Despite bearing a title
that would have worked better for a Disney movie—and despite including monster
makeup that also would have worked better for a Disney movie, since the titular
monster looks a bit like The Shaggy D.A.—this
low-budget thriller is a passable creature feature. In fact, the storyline hews
quite closely to the classic formula established by Universal’s The Wolf Man (1941), complete with
father-son tension and a strong element of inevitable tragedy. So even though The Boy Who Cried Werewolf is incredibly
gentle by horror standards, it features a dollop of angst, humorous flourishes,
and a solid body count.
Set primarily in a lakeside forest somewhere in the
western U.S., presumably California, the movie tracks the adventures of young
Richie Bridgestone (Scott Sealey), whose parents are going through a divorce.
One weekend, Richie goes camping with his father, kind-hearted Robert
Bridgestone (Kerwin Matthews), and the duo encounters a werewolf while walking
along a country road at night. Robert kills the attacker, but receives a nasty
bite on the arm. Once the dead werewolf transforms back into a man, Robert
tries to convince himself he merely imagined the lycanthropy. However, Richie
becomes infatuated with the idea that his father defeated a monster, describing
the event to everyone who will listen. Eventually, a shrink assesses Richie and
suggests that Robert and his son should return to the woods so Richie can learn werewolves don’t truly exist. Naturally, that’s when Robert starts to
get hairy during full moons. Most of the picture comprises suspense scenes of
Robert committing murders while in wolf mode—and then wrestling with the
consequences once daylight arrives.
Screenwriter Bob Homel and director Nathan
Juran do an okay job of contriving situations wherein Richie is kept free from
danger, and the filmmakers also get decent mileage out of the most colorful
people occupying the forest at the same time as the Bridgestones—a Jesus cult
led by a motor-mouthed hippie named Brother Christopher. (Screenwriter Homel
pulls double-duty playing this character, and he’s fairly entertaining; in his
best moment, he encourages Robert to fight off his werewolfism by chanting,
“Kill it, freak it out, rip it out!”) The
Boy Who Cried Werewolf eventually becomes formulaic and repetitive, but the
filmmakers wisely play the material straight, letting campiness emerge
naturally from the extremely familiar scenario. FYI, there appears to be no
connection between this picture and a 2010 telefilm bearing the same name,
which was made for kid-TV powerhouse Nickelodeon.
The Boy Who Cried Werewolf: FUNKY
1 comment:
Juran directed Matthews in the Harryhousen classic, The 7th Voyage of Sinbad. Quite a comedown.
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