Aroooo, it’s Burl! Ha ha, yes, I have a review of a werewolf
movie today, and it’s one of the best: An
American Werewolf in London! 1981, by many reckonings, was The Year of the
Werewolf, since this picture, The Howling,
Full Moon High and Wolfen all came out that same
twelvemonth! (Wolfen, it should be
noted, isn’t really a werewolf picture, but in many ways it might as well have
been!) And there was a lot of debate at the time, and there is still for all I
know, about which was the better picture: this or The Howling!
Well, ol’ Burl is here to tell you that they’re both great,
and choosing the better one is like choosing your favourite child! You might
think you have a preference, but then you find it’s changed, and in any case
most of the time you love them both pretty much equally! And, most importantly, you just don't have to choose!
Anyway, I’ve always enjoyed this movie most robustly! It’s the
story of Jack and David, two students on a trip to Northern England, which I thought was a strange choice of destination until I traveled as a young man myself, and guess where I ended up! The lads get
attacked by a werewolf of course! Jack dies, David is scratched up a bit and
ends up in a London hospital, having a love romance with a nurse played by the gorgeous Jenny “Logan’s Run” Agutter!
In the meantime his dead pal shows up and tries to persuade him that he’s a
werewolf himself now, and that suicide is the only answer!
Of course David thinks this all hooey, and there follows a
famous transformation scene! It’s very impressive, the more so today with all
the weightless CGI they put on us! I don’t mean to fly my fogey flag too
energetically, but give me those old fashioned Special Makeup Effects any day!
Ha ha, and then there’s some killing, a policeman who appears to be auditioning
for John Cleese’s part in Monty Python,
further visits from Jack, the dawning of the truth, See You Next Wednesday, the freakout in Piccadilly Circus, and the
final alleyway encounter!
I will say this in agreement with the picture’s detractors:
the ending is a bit weak! There’s a very brutal series of car crashes in the
Circus, which was the standard Landis climax of the day, and then an attempt at
an emotional climax that the movie almost but has not quite earned! It unfolds
with an admirable economy though, and you can’t complain about a good, sudden
fade-to-black followed by the Marcels’ version of “Blue Moon!” Ha ha, no you
can’t!
And the first chunk of the movie, the beautiful credits
sequence right through the pub scene, is purely wonderful stuff! The two leads,
David “The Sleeping Car” Naughton and
Griffin “After Hours” Dunne, are
perfectly cast, especially Dunne! Ha ha, imagine if John “Into the Night” Landis, the director, had cast whoever was big that
year, in that age group! Imagine if the movie starred Robby Benson and
Christopher Atkins! Ha ha, imagine that for just a moment! As in The Thing, the absence of big stars is
of great benefit to the picture!
Some people complain about the wonky tone, but it’s always
worked magnificently for me! It’s chock full of great British actors, it’s
funny, it’s gory, the photography is nice, the trick effects are glorious! It’s
logically challenged at times, certainly (ha ha, where are David’s parents?)
but a marvelous picture really, one which, in its design, feels as Important as
any Goldcrest production, but in spirit is one of the great 80s latex makeup
movies! Chariots of Fire meets The Power! Ha ha, and the tag line on the poster was lifted from Prophecy!
I’m as fond as I can be of this picture, though I recognize
its flaws! I’m going to award An American
Werewolf in London three and a half walking meatloaves!
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