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Werewolf opinion

Started by Evan3, May 17, 2004, 07:04:51 PM

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JohnL

>Ok kinda off topic but i have this quote stuck in my head, what's it from?

Weird, the same quote popped into my head too! I figured it was Young Frankenstein, but wasn't 100% sure till now.

Eirik

"I'd have to say that Michael J. Fox in "Teen Wolf" was SLIGHTLY (very slightly) better than Jason Bateman in "Teen Wolf Too". But that's really sort of nitpicking."

*****  Yeah, that's sort of like saying Lincoln had a slightly better time at the theater than Kennedy did in Dallas.

Kory


a.v.


Just have a look at Fangoria Gastly Reviews of June 2004... it seems that we have a wonderful new entry.... "one of the best werewolf movie ever made"... what's the movie? .... ROMASANTA...

Jay

Mmmmm... I don't remember the werewolfes on "Dog soldiers" being that good. They looked quite static and expression-less to me, but the did quite a good job disguising that with the camerawork, at least in their first appearences.

I was going to say pretty much thye same thing.  The full body shots were pretty obviously guys on stilts and the head masks were fairly lifeless.  Over all, a decent movie, but the werewolves worked best the less they were seen

trekgeezer

Does anyone remember the series Werewolf on FOX.  It was one  of their first shows when they only had programming on Saturday and Sunday night.  

It starred John J. York  as a college student turned werewolf who had to hunt down the first of   his line to remove the curse. He originally thought it was Chuck Connors a salty old sailor , but after he killed him he found out it was a 2000 year old werewolf/college professor played by Brian Thompson. The show ran for 29 episodes.

The werewolves were designed by Rick Baker and Greg Cammon.  The were pretty mean looking.

If you don't remember it or never saw it you can check it out here:

http://www.werewolftv.com/




And you thought Trek isn't cool.

Gerry

trek_geezer wrote:

> Does anyone remember the series Werewolf on FOX.  It was one
> of their first shows when they only had programming on Saturday
> and Sunday night.  

Yeah, I remember it.  It was pretty impressive for a TV show about werewolves.

JohnL

I remember it too. I was disappointed that they cancelled it without filming a conclusion to the story.

BoyScoutKevin

Actually, going back to the first post, I'd have flipped "Van Helsing" and "Dog Soldiers." (IMHO) the audioanimatronic and people-on-stilts werewolves in "Dog Soldiers" look better then the CGI werewolves in "Van Helsing." The problem with CGI werewolves (IMHO) is that you lose the humanity that is inside every werewolf.
For deep inside all that hair and fur, there is always a person trying to get out.


Evan3

BoyScoutKevin wrote:

> For deep inside all that hair and fur, there is always a person
> trying to get out.
>

I can see your point, but I thought Van Helsing  did a very good job of portraying that very fact. For example, the brother kept fighting, and ripping himself out of the werewolf. The various sheddings I felt were a cool idea.

 "Sir, if you were my husband, I would poison your drink."

--Lady Astor to Winston Churchill

"Madam, if you were my wife, I would drink it."

--His reply

BoyScoutKevin

And I can see your point, and I agree with it, but, when a werewolf iis a werewolf and done in CGI, as they were in "Van Helsing," (IMHO) you cannot help but lose the humanity that still remains within the werewolf, because, at least in this case, the werewolf  part is so exaggerated. Something again (IMHO) you cannot lose, when a man puts on a werewolf costume, because, then they still look like a human to some extent.


Fearless Freep

[/i]you cannot help but lose the humanity that still remains within the werewolf[/i]

Tell that to Gollum

It's not the mechanism it's the care and execution

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Going places unmapped, to do things unplanned, to people unsuspecting

BoyScoutKevin

We were talking about werewolves not Gollums. And I agree, care and execution are important, but, I have yet to see any CGI werewolf that I prefer  over the way that werewolves use to be done in movies from the past. Maybe some day, I'll see a CGI werewolf that I prefer, but not yet.


Fearless Freep

We were talking about werewolves not Gollums. And I agree, care and execution are important, but, I have yet to see any CGI werewolf that I prefer over the way that werewolves use to be done in movies from the past.

Well, my point is that what you don't like about CG werewolves is really because of how they are done in terms of care and execution, not really the technology used to realize them.  I mean, Gollum and Jar Jar *did* have character and if you haven't seen it in a CG werewolf yet it's just because the artsts weren't goood at doing it, not really the CG itself.

Note: I have not seen Val Helsing yet but I've seen a lot of stupid 'traditional' monsters to I have no great love for 'traditional' effects over CG.  It really comes down to the skill of the artists

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Going places unmapped, to do things unplanned, to people unsuspecting