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The Wolfman review

Rupert de Paula


The middle ground is always dangerous, being neither one nor the other, and The Wolfman suffers from this stylistic schizophrenia

After many delays, The Wolfman finally arrives in cinemas this week. So, we asked Rupert:: is it any good?

Published on Feb 8, 2010

What with vampires and zombies so utterly preeminent in the modern horror oeuvre nowadays, it seems that all those other classic bloodcurdling beasties seem to have been forgotten. But then, there are only so many ways you can run through the ‘vampire as sexual metaphor' or ‘zombie as commentary on the modern world's lack of individualism' routines before the whole thing starts to get a little dry. 

So, I don't think I'll be the only one enthused by the prospect of a new werewolf movie. And I don't mean an Underworld or Van Helsing-esque mythology mash-up. No, I mean a bloodcurdling, hair'um scare'um big budget lycanthropic legend.

A remake of the iconic 1940s' creature feature of the same name, starring Benico Del Toro as the titular shapeshifter, with Anthony Hopkins, Emily Blunt and Hugo Weaver in support, The Wolfman certainly talks a good game. It looks fantastic, replete with lashings of lupine howls, gruesome gore and mist-shrouded forests in the moonlight.

But this is also a film that seems somewhat cursed. With a one sacked director, a load of reshoots, a complete re-edit and several release date moves, many thought something rather monstrous was up with this film. The omens, you could say, were not looking good.

Well, the good news is it's not a total stinker, but The Wolfman is certainly very creaky in places - more like a campy homage to the old school frightfest than respectable film in its own right. An $85 million B-movie that seems to think that pummelling the audience into submission with an unrelenting torrent of clichés and stereotypes, all of which are delivered with a canny wink and a knowing nudge-nudge of geeky in-joke cheek, will mask its faults.

Plot-wise it does exactly what it says on the proverbial tin. Lawrence Talbot (Del Toro), a Shakespearian stage actor in Victorian England, returns to his family estate after his brother is torn to pieces. At first, the blame is levelled at a troupe of wandering gypsies and their dancing bear. But after a midnight chase across the fog-drenched moorland, Talbot himself is savaged, only to be saved at the last minute. And everyone knows what happens if a werewolf bites you but you survive.

Hopkins plays Del Toro's misanthropic recluse of a father and Blunt his brother's grieving ex. Then there's Weaving as Scotland Yard's Inspector Abberline, a character bizarrely pinched from the Jack the Ripper story for no real reason other than to add to the film's convoluted collection of Victorian references.

But all of this is secondary, because what we're really waiting for is the glorious sight of a werewolf with the scent of blood in its nostrils. First in murky, moonlit forests, then around the cobbled streets of London's East End, before back to the woods for the finale. Like the meerkat says, ‘simples'.

Another showstopper of the genre is the transformation scene, and The Wolfman doesn't disappoint here. Watching Del Toro's fingers stretch and morph into great cleaving talons while his face transforms into the muzzled maw of the beast within is a spectacular sight. The character design is directly lifted from Lon Chaney Jr's seminal incarnation, so this wolfman retains traces of his human features, with the ripped remains of a white ruffle shirt clinging to its torso. It's wonderfully retro and a testament to Del Toro's love of the source material (he is an avid collector of Wolfman memorabilia).

It is rumoured that the film's original director, Mark Romanek, left after clashing with Del Toro over his visual realisation for the wolfman - with Romanek favouring a more contemporary, feral look and Del Toro demanding a retro hark back to the classic.

Admittedly, the man drafted in to settle the ship, Joe Johnson (Jumanji, Jurassic Park III), has done a marvellous job on the film's aesthetics. But a good facelift can't hide The Wolfman's fundamental disfigurements, namely a hodgepodge script that veers from underdone to burnt-to-a-crisp in the space between plot beats.

The pacing in this film is all over the place, like the scriptwriters were just going ‘So what happens next?  Umm...how about...' and then whacking another sub plot into the oven. This is probably the result of all the reshoots and re-edits, which I also imagine included quite a few shifts in tone.

What saves the film is the acting talent. Hopkins waltzes his way through the film, seemingly unconvinced if his usual gravitas is really necessary. So instead he adds a louche, lounge lizard quirk that brightens every scene, but fails to quite illuminate the overall composition.

Blunt is little more than period piece eye candy, all heaving bosoms and chesty corsets, with characterisation so thin she's barely even a pale shadow of the horror hereon.  But she's a great actress, and manages to inject some life into the breathy, dew-eyed Gwen.

Hugo Weaving adds a little spice as Abberline, but, and this is testament to the film's convoluted script, for a while he's painted out as a bad guy even though he's a police officer who's just trying to figure out why people keep getting eaten.

Del Toro tries his best, and brings his customary cool to proceedings, but Talbot is a very passive protagonist and gives us little reason to root for him.

Unlike vampires, who remain in complete control, and zombies, who lose all traces of humanity, the wolfman has always been stuck in the middle - tormented by what he's done but unable to help himself.

The middle ground is always dangerous, being neither one nor the other, and The Wolfman suffers from this stylistic schizophrenia. It knows not what it is and tries so many different outfits on for size it ends up chasing its own tail. But it is kind of fun in a silly way.


2 stars

The Wolfman opens in UK cinemas on February 12.

 

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Users Comments

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By Kahotep 1 February 9, 2010 09:26:41 AM

Damn. I really wanted this one to work.

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By clementine 1 February 9, 2010 10:35:30 AM

yeah bit gutted bout this i was looking forward too it, del toro is worth the watch though and camp crappy b movies are my vice so maybe it will work for me.

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By osiris292 1 February 9, 2010 11:07:12 AM

wow i was really hoping to see at least 3 stars here. I'm still gonna go see it at the cinema though to make my own mind up about it.

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By DonWilco 1 February 9, 2010 11:23:28 AM

Anthony Hopkins looks like Sean Connery!

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By Interference 1 February 9, 2010 11:35:00 AM

Absolutely knew this was a turd the moment I saw the first 'jaw dropping' trailer.

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By Lucas 1 February 9, 2010 02:16:12 PM

Actuually the make up the actors the perios the wardrobe , the very way Del Toro looks make all this look much more like a Remake of The Cures of the Werewolf (1961) than the 1941 The Wolf Man ...

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By DavidFullam 1 February 9, 2010 04:20:47 PM

Still going to go see it and make up my own mind.

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By Lachesis 1 February 9, 2010 09:43:12 PM

I never expected the reviews to be very positive, its a damned if you do, damned if you don't type film. The styling and talent in front of the cameras deserve a chance imo. At the very least its not a teeny lovestory (ab)using the curse as a metaphor for the blight of achne!

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By MarvMarble 1 February 10, 2010 12:01:41 AM

I've often seen films I've liked which turned out to be reviled elsewhere, or bad reviews of films I ended up liking. I plan to watch it and make my own mind up.

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By moorish 1 February 10, 2010 03:19:34 PM

"Little reason to *root* for him", surely.

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By amalthea1983 1 February 12, 2010 03:33:59 PM

I saw this last night, and I must say I was pleasantly surprised. Yes, its full of every horror cliche under the sun, but if you just accept it for what it is, then you'll enjoy it.

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By LouiseG 1 February 18, 2010 11:08:40 AM

I agree to that, the movie “The Wolfman” has a strong supporting cast and just I know that Emily Blunt was included I was enlightened since I am an avid fan of Emily Blunt from her movie My Summer Love, the Young Victoria and The Devil wears Prada, I’d really love this face. I’ll go to check out this movie.

Re: The Wolfman review
Posted By HorrorGeek11 1 February 23, 2010 10:32:03 PM

I've been a Lon Chaney Jr. and Wolfman fan for as long as I can remember. I was very excited when I found out Universal was re-making this classic. I was a little afraid that they'd screw it up like they did The Mummy. Other than the Ancient Egyptian scenes and Arnold Vosloo - The Mummy was campy and hokey and a major disappointment to me. It was meant to be "scary" not funny. I saw The Wolfman today, and though I didn't like that it strayed quite a bit from the original storyline, it was a good movie. The wolfman transformation was fantastic, and Del Toro was a great pick to play Larry Talbot. This is not a "B" horror flick. Anyone that truly knows horror would not call this a B movie. It isn't. (see: Cabin Fever or Army of Darkness for B horror flicks). I do love Bruce Campbell, though. I agree with the review that the plot and scene changes happened too quickly and out of nowhere, and though it wasn't as good as it could have been -- meaning, it didn't stick to the original story enough and that kind of irritated me -- but it was still fun to watch. I'm glad they went with the classic wolfman look, yet updated. The werewolves in Underworld were incredible, but I didn't want to see that look for the classic wolfman. I applaud the cast -- especially Del Toro. He stepped into Chaney's shoes wonderfully, and for me, that's saying something.
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