Rating: R
Genre:
Horror
Release Date: 09/15/2009
SubTitles: English/French/Italian/Ger/Espanol/Jap
Dubbed: English/Espanol/French/Ger/Italian
Sound: DHMA/DTS-ESM/DD2
Run Time: 60 Minutes
Flags: Graphic Violence, Nudity, Adult Situations, Not For Children, Adult Language
Distributor/Studio: Universal Studios
While wandering the English moors on vacation, college yanks
David (
David Naughton) and
Jack (
Griffin Dunne) happen upon a quaint pub with a mysterious patronage who warn them not to leave the road when walking after dark. Irreverent of such advice as characters in
horror films always are, the two decide to find a short cut....
David wakes up in the hospital with a nasty bite wound to his shoulder; the freshly deceased, and rapidly decomposing,
Jack arrives soon after to deliver the grim news that, unless he commits suicide,
David will become a werewolf when the moon is full.
David dismisses the encounter as a hallucination, but all indicators point to lycanthrope; evenings of barking and bloodletting follow closely behind. While the story is thin and much of the tongue-in-cheek humor is overdone, there are plenty of genuine jolts thanks to makeup guru
Rick Baker's eye-popping special effects. The werewolf, resembling a cross between a bear and a wolverine, appears frighteningly real, and, given the fantastic premise, the gore is most convincing (although surprisingly and refreshingly scant). The hospital dream sequences are creative, and the scenes in which the werewolf runs rampant through downtown London are particularly good. In all,
An American Werewolf in London is an original, atmospheric film that manages both to scare and amuse. While dismissed by most American critics upon its release, the film managed to secure a place in the annals of American cinema when
Baker won an Academy Award for his amazing effects and creature designs.
~ Jeremy Beday, All Movie Guide