Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA local myth will be discovered to be true by a group of teenagers on a night out on remote farmland. Is there a bloodthirsty creature that has been wandering the land?A local myth will be discovered to be true by a group of teenagers on a night out on remote farmland. Is there a bloodthirsty creature that has been wandering the land?A local myth will be discovered to be true by a group of teenagers on a night out on remote farmland. Is there a bloodthirsty creature that has been wandering the land?
Paul Durso
- Carlos
- (as Paul Durs)
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Curious about a special story, a group of friends decide to investigate the truth about a series of rumors involving a mad doctor's experiments and genetic mutations taking place in the area, and when they stumble upon his whereabouts realize that they're intended to be the next experiments.
This was a solid and enjoyable, effective indie outing. One of the finer features with this one is the old-school setup in its approach to the storyline, which is a fun way of paying homage to the previous outings in the genre while offering something unique and different. Not only is this strikingly well accomplished on a technical level with the old-school black-and-white photography capturing everything in that kind of environment, but there's also a way of bringing about the urban legend of the doctors' experiments that have affected the locals. With his work becoming quite prominent in the area, under the numerous reports and investigations into his history of cruelty towards others, which all become enjoyable enough for what's at stake. By the time they get to the special laboratory and are exposed to what's going on, there's a lot of fun to be had with the slow realization about the horrific experiments conducted by the doctor. Featuring the maniacal doctor looking to genetically mutate and transform others into bizarre, grotesque monstrosities, which is what gets paid off here with the deformed outcasts of the experiments. Seeing the malformed, inhuman beasts with animal traits including fur, fangs, unnatural appendages, or other signs of clear-cut animalistic outcomes gives this a solid touch that's decidedly playing into the formula found in those old-school genre classics, leading to a series of impressive images throughout here. These are all enough to make for some positive factors here, even though there are some factors keeping this down. The main issue here is that there's such a disappointing tempo and pacing on display that the film is severely difficult to get into. The opening stretches on forever with the group going around the countryside enjoying sexual shenanigans, trying to investigate the past, or wandering around the forest looking for something that it takes a while to get going, even with all of this material preparing everything for what's to come. It all brings the storyline together rather nicely, but it does so at the expense of ensuring the film gets off to a fine start, much like the finale, where it doesn't feature a big brawl or battle with the doctor or his creation to leave. It just tends to meander around on several long-winded dialogue scenes that end up slowing this to a crawl. Alongside the cheap look of everything, these all bring this one down overall.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Language and Violence.
This was a solid and enjoyable, effective indie outing. One of the finer features with this one is the old-school setup in its approach to the storyline, which is a fun way of paying homage to the previous outings in the genre while offering something unique and different. Not only is this strikingly well accomplished on a technical level with the old-school black-and-white photography capturing everything in that kind of environment, but there's also a way of bringing about the urban legend of the doctors' experiments that have affected the locals. With his work becoming quite prominent in the area, under the numerous reports and investigations into his history of cruelty towards others, which all become enjoyable enough for what's at stake. By the time they get to the special laboratory and are exposed to what's going on, there's a lot of fun to be had with the slow realization about the horrific experiments conducted by the doctor. Featuring the maniacal doctor looking to genetically mutate and transform others into bizarre, grotesque monstrosities, which is what gets paid off here with the deformed outcasts of the experiments. Seeing the malformed, inhuman beasts with animal traits including fur, fangs, unnatural appendages, or other signs of clear-cut animalistic outcomes gives this a solid touch that's decidedly playing into the formula found in those old-school genre classics, leading to a series of impressive images throughout here. These are all enough to make for some positive factors here, even though there are some factors keeping this down. The main issue here is that there's such a disappointing tempo and pacing on display that the film is severely difficult to get into. The opening stretches on forever with the group going around the countryside enjoying sexual shenanigans, trying to investigate the past, or wandering around the forest looking for something that it takes a while to get going, even with all of this material preparing everything for what's to come. It all brings the storyline together rather nicely, but it does so at the expense of ensuring the film gets off to a fine start, much like the finale, where it doesn't feature a big brawl or battle with the doctor or his creation to leave. It just tends to meander around on several long-winded dialogue scenes that end up slowing this to a crawl. Alongside the cheap look of everything, these all bring this one down overall.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Language and Violence.
In the presentation we are already informed that this is a B movie, as a tribute to the 60s, I intend to watch the original version of The Howling, from 1981, the script is reasonable, the production is crude, but if you don't take it seriously , we embarked on Ed Wood's films, blood, guts, high-pitched screams, mean interpretations, passionate...
I am a Doctor and the Medics fan, which is why I saw this movie. Oh how the mighty have fallen. It is so sad to see the desperation of washed up 80's stars to try to regain glory. It is even sadder to see Clive Jackson to be proud of this mess.
The movie looks like it was shot by high school students. With no budget. Actually, high school students would have done a better job. Poor story line, poor acting, poor character development. It shows anybody can make a movie.
I have no problems with college looking movies. After all, the Blair Witch Project was a classic. First problem with this movie is the name. The Howling was a classic movie first released in 1981. If a movie can't even think of an original name and uses a classic, you know there are problems. The story line was weak, the filming looked cheap and characters such as Baron Rathbone IV were laughable and demonstrated some of the worse acting I have ever seen. Run, don't walk from your movie. You will be upset that you wasted the time.
Steven M Smith is a prolific UK producer of Horror and gangster genre movies, predominantly based in or around East London, Kent and Essex. The Howling is an artistic portrayal of a horror movie with shades of Nosferatu and other classic horror influences. Some great character work particularly by JP Gates. Recommended to all lovers of the genre.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesDespite the title The Howling (2017), this is not based on the novel "The Howling" by author Gary Brandner, nor is it a remake of Joe Dante's film Das Tier (1981), or a sequel/reboot to The Howling films, in any way.
- VerbindungenReferenced in Doll House (2020)
- SoundtracksVairo - The Fucking Show
Written by Vairo
Performed by Vairo
Courtesy of TEXTURA under license from Major Music Enterprises
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Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 23 Minuten
- Farbe
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