Summary Capsule
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Justin's Review: There are many things to cherish about An American Werewolf in London, but we can start where they do: the movie begins where most horror movies would end. Two American backpackers - David and Jack - are trekking across Scotland's moors, only to find the creepiest tavern in the land. After a few heebie-jeebies from the natives and a cryptic warning to "stay on the roads", they skedaddle away into the night, only to be tracked and attacked by a giant wolf...thing. Jack is killed, and David mysteriously awakens in a London hospital, plagued by odd dreams. Nobody believes his story about the attacks, except one cute nurse with a penchant for force-feeding.
Don't worry about the screams, however; this film contains some incredibly startling images, as well as a nightmarish werewolf transformation sequence that's long been considered the best ever filmed (particularly before CGI!). It's great to have the laughs come along and release the pent-up pressure that builds within, but it's also unnerving to never quite expect when the next scare is going to hit you. It's no big secret that David's attack by a werewolf eventually turns him into one. This is where the tables are turned on the normal horror convention - David's fear isn't for what's out there, but what's inside of him, threatening to take him over. Disconcertingly, his dead friend Jack keeps reappearing to him (decaying more and more as the movie goes on), telling David of the curse and urging him to kill himself before the next full moon. What's a werewolf-in-training to do? Director John Landis (Animal House, The Blues Brothers) has a lot of fun tweaking the werewolf legend and throwing in a lot of bizarre humor that helps keep this from settling into a stale horror tale. It plays out as a quick, quirky horror story that's as scary as something your uncle might've told you when you were 10, and might stick with you a while after.
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
Groovy Quotes
Dart Player: Stay on the road. Keep clear of the moors.
Harry Berman: A gun is good.
Soundtrack Review
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