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16 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
A classic of its kind, 25 February 2002
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Author:
baronlibra from Rhode Island
You really had to be a teenager in 1957 to appreciate the effect this
movie had on teens back then. Elvis was just starting out and there are
similarites to the reactions of adults and teenagers to both
icons.
(In fact Yvonne Lime was "dating" Elvis (pictures of Elvis and Yvonne
together were in movie magazines back then) when this film was made and from
what I understand, he even visited the set. Too bad they couldn't have had
him sing a song in it!) There is an amazing backstory AMC could make about
the senate hearings on juvenile delinquency and this film; the senators
mentioned the bad effects this film had on teenagers even though none of
them had seen it!
Anyway, Gene Fowler Jr (who had edited Academy Award films like LAURA)
was chosen to direct this, his first film and although he at first had
second thoughts about doing it, his wife convinced him "no one would see it
anyway." Boy, was she wrong! His background as an editor helped him be a
better first-time director than most and helped make this picture, made on a
shoe-string budget in only 7 days, better than all the other teen horror
films back then. The camera angles on the fight at the beginning, Dawn
Richard's gymnist seeing the werewolf upside down at first (and therefore
the audience too), showed that he had good ideas in setting up
shots.
Michael Landon, contrary to what some believe, never downplayed his
connection to this film for it gave him his start in show business. He may
at first have had doubts about being connected with it with the initial
uproar, which is why he turned down the chance to play the werewolf a second
time, but after that, he never bad-mouthed the film. In fact, he paid
homage to it on a Halloween episode of "Highway to Heaven."
Anyway, the acting is good all around with standout performances by Landon
and Whit Bissell. The "science" used to turn Tony into the monster may be
silly today, but in the 1950's, there were a lot of talk and film plots
about past-life regression following the Bridey Murphy newspaper accounts
(also used in THE SHE-CREATURE). Again you had to live in the 1950's to
understand all this.
Philip Scheer's werewolf makeup is one of the better pre-Howling/American
Werewolf ones in movie history and while the transformation scene isn't as
good as in THE WOLF MAN or THE WEREWOLF, the director did not have a lot of
money or time to work with and did a good job considering.
A film has to be pretty good, even with a low budget, to be as successful
as this one was...and to remain a cult favorite 45 years later. It has
stood the test of time and deserves to be considered a classic of its
kind.
9 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
The One That Started It All, 11 May 2001
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Author:
ronnie from United States
Made for a paltry sum in 1957, this horror film grossed over 2 million dollars in a week. Its combination monster and teen angst struck a chord with audiences, especially the core teen-agers. Dozens of related films followed in the late 1950s. Michael Landon is handsome and brooding, in the James Dean mold [in fact he wears a stripe-lined dark baseball jacket almost as good as Dean's red one in "Rebel Without A Cause" (1955)], who seeks help for his violent tendencies. Yvonne Lime is lackluster as Landon's girlfriend, but Whit Bissell is compelling as a demented psychiatrist who transforms Landon into a part-time werewolf. Two set-pieces are masterfully constructed: in the first attack a teen boy is walking home through the woods, and suddenly hears footsteps behind him. Shot day-for-night, we hear no music, just see branches, brush and meadows, and hear crunching sounds. It's terrifying. The second sequence begins with Landon watching a girl practice on a parallel bar in a gym. The bell rings and he is transformed. This is our first look at the werewolf makeup and it's effective. But the girl is hanging and sees him upside down and so do we for a short while, set to a magnetic musical score, and it's thrilling. Later the monster hunt becomes a bit drawn-out, aided by a janitor from "the old country" who speaks of werewolf legends, a replacement for the gypsy woman from "The Wolf Man" (1941). This is undoubtedly Michael Landon's most famous and best screen performance, since he got lost to TV.
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
low budget classic, 15 May 2007
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Author:
baronlibra from Rhode Island
This is one of the best low budget horror movies ever made. Directed by one of the top film editors of his day, Gene Fowler Jr, with cinematography by academy award winner Joseph LaShelle (for LAURA) raises this movie above many other low budget films of it's kind. The werewolf makeup is one of the better ones from pre-Howling-American Werewolf days. The acting is uniformly good all around with Landon and Bissell standouts. Some critics complaint about having actors in their 20's and 30's playing teenagers in IWATW are baseless since in critically praised films like WEST SIDE STORY the same thing occurs. Only weak part of the film is the "rock song" by Kenny Miller. AIP should have had a real rock song in the movie and since Yvonne Lime was dating Elvis about this time, it would have made the film more famous if it had included an Elvis song.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Drive-In bagatelle actually generates mood., 5 December 2006
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Author:
BrentCarleton
Despite its apt but risible title, "I Was a Teenage Werewolf,"
surprises in both the sincerity of its playing, as well as by its
accomplished technical credentials. Campy confessional title
nothwithstanding, there is nothing about the screenplay that is
deliberately parodic.
Effectively photographed by distinguished cinematographer Joseph La
Shelle, and bolstered by an excellent musical score, the film thus
provides a solid showcase for both its scenario and the performances of
its young principals.
More importantly, (and this is what gives the picture a leg up on
others of its ilk) the film is moodily under-lit, giving much of it a
film noir ambiance. This is most evident in the hypnosis sequences,
(the best in the film) which are staged and photographed in a way very
reminiscent of Lewton's "Cat People."
Anyone doubting the value of the change purse aesthetics at work here
need only consult the negligible results attained in such schlock as
"Blood of Dracula" or the pre-Poe Corman films, which make "Teenage
Werewolf" look like David Lean by comparison. Here the sincere effort
of the technical crew shows: an unsettled, fatalistic brooding mood is
generated, taking equal measure from the sense of doom hanging over the
protagonist and expressed in shadows everywhere, even in mid-day living
rooms and psychiatrist's offices.
Mr. Landon brings a sensitive intensity to the role that is wholly
convincing, and he is ably abetted by all in support. Mr. Sokoloff is
fine in his masculine reprise of the Maria Ouspenkaya role from Lon
Chaney's "The Wolfman," and a pre Zorro Guy Williams shows up
effectively as a policeman.
While admittedly done on a modest budget, this limitation is actually
an asset, inasmuch as it prevents the art direction from going over the
top in its very effective depiction of proletariat domestic interiors,
(Miss Lime's character even has Archie and Edith Bunker type parents.)
Thus, the homes, teen club, principal's office etc. are "right on the
money."
Even so, sharp eyed viewers will note that a leather sofa does double
duty in both the police detective's and Miss Fergusan's office.
Similarly, Dr. Brandon's and Miss Fergusan's respective office's are
the same set, re-arranged, and re-dressed.
For his part, Mr. Landon, flush with his TV western success, and
(equipped with accompanying footage), lampooned his role in the film in
a 1969 guest appearance on the Jerry Lewis TV show.
5 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
A classic werewolf movie, 8 May 2005
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Author:
Noel (Teknofobe70) from Bromsgrove, England
Tony Rivers is a teenager who has a real problem with anger. He's
always ready for a fight and explodes at even the slightest
provocation. A sequence of unfortunate events lead him to seek help
with a psychotherapist, who turns out to be a mad scientist obsessed
with the possibilities of reverting man to his animal state. After a
few sessions which seem to be helping, brutal animal-like killings
begin to occur in the town and Tony fears that he has become ... a
werewolf! Although it was made for an extremely low budget by a
brand-new production company called American International Pictures,
this movie became very successful very quickly. Whether or not somebody
actually sat down and figured out that teenagers should be the target
audience for movie theatres now that the older folk stayed at home to
watch TV is uncertain, but it was definitely a winning formula. Of
course, the authority figures at the time were quick to damn the movie,
saying it was psychologically damaging the kids who watched it. What a
bunch of squares.
The werewolf aspect here is a metaphor for common teenage mood swings,
with the anger of Tony being eventually channelled into the beast.
There are hints of a darker subtext, particularly in a scene where he
watches an attractive, partially-clad female gymnast doing her moves,
right before changing into the wolf and attacking her. Overall the
movie fails to notice the other similarities between the werewolf myth
and adolescence, at least not to the same extent as "Ginger Snaps" or
even "Teen Wolf". It tries very hard to be hip to the teenagers of that
time, with fifties slang and a completely out-of-place extended music
number and dance sequence thrown in. Unfortunately, it isn't really as
thrilling or as fun as it really should be in places ... it's quite
slow moving, takes a long time to get started and a lot of the scenes
in the second half of the movie seem thrown together and lacking in
narrative flow. Obviously it isn't perfect (it was given the "Mystery
Science Theatre" treatment), but hey -- it's a B-movie.
Michael Landon is a real star in this movie, giving a performance that
is both intense and convincing. Rather than setting his sights on
movies, from here he went on to become a popular face on television,
with major roles in series such as "Bonanza" (for over a decade),
"Highway to Heaven", and later starring in "Little House on the
Prairie". Nobody else on the cast really stands out, although everyone
is competent. Tony's girlfriend is played by Yvonne Lime, who was
actually dating Elvis while this movie was being made (how cool can you
get?).
The notable writing team here, although originally credited as "Ralph
Thornton", were in fact Herman Cohen and Aben Kandel who also wrote the
sequels "I Was A Teenage Frankenstein" and "How To Make A Monster",
then credited as Kenneth Langtry. Aben Kandel also did some earlier
uncredited work on the "Werewolf Of London" screenplay. Unfortunately
none of these movies were particularly strong in terms of story or
dialogue, but nevertheless they did contribute a great deal to werewolf
movie history. Director Gene Fowler Jr made his career in B-movie
horrors and westerns, with this being his most well-known work
(although "I Married A Monster from Outer Space" has to rank highly).
Werewolf movie fans really have to see this movie, not only because it
was so popular and so influential, but because it was one of the most
interesting werewolf movies of it's time.
4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Enjoyable camp classic., 16 January 2006
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Author:
AngryChair from Brentwood, USA
Memorable drive-in horror of the 50's is a golden oldie of the genre.
When teenage boy starts having anger issues, he begins to see a doctor,
who is slowly turning him into a werewolf!
As delightfully hokey as it sounds, I Was a Teenage Wolf is a camp
horror film that's really carried by its young star. Young Michael
Landon makes for a tragic and heart-felt character. The supporting cast
is decent enough, although their performances are a bit uneven. The
makeup FX are dated, but they manage to be pretty good considering the
era.
Over all, this one is for the B fans.
*** out of ****
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Watchable, but boring, 27 September 2009
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Author:
mutty_mcflea from Bristol, UK
Tedium sets in well before the end of this slow-moving movie just after the opening credits, actually. Thankfully Whit Bissell is on hand to liven things up as a nutty psychiatrist banging on about the usual "world shaking experiments". Troubled teen Michael Landon visits him to try and control his aggression, but instead becomes the subject of Bissell's plan to bring out man's primal state, which transforms Landon into a bouffant-topped werewolf. Landon's not bad and there are patches of fun, but all the groovy teenage parties and practical jokes are tiresome stuff, and the movie fails to round up any tension, with the supposedly mysterious deaths given away by the title.
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Freaked me out!, 8 November 2008
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Author:
jeff-51847 from Costa Mesa, CA
A group of us guys were discussing the scariest films we'd seen as
kids. I was 10 in 1957 when I saw this film while spending a week on
Catalina Island. The theater was at the landmark "Casino" which was
about a half mile walk from the small port village of Avalon. I was
heavily absorbed in war, sci-fi, and western action films, with a
special appreciation for stunts and special effects but unfamiliar with
the horror genre in general and werewolf lore in particular. I was also
the runt tagging along with a trio of cool eleven year old friends. It
could've been a scene out of "Stand By Me". Four smart-ass kids walking
at night down a dirt road to see "I Was a Teenage Werewolf" for my
first and only time.
As an aspiring artist, I remember being fascinated by the opening
titles where a make-up artist sketched the monster's face but when the
actual transformation took place in the film it freaked me out, to say
the least. Maybe it was the collective scream of a hundred other kids,
but I covered my eyes until brave enough to slowly glimpse the monster.
The scenes shot in Griffith Park looked too much like the dark, tree
lined path we had walked to the theater. That half mile walk back to
town was the longest, creepiest walk of my childhood.
A few months later I saw "A Man of a Thousand Faces" and became
completely fascinated by the art of make-up and dove into everything I
could find on Lon Chaney Sr. Later I finally saw Chaney Jr. in "The
Wolf Man". By then I was too cool to be scared but still reading
anything I could find on werewolf and vampire lore and probably first
in line to see "I Was a Teenage Frankenstein".
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Surprisingly successful horror camp flick., 29 October 1998
Author:
bux from Tecumseh ok
Even the makers of this picture must have been surprised at the success of this horror camp film. Landon is the troubled teen, Bissel the mad doctor that transforms him into canine terror. Later in his career, Landon admittedly blushed at the mention of the picture, but this one did kick off the start of the "I Was a Teenage Whatever" craze. This one moves along quite well and is still watchable by today's standards.
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
"I'm going to TRANSFORM him, and unleash the savage instincts that lie hidden within", 8 October 2007
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Author:
bensonmum2 from Tennessee
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Tony Rivers (Michael Landon) is a troubled teen. His quick temper has
way of getting him in trouble. At the insistence of teachers and his
girlfriend, he agrees to see a psychiatrist. Unfortunately for Tony,
his doctor isn't interested in helping him as much as he is in using
Tony as part of his experiments. He sees Tony as the perfect specimen
to test his theories on hypnotic regression. But his experiments have a
dramatic and horrific effect on Tony, turning him into a snarling
werewolf.
Despite what I consider to be a ridiculous name, I Was a Teenage
Werewolf is quite an enjoyable movie. In fact, it's much better than I
ever expected for a Teen Angst / Horror movie starring Michael Landon.
While a lot of the film is terribly predictable with some very obvious
foreshadowing, it's still a lot of fun much more fun than its 3.9
IMDb rating would indicate. There are some surprisingly effective
scenes in the woods once the werewolf makes his appearance, including
one vicious attack on a dog. And, I Was a Teenage Werewolf is easily my
favorite thing I've seen Michael Landon appear in. I've never been much
of a fan, but he gives a nice performance. In fact, everyone involved
gives a good accounting of themselves. So despite the incredibly awful
song "Eeny Meenie Minie Moe" (someone should be flogged for that
abomination), I'm giving I Was a Teenage Werewolf a slightly better
than average rating of 6/10.
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