The Howling (film)

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The Howling
The Howling (1981 film) poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJoe Dante
Screenplay by
Based onThe Howling
by Gary Brandner
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyJohn Hora
Edited by
Music byPino Donaggio
Production
companies
  • International Film Investors
  • Wescom Productions
Distributed byEmbassy Pictures
Release date
  • March 13, 1981 (1981-03-13)
Running time
91 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1.5 million[1]
Box office$17.9 million[2]

The Howling is a 1981 American comedy horror film directed by Joe Dante and starring Dee Wallace, Patrick Macnee, Dennis Dugan, and Robert Picardo. Based on the novel of the same name by Gary Brandner, the film follows a television newswoman sent to a remote mountain resort after a near-fatal incident with a serial killer, unaware that the resort's residents are werewolves.

The film was released on March 13, 1981 and became a moderate success, grossing $17.9 million at the box office. It received generally positive reviews, with praise for the makeup special effects by Rob Bottin. The film won the 1980 Saturn Award for Best Horror Film while still in development, and was one of the three high-profile werewolf-themed horror films released in 1981, alongside An American Werewolf in London and Wolfen. Its financial success aided Dante's career, and prompted Warner Bros. to hire Dante (as director) and Michael Finnell (as producer) for Gremlins. A series consisting of seven sequels arose from the film's success. A remake is currently in development for Netflix, with Andy Muschietti set to direct.

Plot[]

Karen White is a Los Angeles television news anchor who is being stalked by a serial murderer named Eddie Quist. In cooperation with the police, she takes part in a scheme to capture Eddie by agreeing to meet him in a sleazy porn theater. Eddie forces Karen to watch a video of a young woman being bound and raped, and when Karen turns around to see Eddie, she screams. The police enter and shoot Eddie, and although Karen is safe, she suffers amnesia. Her therapist, Dr. George Waggner, decides to send her and her husband, Bill Neill, to the "Colony", a secluded resort in the countryside where he sends patients for treatment.

The Colony is filled with strange characters, and one, a sultry nymphomaniac named Marsha Quist, tries to seduce Bill. When he resists her unsubtle sexual overtures, he is attacked and scratched on the arm by a werewolf while returning to his cabin. After Bill's attack, Karen summons her friend, Terri Fisher, to the Colony, and Terri connects the resort to Eddie through a sketch he left behind. Terri and her boyfriend Chris Halloran also find out that Eddie's body disappeared from the morgue. Karen begins to suspect that Bill is hiding a secret far more threatening than marital infidelity. Later that night, Bill meets Marsha at a campfire in the woods. While having sex in the moonlight, they undergo a frightening transformation into werewolves.

While investigating the next morning, Terri is attacked by a werewolf in a cabin, though she escapes after cutting the monster's hand off with an ax. She runs to Wagner's office and places a phone call to Chris, who has been alerted about the Colony's true nature. While on the phone with Chris, Terri looks for files on Eddie Quist. When she finally finds the file in the filing cabinet, she is attacked by Eddie in werewolf form, and is killed when she is bitten on the jugular vein. Chris hears this on the other end and sets off for the Colony armed with silver bullets.

Karen is confronted by the resurrected Eddie Quist once again, and Eddie transforms himself into a werewolf in front of her. In response, Karen splashes Eddie in the face with corrosive acid and flees. Later, as Chris arrives at the Colony, he is confronted by the horribly disfigured Eddie, who is fatally shot by Chris with a silver bullet when he attempts to transform. However, it turns out all the people in the Colony are werewolves and can shapeshift at will, without the need of a full moon to do so. Karen and Chris survive their attacks and burn the Colony to the ground.

Karen resolves to warn the entire world about the existence of werewolves, and begins a special worldwide broadcast announcement to the people around the world. Then, to prove her story, she herself transforms into a werewolf, having become one after being bitten at the Colony by Bill. She is shot by Chris in front of a live viewing audience, although the people watching the transformation from their television sets around the world are amused, believing it to be just a stunt done with special effects. Marsha, who escaped the Colony herself, sits at a bar with a man who orders a pepper steak for himself while watching the special broadcast announcement and orders a rare hamburger after Karen's display cuts to a commercial break.

Cast[]

Production[]

Though the film has been noted for its semi-humorous screenplay, it was adapted from a more straightforward novel by Gary Brandner which was first published in 1977. After drafts by Jack Conrad (the original director who left following difficulties with the studio) and Terence H. Winkless proved unsatisfactory, director Joe Dante hired John Sayles to completely rewrite the script. The two had collaborated before on Dante's 1978 film Piranha. Sayles rewrote the script with the same self-aware, satirical tone that he gave Piranha, and his finished draft bears only a vague resemblance to Brandner's book. However, Winkless still received a co-writer's credit along with Sayles for his work on the screenplay.

The cast featured a number of recognizable character actors, such as Kevin McCarthy, John Carradine, Kenneth Tobey and Slim Pickens, many of whom appeared in genre films themselves. Additionally, the film was full of in-joke references (see 'Tributes' below). Roger Corman makes a cameo appearance as a man standing outside a phone booth, as does John Sayles, appearing as a morgue attendant and James Murtaugh as one of the members of the Colony. Forrest J Ackerman appears in a brief cameo in an occult bookstore, clutching a copy of an issue of his magazine Famous Monsters of Filmland.

The Howling was also notable for its special effects, which were state-of-the-art at the time. The transformation scenes were created by Rob Bottin, who had also worked with Dante on Piranha. Rick Baker was the original effects artist for the film, but left the production to work on the John Landis film An American Werewolf in London, handing over the effects work to Bottin.[3] Bottin's most celebrated effect was the on-screen transformation of Eddie Quist, which involved air bladders under latex facial applications to give the illusion of transformation. Variety claimed that The Howling's biggest flaw is that the impact of this initial transformation is never topped during the climax of the film.[4] The Howling also features stop-motion animation by David W. Allen, and puppetry intended to give the werewolves an even more non-human look.[3] Despite most of the special effects at the time, the silhouette of Bill and Marsha having sex as werewolves is obviously a cartoon animation. Dante attributed this to budgetary reasons.[citation needed]

Due to their work in The Howling, Dante and producer Michael Finnell received the opportunity to make the film Gremlins (1984) for Steven Spielberg.[5] That film references The Howling with a smiley face image on a refrigerator door. Eddie Quist leaves yellow smiley face stickers as his calling card in several places throughout The Howling.[citation needed] Also, Jim McKrell's character as news reporter Lew Landers appears in both The Howling and Gremlins.

Music[]

Pino Donaggio composed the score which featured classic orchestral horror melodies with minimal synth sounds. released the full soundtrack on a double LP in 2017. The album art was done by Francesco Francavilla.[6]

Differences from Brandner's novel[]

The plot and characters of the film deviate from the original novel in many ways:

  • In the novel, Karen White is called Karyn Beatty. Her husband in the novel is called Roy Beatty (as opposed to Bill Neill in the film). Neither Karyn or Roy work in television.
  • In the novel, Karyn is raped by a man in her apartment. In the film, she is saved by the police before she is attacked by a werewolf in an adult bookstore.
  • In the novel, Karyn's psychiatrist is only briefly mentioned. In the film, her psychiatrist is Dr. Waggner, who is a major character.
  • In the novel, Karyn goes to recuperate at Drago, a mountain village in California. In the film, she goes to "the Colony", a health resort run by her psychiatrist Dr. Waggner.
  • Karyn's rapist in the novel is named Max Quist and he is an ex-con who has no involvement with the village of Drago or its inhabitants. In the film, Karen's (attempted) attacker is named Eddie Quist and is already affiliated with the Colony before he meets Karen.
  • Marsha Quist's name in the novel is Marcia Lura, a shopkeeper in Drago, and she is not a relative of Max Quist.
  • In the novel, Karyn and Roy bring their pet dog Lady with them to the village, which is killed later on. In the film, they have no dog.
  • The werewolves in the novel are described as resembling actual wolves. The werewolves of the film are more anthropomorphic, and can walk on their hind legs; standing over seven feet tall.
  • The werewolves in the novel are never seen in the daytime; in fact, they change every night once the sun has gone down. The werewolves in the film can change at will at any time of the day or night and are seen in daylight hours.
  • In the novel, the character Chris Halloran is Roy's best friend. In the film, Chris works with Karen and Bill at the television station. Karen's friend Terri (Chris's girlfriend, who also works at the station) is not featured in the novel at all.
  • In the novel, Karyn escapes from Drago physically unharmed, but mentally traumatized, and survives after being rescued by Chris Halloran. In the film, she gets bitten by her husband Bill who became a werewolf and later transforms into one herself on live television. She is then shot by Chris with a silver bullet live on the air.

Tributes[]

Notable for its semi-humorous screenplay, director Joe Dante put many in-joke references in the film, including numerous references to wolves: The Big Bad Wolf from Ub Iwerks' Little Boy Blue (1936) is seen on TV; Sheriff Newfield is seen eating Wolf Brand Chili and a similar can is seen on the counter in Eddie's cabin; a copy of the Allen Ginsberg book Howl appears; a mention of disc jockey Wolfman Jack; a bottle of Wolfen-brand medicine on the counter from which Karen picks up the acid; and in Karen and Bill's cabin there is a picture of a wolf who killed a sheep from within the flock.

Many characters in the film are named after horror film directors who directed other films that featured werewolves, including George Waggner, who directed The Wolf Man (1941). Others include R. William Neill (Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man, 1943), Terence Fisher (The Curse of the Werewolf, 1961), Freddie Francis (Legend of the Werewolf, 1975), Erle Kenton (House of Dracula, 1945, which co-stars John Carradine, who plays Kenton in The Howling), Sam Newfield (The Mad Monster, 1942), Charles Barton (Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, 1948), Jacinto Molina (La Marca del Hombre Lobo, 1968) and Lew Landers (The Return of the Vampire, 1943).

Dick Miller's bookstore owner Walter Paisley gets his name from Miller's starring role in the low-budget horror film A Bucket of Blood (1959). Also present in the bookstore is the mummified grandmother in an armchair from the attic of the house in the original version of the film The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.

The film's screenwriter and future director John Sayles, Dante's former producer Roger Corman (who directed A Bucket of Blood), and science fiction and horror film personality Forrest J Ackerman all have cameos.[7]

Finance[]

IFI agreed to provide 50% of the finance. Goldcrest Films had a partnership with IFI. They ended up providing £145,000 to the budget of The Howling and receiving £396,000, making a profit of £251,000.[8]

Release[]

The film opened on March 13, 1981 in 170 theatres in New York City, Philadelphia and the Washington D.C.—Baltimore area.[9]

Critical response[]

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, The Howling holds a 72% approval rating based on 39 critic reviews, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The consensus reads: "The Howling packs enough laughs into its lycanthropic carnage to distinguish it from other werewolf entries, with impressive visual effects adding some bite.”[10]

In 1981, Roger Ebert's 2-out-of-4 star review described The Howling as the "silliest film seen in some time", but Ebert also said the special effects were good and the film was perhaps "worth your money, IF you get it two for one".[11] Gene Siskel liked the film and gave it three and a half stars out of four.[12] In his Movie Guide, Leonard Maltin wrote that The Howling is a "hip, well-made horror film" and noted the humorous references to classic werewolf cinema.[13] Variety praised both the film's sense of humor and its traditional approach to horror.[4] Kim Newman, in his 1988 book Nightmare Movies, called The Howling "a brisk chiller that effortlessly revives the prowling-through-misty-forests genre", and called Picardo's transformation sequence "the movies' most impressive werewolf monster".[14]

The film won the 1980 Saturn Award for Best Horror Film.[a] This film was also #81 on Bravo's 100 Scariest Movie Moments.

Box office[]

The film grossed $1,160,172 in its opening weekend.[9] Per Variety's weekly chart, based on a sample of 20-24 markets, the film was ranked number one for the week;[15] however, Back Roads, which opened in 635 more theatres, grossed more nationally, with $3 million.[16] The Howling grossed $17.9 million in the United States and Canada.[2]

Home video[]

Shout! Factory re-released The Howling on DVD and Blu-ray on June 18, 2013 through their Scream Factory imprint.[17] The film was previously released to DVD by MGM (owners of the video and TV distribution rights to The Howling due to the distribution deal with StudioCanal and Sony Pictures, the current owners of the AVCO Embassy library) on August 26, 2003 as a Region 1 widescreen Special Edition DVD.

Sequels and remake[]

There have been seven sequels to The Howling.[18] In May 2015, a newly formed production company announced that they had bought the rights to the original film and were working on a ninth film, a remake of the original.[18] In January 2020, it was announced that Andy Muschietti would be directing the remake for Netflix.[19]

A comic book series by Space Goat Productions entitled The Howling: Revenge of the Werewolf Queen began publication in May of 2017, acting as a direct sequel to the original film, ignoring the film sequels.[20]

Notes[]

  1. ^ While the film was released in 1981, the Saturn Awards, being awarded in July at the time, did not follow the calendar year and a handful of films released prior to May 1981 were nominated for the 1980 awards.

References[]

  1. ^ Molyneaux, Gerry (2000). John Sayles. Renaissance Books. p. 96.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b The Howling at Box Office Mojo
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Anderson, Jeffrey M. (September 30, 2003). "Howl Play: Interview with Joe Dante". Combustible Celluloid. Retrieved 2016-08-05.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "Review: 'The Howling'". Variety. Retrieved 2016-08-05.
  5. ^ DVD commentary; Steven Spielberg presents Gremlins. Special Edition. Warner Home Video, 2002.
  6. ^ Lobenfeld, Claire. "Waxwork announce deluxe vinyl reissue of The Howling OST". Fact Magazine. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  7. ^ van Heerden, Bill (1998). Film and Television In-Jokes. McFarland & Co. ISBN 978-0-7864-3894-5.
  8. ^ Eberts, Jake; Illott, Terry (1990). My indecision is final. Faber and Faber. pp. 59, 655.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b "'Howling' Croons $1.1 Mil B.O. In 3-Market Opening". Daily Variety. March 17, 1981. p. 4.
  10. ^ "The Howling". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2021-08-19.
  11. ^ Ebert, Roger. "The Howling". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved 2016-08-05.
  12. ^ Interview with Siskel in Fangoria #15 (1981)
  13. ^ Maltin, Leonard (2008). Leonard Maltin's 2009 Movie Guide. Plume. p. 642. ISBN 978-0-452-28978-9.
  14. ^ Newman, Kim (1988). Nightmare Movies: Critical History of the Horror Film, 1968–88. New York: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 178. ISBN 978-0-7475-0295-1.
  15. ^ "50 Top-Grossing Films". Variety. March 25, 1981. p. 12.
  16. ^ "'Back Roads' Grosses $3 Mil B.O. In 3 Days". Variety. March 17, 1981. p. 4.
  17. ^ Miska, Brad (March 6, 2013). "Shout! Factory's Scream Factory Announces 'The Howling' Special Edition DVD and Blu-Ray!". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 2016-08-05.
  18. ^ Jump up to: a b Miska, Brad (May 5, 2015). "Joe Dante's 'The Howling' Is Also Being Remade..." Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 2015-05-05.
  19. ^ Goodman, J. J. (2020-01-08). "EXCLUSIVE: 'IT' Director Andrés Muschietti WILL helm 'The Howling' for Netflix". That Hashtag Show. Retrieved 2020-06-18.
  20. ^ First Look at Sequel Comic Series "The Howling: Revenge of the Werewolf Queen", Bloody-disgusting.com (April 18, 2017)

External links[]

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