Posted by Notcot on Apr 24, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (53 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
With an ingenious script, engaging characters, nerve-shredding suspense, genuinely frightening set-pieces and laugh-out-loud funny bits An American Werewolf in London is a prime candidate for the finest horror-comedy ever made. Americans David (David Naughton) and Jack (Griffin Dunne) are backpacking in northern England when Jack is killed by a wild beast and David is bitten. Back in London David finds himself falling in love with a nurse, Alex (played with winning charm by Jenny Agutter), and turning into a werewolf. Adding to his problems, an increasingly decomposed Jack keeps coming back from the dead, and he is not a happy corpse. The Oscar winning make-up and transformation scenes still look good and rather than send itself up Werewolf plays its horror seriously, the laughs coming naturally from the surreal situation. Naughton is engagingly confused and disbelieving, desperately coping with the ever more nightmarish world, while Landis delivers one absolutely stunning dream sequence, an unbearably tense hunt on the London Underground and a breathtaking finale. Gory, erotic, shocking and romantic, this unforgettable horror classic has it all. Tom Holland’s Fright Night (1985) remixed the formula with vampires, as did Landis himself in Innocent Blood (1992). A disappointing sequel, An American Werewolf in Paris, followed in 1997. –Gary S Dalkin
American Werewolf in London
Buy Now for £5.68
Tags: Alex, amazon, amazon co uk, American, american werewolf in london, american werewolf in paris, Average, beast, candidate, David, David Naughton, Gary S Dalkin, Griffin Dunne, horror, horror classic, horror comedy, jack, jack griffin, Jenny Agutter, Landis, London, love, nightmarish world, northern England, nurse, Oscar, Paris, rating, Reviews, ReviewWith, script, Suspense, Tom Holland, transformation scenes, werewolf, werewolf in london, werewolf in paris, wild beast
Posted by Notcot on Apr 18, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (53 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
With an ingenious script, engaging characters, nerve-shredding suspense, genuinely frightening set-pieces and laugh-out-loud funny bits An American Werewolf in London is a prime candidate for the finest horror-comedy ever made. Americans David (David Naughton) and Jack (Griffin Dunne) are backpacking in northern England when Jack is killed by a wild beast and David is bitten. Back in London David finds himself falling in love with a nurse, Alex (played with winning charm by Jenny Agutter), and turning into a werewolf. Adding to his problems, an increasingly decomposed Jack keeps coming back from the dead, and he is not a happy corpse. The Oscar winning make-up and transformation scenes still look good and rather than send itself up Werewolf plays its horror seriously, the laughs coming naturally from the surreal situation. Naughton is engagingly confused and disbelieving, desperately coping with the ever more nightmarish world, while Landis delivers one absolutely stunning dream sequence, an unbearably tense hunt on the London Underground and a breathtaking finale. Gory, erotic, shocking and romantic, this unforgettable horror classic has it all. Tom Holland’s Fright Night (1985) remixed the formula with vampires, as did Landis himself in Innocent Blood (1992). A disappointing sequel, An American Werewolf in Paris, followed in 1997. –Gary S Dalkin
An American Werewolf in London
Buy Now for £11.95
Tags: Alex, amazon, amazon co uk, American, american werewolf in london, american werewolf in paris, Average, beast, candidate, David, David Naughton, Gary S Dalkin, Griffin Dunne, horror, horror classic, horror comedy, jack, jack griffin, Jenny Agutter, Landis, London, love, nightmarish world, northern England, nurse, Oscar, Paris, rating, Reviews, ReviewWith, script, Suspense, Tom Holland, transformation scenes, werewolf, werewolf in london, werewolf in paris, wild beast
Posted by Notcot on Mar 28, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (52 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
It’s silly, it’s superficial, it’s so desperately earnest about its tale of time-spanning love that you almost wish for a cheap flatulence gag just to break the solemn mood. But there is something so unabashedly gushy and entertaining about Somewhere in Time that you can’t begrudge its enduring popularity. The film has become a staple of romantic-movie lovers since its release in 1980, and endless showings on cable TV have turned it into a dubious classic of sorts–a three-hanky weepy that anyone can enjoy as a guilty pleasure or a beloved favourite, with no apologies necessary. In his first film after the star-making success of Superman, Christopher Reeve stars as a contemporary playwright who visits a posh hotel and sees the portrait of an actress (Jane Seymour) who had performed there in 1912. He becomes obsessed with this beautiful woman and learns all he can about her, and then discovers a method of hypnotically transporting himself backward in time to meet her. “Is it … you?” she says upon seeing the lovestruck playwright, and it’s clearly a mutual attraction. But even the slightest reminder of the playwright’s modern time can jar him from his seemingly real existence in the past, so his wonderful love affair is constantly just a step from being stolen away. Based on Richard Matheson’s novel Bid Time Return, this flaky film may strain one’s tolerance for plot holes and corny romance, but it’s hard to deny its lasting appeal–and let’s face it, guys, it’ll make wives and girlfriends swoon if they are in a tearjerker mood. –Jeff Shannon
Somewhere in Time
Buy Now for £4.12
Tags: actress jane seymour, amazon, amazon co uk, Average, bid time return, Christopher Reeve, earnest, FILM, flatulence, gag, guilty pleasure, Jane Seymour, Jeff Shannon, love, love affair, modern time, mood, mutual attraction, playwright, plot holes, posh hotel, rating, ReviewIt, Reviews, Richard Matheson, something, Somewhere, somewhere in time, superman christopher reeve, tale, time