Directed by Joe Johnston, Written by Andrew Kevin Walker and David Self
Screening at
(12th - 25th February
2010)
This is an entertaining piece of hokum. Starring Benicio Del
Toro and
Anthony Hopkins - the latter is in surprisingly good form in his
role
- it is an adaptation of the The Wolfman made in 1941, which
featurred
Lon Chaney Jr as the hirsute one.
With all the classic ingredients of a horror film - lots of
fog, the
ever-present menace of the full moon, a blood fest (for example
heads
being decapitated), dark interiors of stately mansions, and at
times camp
acting - surely none of the actors taking part could take this
film seriously.
Apparently there were a lot of problems in production, with the
movie
taking longer to finish than expected. Maybe they had to wait
for a fully
luminous moon to appear to enable everyone to do the filming.
Only joking
of course!
Hopkins (in a part played in the original by Claude Rains)
welcomes back
his son Lawrence Talbot (Del Toro) to the family home after a
long exile,
the day after his brother has been torn apart on the moors by a
wild animal
or a crazed psycho. In pursuit of his killer the younger Talbot
ends up
being attacked by the monster, with predictable consequences.
He then goes on the rampage, devouring endless numbers of
people, despite
being pursued by a Scotland Yard detective, impressively played
by Hugo
Weaving (V For Vendetta). He had further reason to catch him,
having recently
failed to capture Jack The Ripper.
There are several interesting cameo performances of characters
inflicting
gypsy curses on people, locals who appeared to have been born
through
inbreeding in the isolated village, a godfearing vicar and a
menacing
Indian servant with a giant moustache and a turban.
The love interest is served up by Gwen (Emily Blunt), the
fiancee of
the murdered Talbot. There is one poignant moment near the end
when the
wolfman, ready to kill her, looks at her with compassionate eyes
- somewhat
similar to the way King Kong looked at his beloved damsel in
distress
- and restrains himself from doing so.