Saturday, February 13, 2010

The Wolfman


The Wolfman (2010)
Directed by Joe Johnstone
Starring Benicio Del Toro, Emily Blunt, Anthony Hopkins

Remake of the Hollywood classic. I went in hoping to be impressed given the stellar cast involved, but the film was crippled by its B-movie approach to the story, bad dialogue and over the top melodramatic music. The film gets more interesting as the action ramps up and the characters talk less. The plot is easy to figure out and there is nothing new in the story or the visual effects that makes this an original or unique werewolf film. There is nothing in this film that we didnt see in the early 80's in 'American Werewolf In London' by John Landis; if you cant better that classic then why bother. It's basically the same story wrapped in a different coat. Surprisingly the visual effects are no better than in AWIL; okay there are some cool closeup inner mouth transformation shots that are crazy cool, but all in all it didnt feel new or have a 'wow factor monster'. The film is actually quite a snooze as we wait through tedious set-up for it all to go down exactly as we predict. No guess work needed with this plot.

Del Toro looks bored and he resembles an overweight Paul McCartney with bad hair, bad make-up and some real bad acting until he becomes The Wolfman, then he steps it up. I wont even get into the story or plot, its not worth it. The big problem is that the film lacked character development of any kind. The dialogue and performances are so hammed up its hard not be chuckling while you watch the splatter-fest. Yes it is very gory and this makes up for the lack of suspense or tension.

Hugo Weaving plays a supporting Role as a Scotland Yard detective who 'knows all along', and he is quite good until the very end of the film when its made clear he will be playing the next Wolfman. What does that mean? The Wolfman 2. No, please!

Danny Elfman's music (in my opinion) was a bad rip on Wojciech Kilar's score for 'Bram Stoker's Dracula' (91) by Francis Ford Coppola. Through and through its a clear rip-off, the beats, the tones, the movements, all of it - very disappointing.

There is no real twist in this film and the reveal of Hopkins as the Daddy Werewolf comes as no surprise. When father and son duke it out in a wolf-fight its quite comedic instead of climactic. An old grey and hairy Hopkins-wolfman had me cracking up.
Emily Blunt is fabulous as usual but she has nothing to do apart from 'fall in love' with her brother in law, yes yuck. When this happens it crushes the lead characters with bad taste and bad writing. Blunt looks beautiful as ever and cries on cue (a lot). She should have passed on this turkey. Its just a big corny laugh.

Props must be given for the fact that the Wolfman looks exactly like Wolfman from the Hollywood legend, ripped white shirt and all, the face is a total dead-ringer. The 3D is okay but clearly animated and the matte paintings are well below average, one too many timelapse moon shots. This film sat on the shelf for 2 years. Its easy to see why, it just doesnt hit the mark for such a classic title. Rent it on DVD to support these great actors regardless of the content. If you like Gore you might enjoy it, just don't expect to be gripped, moved or scared. It wont happen.

No comments:

Post a Comment