The Howling

April 10th, 1981







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The Howling

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Still of Christopher Stone and Dee Wallace in The HowlingStill of John Carradine and Slim Pickens in The HowlingStill of Elisabeth Brooks in The HowlingThe HowlingStill of Belinda Balaski in The HowlingThe Howling

Plot
After a bizarre and near fatal encounter with a serial killer, a newswoman is sent to a rehabilitation center whose inhabitants may not be what they seem.

Release Year: 1981

Rating: 6.5/10 (11,952 voted)

Director: Joe Dante

Stars: Dee Wallace, Patrick Macnee, Dennis Dugan

Storyline
Eye-popping special effects highlight an updated werewolf story. TV newswoman, Karen White, goes on a retreat after a traumatic incident with a serial killer. But is she really safe? And what should she fear more: regaining her memory or the creepy residents of "The Colony"? Followed by many unsatisfying and unconnected sequels. Helped launch shortlived werewolf craze in early eighties.

Writers: Gary Brandner, John Sayles

Cast:
Dee Wallace - Karen White
Patrick Macnee - Dr. George Waggner
Dennis Dugan - Chris
Christopher Stone - R. William 'Bill' Neill
Belinda Balaski - Terry Fisher
Kevin McCarthy - Fred Francis
John Carradine - Erle Kenton
Slim Pickens - Sam Newfield
Elisabeth Brooks - Marsha Quist
Robert Picardo - Eddie Quist
Margie Impert - Donna
Noble Willingham - Charlie Barton
James Murtaugh - Jerry Warren
Jim McKrell - Lew Landers
Kenneth Tobey - Older Cop

Taglines: Imagine your worst fear a reality

Release Date: 10 April 1981

Filming Locations: Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA

Box Office Details

Budget: $1,000,000 (estimated)

Gross: $17,986,000 (USA)



Technical Specs

Runtime:



Did You Know?

Trivia:
Cameo: [Forrest J Ackerman] in the book shop carrying a copy of his magazine "Famous Monsters of Filmland."

Goofs:
Continuity: When Marsha makes the scratches on Bill's back, his back smooth and hair free. Yet the shot before showing them turning into werewolves, they were both covered with hair.

Quotes:
[first lines]
Dr. George Waggner: Repression. Repression is the father of neurosis, of self-hatred. Now, stress results when we fight against our impulses. We've all heard people talk about animal magnetism, the natural man. the noble savage, as if we'd lost something valuable in our long evolution into civilized human beings. Now there's a good reason for this.



User Review

awesome werewolf flick

Rating: 9/10

This is an excellently crafted piece of work from former Roger Corman student, Joe Dante. I won't go much into the plot, but it involves a news woman who gets attacked while in a porno shop viewing room. To get her mind off things, a psychiatrist recommends she goes to his private retreat to be treated. After that, spooky happenings and strange deaths start occurring. This film has great direction and great atmosphere and mood. The lighting and use of fog is excellent and really hightens the spookiness of the film. One of the best werewolf transformations is shown in this film, rivaled only by the one in An American Werewolf in London. Although this movie starts out slow, the tension keeps rising and keeps you interested in what will happen next. The spookiness doesn't always lie within the content but also the claustrophobic feeling and the uncertainty of who you can trust. A very good movie, highly recommended.





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