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If "Ginger Snaps" was a hard flaming shot of vodka in a neighborhood
bar, Nickelodeon's counterpart "The Boy Who Cried Werewolf" is a Virgin
Fruit Colada in an outdoor cafe. While this movie is meant as mere
Halloween filler while simultaneously working as a vehicle for
Nickelodeon's key star Victoria Justice, "The Boy Who Cried Werewolf"
ends up being a surprisingly solid family horror comedy that isn't as
soapy or girly as I originally assumed it would be. Within the pandering
to preteens salivating after Justice, there is also a solid however
flawed and derivative story and some wicked special effects. Sure the
flick rips off of "Spider-Man," and "Young Frankenstein," but it's still
an entertaining time filler with potential to be a franchise or new
series, which Nick seems to be going for in the goofy final scene. And
you have to love how the writers rip off Mel Brooks by turning Brooke
Shields in to a Cloris Leachman clone named Madame V who every time her
name is mentioned we hear wolves howling in the background. Movie buffs
will instantly notice this is a rip off of the gag where whenever Frau
Blucher's name is muttered horses neigh, but this might be the perfect
segue in to actual comedy and an introduction in to Brooks classic
comedies. "The Boy Who Cried Werewolf" is a crowd pleasing little horror
comedy about Jordan, a goofy, gawky, allergy ridden high schooler who is
the local reject in her class. Justice is dappered up like a librarian
through most of the film as she weathers rude classmates, a crush she
has no chance with, and a little brother obsessed with horror movies and
scaring his sister.
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He even has a wall of pictures
with Jordan's mug crying out in horror. Some say future
Manson, I guess this is their way of indicating a horror
geek. Jordan her brother Hunter, and dad David are still
haunted by their mom's death (another apparent horror geek),
and shockingly discover they've inherited a castle in
Romania in the town of Wolfsberg (Say... think there
are wolves around there?). |
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They're the descendents of a count who
handed over the castle to them, and Jordan and Hunter discover the
quirks of the Romanian town preparing for the local werewolf festival
and a run in with a vial of mysterious blood turns Jordan from geek to
sleek. Her
instantaneous transformation blossoms her in to a brand new geek who is
prettier but still acts weird bouncing over bushes, lusting after meat,
and giggling like a school girl, all the while Hunter is trying to
decide how to kill her before the full moon turns her in to a werewolf.
Surely enough she eventually does, and the make up effects artists don't
let us down providing a wicked transformation scene for Justice who
becomes a ravaging monster stalking her brother and hunting through the
night in her town. Along the way we learn the mystery of Madam V
(Shields is also quite funny in her supporting role), the mysterious old
man following Hunter, and the intent of the eager real estate agent
Paulina who is desperate to sell the castle and romance lonesome dad
David. "The Boy Who Cried Werewolf" has much more in store for it than a
simple werewolf tale, and carries a nice eighties vibe to it that with a
lot more violence would have made for a wicked little cult classic, but
for what it promises it guarantees some nice creeps and great special
effects, all the while director Eric Bross strives for an epic scale in
the miniscule television budget he's handed. There is suggested violence
and some creepy scenes of wolf danger, but the attraction is here for
Justice's fans, and she handles the role well garnering the make up and
taking on this entertaining and surprising horror comedy that kids will
surely enjoy.
Back in my day we called
them werewolves and not lycanthropes, and "The Boy Who Cried Werewolf"
works as a decent horror comedy, an amusing dedication to the classic
werewolf movies of the golden age of film, and a vehicle for Victoria
Justice who works well under the confines of the genre. Ultimately, I'm an equal opportunity
horror geek, and I suggest this for a family horror night.
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