- "Kill yourself, David. Before you kill others."
- ―Jack Goodman
An American Werewolf in London | |
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Credits | |
Title: | An American Werewolf in London |
Director: | John Landis |
Writers: | John Landis |
Producers: | Peter Guber Jon Peters George Folsey, Jr. |
Composer: | Elmer Bernstein |
Cinematography: | Robert Paynter |
Editors: | Malcolm Campbell |
Production | |
Distributed by: | PolyGram Filmed Entertainment |
Released: | August 21st, 1981 |
Rating: | R |
Running time: | 97 min. |
Country: | USA/UK |
Language: | English |
Budget: | $10,000,000 |
Gross: | $3,786,512 |
Navigation | |
Previous: | — |
Next: | An American Werewolf in Paris |
An American Werewolf in London is a joint American/British horror film directed by John Landis. Released theatrically in 1981, it has earned cult status due to the revolutionary special effects work of makeup artist Rick Baker. Along with Joe Dante's The Howling, released the same year, An American Werewolf in London is known for re-inventing the physical appearance of werewolves and for revolutionizing the processes used to show a man shape-shifting into a wolf. It is also one of the first modern horror films to include elements of "black comedy" into a movie.
Plot[]
Beware the moon[]
David Kessler and Jack Goodman are two friends backpacking through the UK as one leg of a three-week tour of Europe. Hitchhiking through East Proctor in Northern England, they catch a ride with a sheep herder who drops them off in the middle of a desolate road. Night begins to fall and as the driver drops them off, he warns them to keep to the road and stay clear of the moors. David and Jack continue their trek and Jack pines for a woman he is scheduled to meet in Italy. As it grows colder outside, they seek shelter in a pub called The Slaughtered Lamb. The patrons of the pub cease their activity when they see the boys enter the room. A palpable feeling of unease washes over the place and it is clear that they are unwelcome. The bartender brings them some tea and Jack takes note of a pentagram painted on the wall. After several uncomfortable moments, the other patrons send the two on their way, but repeat the warning issued to them by the sheep herder: Stay on the road and avoid the moors. Another man adds, "Beware the moon".
Jack and David continue walking, but fail to heed the Englishman's advice. As it grows dark and rainy, they lose sight of the road and find themselves in the middle of the fog-shrouded moors. An unseen presence begins growling at them and they try to find their way back towards the bar. David stumbles and falls, but when Jack goes to help him up, a werewolf springs out of the fog and attacks him, completely eviscerating the boy. The werewolf attacks David and scratches him across the face. Several loud gunshots are fired and the werewolf falls over dead. Before losing consciousness, David turns and sees the werewolf in his true, human form.
Recovery[]
- "Beware the moon."
- ―Jack Goodman
David spends the next three weeks recuperating at St. Martin's Hospital in London. When he comes to, the doctor, J.S. Hirsch informs him that Jack is dead. A police inspector named Villiars and his bumbling assistant Sergeant McManus arrive and interview David to ask him about what took place on the night of the attack. A man named Mister Collins from the American consulate is also present to hear David's statement. Everyone agrees that it was an escaped lunatic that killed Jack, but David insists that it was an animal.
For the next several nights, David is plagued by horrific nightmares. In these dreams, he sees himself as a naked savage running through the forests hunting prey. In another dream, demonic-looking personages break into his home and slaughter his family.
Helping David through this crisis is a nurse named Alex Price. Alex develops a personal interest in David and spends a lot of time with him on his road to recovery.
Late at night, David is visited by the ghost of Jack Goodman. Jack's face is completely mauled, and he confirms that what attacked them was a werewolf. David, of course, doesn't believe that he is actually seeing Jack and thinks he is having another nightmare. Jack tells him that he is forced to wander limbo as one of the undead until the bloodline of the werewolf who killed him is destroyed. He warns David that he has become infected with the werewolf curse and unless he takes his own life, he will become a werewolf and killer others. David's anxiety and intensified and he calls for the nurse. When Alex comes into the room, Jack is gone.
First change[]
The following day, David is discharged from St. Martin's. Alex invites him to stay at her place. She is nervous about having a strange American man at her flat, but confesses that she is terribly attracted to him. The two spend the afternoon together making love.
Meanwhile, Doctor Hirsch journeys to East Proctor and finds The Slaughtered Lamb. The people inside the pub are the same as those who were the night Jack was killed. Kirsch tries to ask them questions about the night in question, but they remain very tight-lipped. One of the guests tries to speak with Hirsch in private, but his friend warns him not to say anything. Hirsch leaves, convinced that the locals believe in the curse of the werewolf, and what's worse, David might believe it too.
The next afternoon, Alex goes to work at the hospital leaving David to his own devices. He putters about the flat for hours on end, utterly bored. When night comes, the full moon rises and David's body is suddenly wracked by a flash of intense heat. He tears his clothes off and undergoes an excruciatingly painful metamorphosis. True to Jack's ghostly warnings, David Kessler becomes a werewolf.
He prowls off into the night and claims his first two victims, a couple by the names of Harry Berman and Judith Browns.
Doctor Hirsch returns to London and goes to the hospital. He asks Nurse Price about David and tells her about his experience in East Proctor. They try to telephone the flat, but nobody answers.
Going insane[]
Meanwhile, the werewolf continues to hunt for prey. He finds a trio of winos named Alf, Ted and Joseph near the river and slaughters them. He then goes off to a tube station where he stalks a passenger named Gerald Bringsley. Bringsley hears the snarls of the werewolf and tries to escape, but Kessler pounces upon him on an escalator and kills him.
The following morning, David wakes up in the wolves' den at the London Zoo. He is naked and has no memory of what has transpired. He climbs out of the cage and begins wandering the streets of London in search of clothing. He steals a collection of balloons from a small child to cover up his private areas and later comes upon a woman's coat. He gets back Alex's flat and is overjoyed to see her.
Shortly thereafter, Alex receives a telephone call from Doctor Hirsch. She tells Hirsch that David has come home no worse for wear. Hirsch is greatly troubled and tells Alex that she needs to bring David into St. Martin's immediately.
The two leave her apartment and hail a taxi. During the car ride, they learn that six people had been murdered the previous evening. David has a panic attack as he comes to realize that everything Jack had told him was true. He was a werewolf and he was responsible for killing those people. He stops the cab and runs off. Alex chases after him, but she fails to calm David down. He finds a police constable and begs the man to arrest him. The officer is perplexed by David's strange behavior but doesn't believe him when he confesses to the murders. Kessler begins mouthing off obscenities and offenses to British culture in the hopes of getting arrested, but the bobbie merely tells him "push on". He is shocked that he cannot even succeed in getting himself locked up. He grabs Alex and tells her that he loves her, but for her own protection, she must stay away from him.
At the movies[]
That evening, David is walking through the city streets trying to determine what he should do. He sees the image of Jack standing outside of a pornographic movie theater beckoning him to come inside. Jack's visage is even more rotted and gruesome than before. David follows him into the theater and finds that he is now accompanied by the ghosts of the six people he killed. Jack gives him an "I told you so" and presses upon him the importance of taking his own life less he murder even more people. David has no idea how he would even go about doing such a task. He asks if silver bullets would be required, but the ghosts just scoff at him. Each of them in turn volunteers a distinctive method for taking his life.
As the moon rises, David goes through the transformation for a second time. The ghosts disappear and the werewolf savages the remaining people in the theater. From outside, nearby pedestrians hear the howling snarls from the theater and an usher pulls down the security gate. Someone contacts the police and reports the incident. The werewolf bursts through the gate and begins attacking people in the street. He snaps his massive jaws upon one man's head and tears it off his neck, spitting it into the street. The entire cross section of Piccadilly Circus erupts into chaos as people flee in terror. Cars crash into one another, killing even more people.
At St. Martin's, Doctor Hirsch hears the news reports and tells Alex about the "wild animal" sighting. They both fear that David might be involved and hurriedly leave the hospital. When they arrive, they see that armed police men have barricaded off an alleyway in the hopes of trapping the werewolf. Alex breaks through the barricade and runs down the alley. She sees the werewolf and knows that it is David. Tearfully, she mouths the words "I love you". The werewolf appears to understand the sentiment, but then snarls and charges forward, at which point, the police officers gun him down. The werewolf, now dead, turns back into David Kessler.
Cast[]
Actor | Role |
---|---|
David Naughton | David Kessler |
Griffin Dunne | Jack Goodman |
Jenny Agutter | Alex Price |
John Woodvine | J.S. Hirsch |
Anne-Marie Davies | Susan Gallagher |
Lila Kaye | Barmaid |
Paddy Ryan | First werewolf |
Joe Belcher | Truck driver |
David Schofield | Dart player |
Brian Glover | Chess player |
Rik Mayall | 2nd chess player |
Sean Baker | 2nd dart player |
Frank Oz | Mister Collins / Miss Piggy |
Don McKillop | Inspector Villiers |
Paul Kember | Sergeant McManus |
Colin Fernandes | Benjamin, boy in hospital |
Albert Moses | Hospital porter |
Michele Brisigotti | Rachel Kessler |
Mark Fisher | Max Kessler |
Gordon Sterne | Mister Kessler |
Paula Jacobs | Mrs. Kessler |
Claudine Bowyer | Creepy little girl |
Johanna Crayden | Creepy little girl |
Nina Carter | Naughty Nina |
Geoffrey Burridge | Harry Berman |
Brenda Cavendish | Judith Browns |
Christopher Scoular | Sean |
Mary Tempest | Seans' wife |
Cynthia Powell | Sister Hobbs |
Sydney Bromley | Alf |
Frank Singuineau | Ted |
Will Leighton | Joseph |
Michael Carter | Gerald Bringsley |
Elizabeth Bradley | Woman in zoo |
Rufus Deakin | Little boy with balloons |
Lesley Ward | Little boy's mother |
George Hilsdon | News vendor |
Gerry Lewis | Man in bus queue |
Dennis Fraser | 2nd man in bus queue |
Alan Ford | Taxi driver |
Peter Ellis | Bobby in Trafalgar Square |
Denise Stephens | Girl in Trafalgar Square |
Christine Hargreaves | Ticket lady |
Linzi Drew | Brenda Bristols |
Lucien Morgan | Lance Boyle |
Gypsy Dave Cooper | Chris Bailey |
Susan Spencer | Georgia Bailey |
Bob Babenia | Usher |
Ken Sicklen | Bobby at cinema |
John Salthouse | Bobby at cinema |
John Altman | Assorted police |
Keith Hodiak | Assorted police |
John Owens | Assorted police |
Roger Rowland | Assorted police |
Vic Armstrong | Bus driver |
John Cannon | Villager |
Simon van Collem | Shop owner |
Harry Fielder | Man outside cinema |
Laurie Goode | Hospital porter |
John Landis | Man being smashed into window |
James Payne | Taxi driver |
Notes & Trivia[]
- The tagline for this film is "Beware the Moon".
- An American Werewolf in London has been made available on Betamax, VHS, Laserdisc, DVD and Blu-ray.
- Actor David Naughton had grown up having a crush on Jenny Agutter before ever knowing that he would one day film a love scene with her. [1]
- Director John Landis has a cameo appearance during the Piccadilly Circus pile-up as a man being struck by a vehicle. Landis performed the stunt himself for the film.
Recommendations[]
External Links[]
- An American Werewolf in London at IMDB
- An American Werewolf in London at Wikipedia
- An American Werewolf in London at Themoviedb.org
References[]
- ↑ David Naughton; An American Werewolf in London; DVD Audio commentary; 2001
Keywords[]
1980s | 1981 | England | Dead animals | Decapitation | Dismemberment | Hospital | London | Moors | Nightmares | Piccadilly Circus | Pentagram | Severed hands | Throat injuries | Werewolves