Wednesday 21 September 2011

An American Werewolf in London

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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Year:1981
Country of origin:UK
Director:John Landis
Genre:Werewolf / Comedy
Starring:David Naughton, Jenny Agutter
Rating:5/5
IMDB link:http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082010/
Tagline:Beware the Moon
Favourite line:
"A naked American man stole my balloons."

There are certain moments in life that define an individual; the goal scored to secure your school county champions, that first kiss with the semi-Down Syndrome new girl underneath the tunnel on the way to the chip shop, a bit proud, a bit afraid lest your fellow teachers find out, the first time you realise your genitalia is capable of producing more than that insignificant bead of excitement...
So it was for me with An American Werewolf in London, my first true horror movie experience and one that sent chills down the spine. I recall the fear, recall the absolute dread as the attack took place on the Yorkshire Moors, geographically less than twenty miles away from my very own bedroom at the time, yet loving every minute even though I was obliged to go to bed lest I piss my pants when David's friend Jack appeared, all rotting skin and bloody lacerations.
As horror comedies go, this is the cream of the crop: funny, sick, genre bending and sexy, it really is hard to beat.
Just in case, here's the plot: Two adventurous, young, spunky American sorts are on a hiking holiday through the Yorkshire Moors (God alone knows why) and venture into The Slaughtered Lamb, a pub about as welcoming as the security guards at LAX. They are sent on their way, with mysterious warnings about watching out for the moon and staying on the road when, in the death of night, they hear howling and realise they have drifted far from the road and, horror of horror's, the moon is full. Well, not long until they are attacked, Jack killed outright, David surviving though at a price: he will become a werewolf when next the moon is full.
Wilfully playing with the audience, director Landis clearly a fan of the genre though not afraid to meddle, this is riotously good fun.
With the added bonus of the delicious Jenny Agutter, a storming soundtrack and Oscar winning special effects that stand up even to this day, this is about as good as horror gets.
Simply marvellous.

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