| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| Tom Everett Scott | ... | ||
| Julie Delpy | ... | ||
| Vince Vieluf | ... |
Brad
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| Phil Buckman | ... |
Chris
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| Julie Bowen | ... |
Amy Finch
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Pierre Cosso | ... |
Claude
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| Thierry Lhermitte | ... |
Dr. Thierry Pigot
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Tom Novembre | ... |
Inspector LeDuc
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Maria Machado | ... |
Chief Bonnet
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Ben Salem Bouabdallah | ... |
Detective Ben Bou
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Serge Basso | ... |
Officer with Flashlight
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| Charles Maquignon | ... |
Bouncer
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Jochen Schneider | ... |
Lycanthrope
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| Alan McKenna | ... |
Lycanthrope
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Hervé Sogne | ... |
Lycanthrope
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The daughter of the werewolf from AWIL is alive and living in Paris where her mother (from the first film) and stepfather are trying to overcome her lycanthropic disease. A trio of American tourists on a thrill seeking trip around Europe manage to stop her from plunging to her death from the top of the Eiffel tower and are embroiled in a horrific but often hilarious plot involving a secret society of werewolves based in the city and a drug which allows werewolves to change at any time... This time there's no need for a full moon... Written by Ben Jewitt <moribund.boy@mcmail.com>
OK, so I don't know why they decided to make another movie about a Yankee college student going to a European capital and becoming a lycanthrope. But still, "An American Werewolf in Paris" definitely has its moments. Some scenes were no doubt thrown in for comic relief, like "You can't just pop up and tell me what to do." I agree with a previous reviewer that people who slam this movie are comparing it too much to "An American Werewolf in London". Maybe there's a slight feeling of that one, but you have to take this one as something new - and rather campy - to really enjoy it. Tom Everett Scott and Julie Delpy do a pretty cool job. But either way, I think that I've had my fill of movies about US citizens becoming lycanthropes in the Old Continent.
So what do YOU plan to do the next time that there's a full moon?