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Hurlements V: la re-naissance

Original title: Howling V: The Rebirth
  • 1989
  • R
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
4.4/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
Hurlements V: la re-naissance (1989)
Werewolf HorrorHorrorMystery

A group of strangers visit an ancient Hungarian castle and bring along a werewolf.A group of strangers visit an ancient Hungarian castle and bring along a werewolf.A group of strangers visit an ancient Hungarian castle and bring along a werewolf.

  • Director
    • Neal Sundstrom
  • Writers
    • Clive Turner
    • Freddie Rowe
    • Gary Brandner
  • Stars
    • Phil Davis
    • Victoria Catlin
    • Elizabeth Shé
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.4/10
    3.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Neal Sundstrom
    • Writers
      • Clive Turner
      • Freddie Rowe
      • Gary Brandner
    • Stars
      • Phil Davis
      • Victoria Catlin
      • Elizabeth Shé
    • 76User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos18

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    Top cast17

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    Phil Davis
    Phil Davis
    • The Count
    • (as Philip Davis)
    Victoria Catlin
    Victoria Catlin
    • Dr. Catherine Peake
    Elizabeth Shé
    • Marylou Summers
    Ben Cole
    • David
    William Shockley
    William Shockley
    • Richard
    Mark Sivertsen
    Mark Sivertsen
    • Jonathan
    Stephanie Faulkner
    • Gail
    Mary Stavin
    Mary Stavin
    • Anna
    Clive Turner
    • Ray
    Nigel Triffitt
    • Professor
    Jill Pearson
    • Eleanor
    József Madaras
    József Madaras
    • Peter
    • (as Joszef Madaras)
    Renáta Szatler
    • Susan
    József Bozsó
    • Londiner
    • (uncredited)
    Zsuzsa Holl
    • Hungarian mistress of the castle
    • (uncredited)
    Zsolt Körtvélyessy
    Zsolt Körtvélyessy
    • Hungarian lord of the castle
    • (uncredited)
    Antal Leisen
    Antal Leisen
    • Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Neal Sundstrom
    • Writers
      • Clive Turner
      • Freddie Rowe
      • Gary Brandner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews76

    4.43.2K
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    Featured reviews

    5spencergrande6

    Initiate murder mystery slasher mode

    Finally someone has the cajones to put werewolves in a castle and initiate murder mystery slasher mode. My god, how did it take till 1989 to kick this into gear? And what fun we have here!

    At least in terms of a C-movie eclectic character cast and some cool castle cinematography. This is a murder mystery where you don't really care about the reveal, and you know it's a werewolf anyway so the why isn't important. It's also a slasher where there's not much bloodletting or fun. It lies somewhere flatly in-between these two genres that share so much in common and yet can't meet a happy middle ground.
    5Skutter-2

    Okay, despite some flaws.

    The general consensus with this movie seems to be not that great but better than the first three sequels and I'm happy to go along with that. It is probably, and this says a lot about the quality of the series, the best of the sequels. Only the first was much good and it wasn't a masterpiece. Oh, for some more decent werewolf movies.

    This installment is basically a variation on the Ten Little Indians (Or N*ggers to use the somewhat un-PC word that was the original title of the Agatha Christie novel) with the killer amongst the group being a secret werewolf. A group of varied characters arrive at the opening of castle (Kind of like the opening of a supermarket but classier I guess) near Budapest and are snowed in by a blizzard. How these exact people, a seemingly disparate group, end up in the castle for its opening is actually a plot point, and a rather flimsy one at that, which comes into play later in the movie.

    The characters are you standard varied bunch- airheaded would be starlet, playboy tennis pro, down to earth Aussie, snooty rich dude and so on. Had this been a teen oriented movie you know it would be the jock, the bitch, the nerd etc. The acting isn't the greatest but it isn't the worst, most of the actors at least being able to put some personality into there characters, even if they don't exactly deliver their lines very well and when the scripts lets them down. For the most part nobody is annoyingly bad and fortunately the worst actors seem to be killed of earlier on, such as the Australian professor, or are given less to do. I don't know if this intentional but it works in the movies favour.

    Naturally as the characters are killed off it becomes a whodunit. This aspect isn't too badly handled and it isn't too badly handled unless you apply some simple logic to work out who the killer must be at one point halfway through the movie. Basically ala the movie Clue, the characters split up into four pairs (There was one group of three IRC) to go searching for some of the other missing characters in the labyrinth beneath the castle. Two of the pairs get split up at around the same time and one of those four ends up dead. Surely it would be logical for the others to deduce that it must be of these three who was the killer when they decide it is indeed one of their own number which is doing the killing rather than an outside party, as everyone else has an alibi so to speak. The other two people should at least be able to work out it is one of the other two who was on their own at the time. However nobody on screen seems to put that much thought into despite being supposedly intelligent people. To add insult to injury the victim at this point actually is killed by the person he was paired up with but nobody actually makes the obvious connection (The point was made in a humorous fashion in the similar section of Clue that if any one of them dies whilst searching the house they'll know they will at least know the other half of the pair is the killer but that was a much more intelligent movie with a stronger plot despite having three possible endings and being a farcical comedy). For the viewer at home it is made even easier to work out who is guilty since we are shown one of the three possibly suspects shooting at the werewolf after the kill, proving their innocence. Of the remaining two one of them is set up so heavily to look guilty that it is obvious that the other must be the culprit unless the makers were actually being sneaky. That said, it isn't blatantly telegraphed who the killer is earlier on in any other way as it so often is these kind of stories.

    The plot beyond the whodunit aspect, specifically as to why particular people are in the castle makes very little sense. Without going into detail it involves an elaborate plan to get these particular people into the castle so the werewolf can be trapped and killed, except those behind this elaborate plan put absolutely no thought into killing the werewolf once this improbable scheme is pulled off and everybody is massacred. The makers would have been better off leaving out this whole aspect of the plot and just making a straightforward trapped in a closed off location with a nasty flick.

    The dumbness of the plot aside Howling V is not that bad a watch if you like cheesy horror flicks. The castle setting is cheap and kind of fake looking but strangely enough it works and the movie has a nice enclosed atmosphere to it. It is well paced and does a lot of things right despite its shortcomings- for example characters are not killed off in exactly the order you would expect them to be, when normally in these kind of movies you can work it out exactly. Gorehounds and monster fans might disappointed by the fact there is very little gore, other than some after the fact claw marks and a later in the picture decapitation and that we only really get glimpses of the werewolf and it don't look that impressive from what we see of it so that is probably a good thing. To me the single most endearing aspect of the movie is what it does instead of showing the gory deaths. Every time, with one exception, someone is killed by the werewolf the movie cuts away from the killing and there is short burst of bombastic Omenesque music. I don't know why, but I loved it. The one time it didn't happen I felt cheated.
    5lone-wolf-007

    Bark at the Moon

    Basically this is the werewolf version of Ten Little Indians. A group of people end up stranded at a castle during a snowstorm and while they wait for it to end someone or something begins to pick them off one by one. With the howling and teeth marks on the bodies it points to one of them not being what they seem. This is actually a fairly descent Howling movie but it does have a small budget. I will give credit in the fact that they did well with what they had. The ending is also somewhat clever if you are not paying close attention throughout the movie. Overall not bad for what it is and is better than some of the other sequels.
    3Fella_shibby

    There is zero atmosphere inspite of the movie being set in a castle situated in the snowy Budapest.

    I first saw this in the early 90s on a vhs.

    Revisited it recently.

    We dont get to see a single werewolf in the entire movie and all the kills are offscreen except for a lousy decapitation.

    This one is more like a whodunnit without any suspense, tension or engrossing story.
    cijidunn

    Out of 10: about a 9 in my opinion. It is the best movie in the Howling series, and on the budget it was shot, they did a pretty good job

    i first saw this movie about 4 years ago, and feel in love with it almost instantly. At the time i had never seen any of the Howling movies, in fact, i don't think i had even heard of the howling before this. Now that i have seen them all, i can see that Howling 5 is by far the best in the series.

    The other howling movies seem to be a lot of talk and very little action, especially Howling 4 and 7. For all in this installment of the Howling, there is little Werewolf action, the fact that you do not see the werewolf, i believe, adds to the suspense. In Howling 4, the werewolves are seen in great detail, and i think this ruined it, as the wolves were overdone and slightly silly. In this, the idea of the wolf, and the three second shots of teeth etc. are more effective then a full plastic-wolf bounding about the castle after the victims.

    one other thing i have to note, is the incidental music. Whenever one of the cast is butchered by the werewolf, a sinister piece of opera is played and the scene pans off, so you dont get to see the body until later. When i first saw the scenes like this, i couldn't help but laugh. For all i love it, and i think it is a brilliant effect, the first impression for someone who considers Excalibur an extension of Monty Python can find the incidental operatic slightly humorous.

    This movie is by far the best of all the Howling movies, and is a movie all werewolf fans should find enjoyable.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Despite the fact that this film states "Based on the novels 'The Howling I, II, and III' written by Gary Brandner", this film is in no way based on any of those novels, and is a sequel to the earlier Howling films in name only.
    • Goofs
      There was no city called "Budapest" in 1489. The cities of Buda and Pest were not merged until 1873.
    • Quotes

      Marylou Summers: The Devil was a werewolf... Wow, that's incredible!

    • Connections
      Featured in Nuits de pleine lune (1995)

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Howling V: The Rebirth?Powered by Alexa
    • The Count explains that a baby had been taken out of the castle centuries ago when telling everybody the truth as to why they were brought there. How could the baby have taken out of the castle when everybody had committed suicide?
    • How does the movie end?
    • What were the bus driver and the Count arguing about?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 22, 1990 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Hungary
    • Languages
      • English
      • Hungarian
    • Also known as
      • Howling V: The Rebirth
    • Filming locations
      • Hungary
    • Production companies
      • Allied Vision
      • Lane Pringle Productions
      • Mafilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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