A young boy visits his father in a secluded cabin; the father is attacked by a werewolf and becomes one himself every full moon. However, the boy constantly tries to warn others, but no one ... Read allA young boy visits his father in a secluded cabin; the father is attacked by a werewolf and becomes one himself every full moon. However, the boy constantly tries to warn others, but no one will believe him.A young boy visits his father in a secluded cabin; the father is attacked by a werewolf and becomes one himself every full moon. However, the boy constantly tries to warn others, but no one will believe him.
- Deputy
- (as Dave Cass)
- Mr. Duncan
- (as Herold Goodwin)
- Director
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Featured reviews
I thought this was a very effective early seventies monster movie! It took some time in developing the character's in the family (Robert, Sandy and Richie), and therefore you felt for them and wanted them to succeed as a family unit. A lot of movies don't do that obviously, and therefore you don't care if they live or die most of the time. You don't really see a lot of the kills, and most of the scenes with the werewolf are in the dark. The werewolf costume/effects are basically that of a stunt man running around with a mask on, but for it's time of 1973 I think it worked well! It had the appearance of both man and wolf.
Acting was pretty good throughout. Matthews and Devry do well as the parents who are in the midst of a separation. Scott Sealey did good as the little boy, and his character had a very "Leave it to Beaver" feel to it. I really liked 'The Boy Who Cried Werewolf'. It moved at a pretty fast pace for a majority of the time, and manages to grasp my attention throughout. The ending is pretty good as well, both sad and shocking. It's not perfect, but worth a look if it pops up on TV late one night.
7/10
It has the production values of a rushed TV-film, and awful dialogue you can recite before it is uttered by the poor actors.
As for shocks and thrills, look elsewhere. Your cellar has more menace than this movie.
The music score is atrocious and grating. There is zero horror atmosphere in this little Z-grade turkey.
The inclusion of Jesus freaks midway through does nothing to make this any more mundane.
The initial werewolf appearance is not bad, but it all goes downhill from there.
"The Boy Who Cried Werewolf" is a nice werewolf film, with the story of a boy that knows that his father is a werewolf but nobody believes him. The subplot with the hippies is silly but in general the film is enjoyable. My vote is six.
Title (Brazil): "A Maldição da Lua Cheia" ("The Curse of the Full Moon")
The tone of The Boy Who Cried Werewolf is all over the place. It's too silly to be taken seriously as a horror film with any sort of tension, but it's not funny enough to be spoof which leaves in a weird in-between place where nothing really works. It also features some of the most annoying Christian hippies you'll ever meet. Every time they show up, it almost seems like the film is going for comedy or trying to satirize something, but it doesn't amount to much.
Did you know
- TriviaThis film was released by Universal as a double feature with SSSSnake, le cobra (1973), making the program one of the last double bills released by the studio.
- GoofsWhen Richie is running from the cabin in search of his dad, the night time sky changes back and forth between dusk and late-night.
- Quotes
Robert Bridgestone: Well, what was the urgent phone call about?
Sandy Bridgestone: O Robert, I'm sorry. It's just that we have a big problem with Ritchie. He's on that werewolf kick again.
Robert Bridgestone: Did you drag me out here just to tell me that?
Sandy Bridgestone: I know you've heard it before, but this time he thinks it's you.
Robert Bridgestone: That is lunacy.
Sandy Bridgestone: Obviously.
Robert Bridgestone: Can't you handle the boy anymore, Sandy?
Sandy Bridgestone: Oh, it's beyond me. I've discussed it with Dr. Mardesrosian and he thinks we ought to take it more seriously. He wants to see you.
Robert Bridgestone: Are you saying that you believe that I am a werewolf?
- ConnectionsFeatured in Coming Soon (1982)
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Details
- Release date
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- Also known as
- The Boy Who Cried Werewolf
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- Runtime
- 1h 33m(93 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1