction under wraps, and a travelling
pack of “bad” werewolves, who enjoy killing and carnage. The baddies roar into
town looking for the youngest member of the good-guys’ pack, because a prophecy
has foretold that the kid will seriously affect the way that lycanthrope
destiny will unfold in the future (specifically by stopping all the mindless
slaughter somehow). Our bad guys are too keen to keep on keeping on, so they
decide that the kid must go.
Our
two teams collide in the town’s centre and things get wild. There are extended
chases, epic fights and gore galore. Both teams are riddled with secrets and
unresolved issues and these begin to surface, pushing the action along to a
satisfying conclusion. An extra point in this movie’s favour is that it lists
Elias Koteas among its actors and – given his penchant for quirky and offbeat
productions - this always bodes well, as films such as “Fallen”, “The Prophecy”
and even “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles”
(not the recent drek – the very, very first one) would indicate. And so far,
no-one’s made a sequel...
Bazalgette, Edward (2009), “Werewolves: The Dark Survivors”
This
is a mockumentary which was made by the Animal Planet people as a kind of a
joke. It seems kind of weird that they would have gone along with this concept,
but nevertheless, it’s out there and it works. Like any documentary tracing the
origins and lives of a particular species of creature, it traces the history of
the werewolf across the ages, positing reasons as to how the lycanthrope came
to be and then watching the animals in their normal environment. It’s a bit
like David Attenborough meets Michael Moore.
We
meet a clan of rootless werewolves, travelling across the country and trying to
keep a low profile whilst keeping body and soul together. As we learn more
about them, we observe issues of dominance within the pack structure, tearaway
youngsters bridling under the command of the Alpha Couple. We watch as they
enter town, stock up on supplies and try to earn some cash. Then someone makes
a bad mistake...
This
film is not for everyone. Certainly, if you check the online reviews, it gets
quite a drubbing from folks who watched it thinking they were going to see the
standard werewolf fare. Personally though, I quite enjoyed it, but then I am the kind of geek who likes it when
others make an attempt at combining reality with fiction. In fact, there are
quite a few people out there in the world who think that this documentary is real... It’s free to view on YouTube if
you’re interested.
*****
Well,
that wasn’t so bad: I managed to make it to ten films after all. It’s
interesting that the were-creature movie trope doesn’t have greater
representation than it does, at least in the realm of serious film-making. I
guess it’s easier to make movies about serial killers, because then the makeup
budget accounts for only a fraction of the cost. Sadly, it seems that the
lycanthropes are just there to morph, howl, rip faces off, and wait for someone
to invent a silver bullet slash dagger and end the rampage. Surely, after years
of “Werewolf: the Apocalypse” being
played by gamers worldwide, someone could come up with a better script than the
usual B-grade dross?
Being quite the fan of this particular subgenre or setup, I might point attention to another little known gem: WOLFEN (1981) by Michael Wadleigh cleverly mixes left-wing terrorism, Indian mysticism and a hard-boiled detective story led by (the always reliable) Albert Finney. There's one scene where you really expect the transformation to take place, but nah, it's just an Indian steel worker tripping on acid. Somewhat unfortunately labeling itself 'the thinking man's werewolf movie', I can't recommend this movie enough. It has an uplifting environmentalist message at the end as well.
ReplyDeleteSebastian
It is head-canon (my head and my canon, anyway) that Brotherhood of the Wolf has ties to Averoigne through Father Sardis and Solomon Kane's African adventures through Jean-François de Morangias. It could have used a few more toads, though...
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