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THE
WOLFMAN (2010)
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During a horrific and gruesome rampage from the beast, Lawrence is bitten in the shoulder and given the mark of the beast coming to grips with a terrible curse bestowed upon him that transforms him in to a merciless swift monster prone to maiming and murdering innocent bystanders and hunters wandering in the forests. Rick Baker's make up effects are about as remarkable as ever giving way to a new design for the wolf man that's respectable to Chaney's original mold, while also adding a darker more demonic gleam that makes him a monster to be petrified of. It's amazing at times what Baker has done with the Wolf Man for the modern age. He's always foaming at the mouth, always heaving his chest, and acts as an animal would whenever attacking or on the defensive. The performances are quite top notch with Hugo Weaving and Anthony Hopkins giving strong portrayals along with Emily Blunt who is the angelic Gwen. Benicio Del Toro fits in this period piece perfectly with a man filled with apathy who can only express desires in the flesh of the monster. Meanwhile director Johnston doesn't shy away from the carnage providing some incredible and disturbing scenes of the wolfman tearing his way through a bus, murdering a pack of hunters, and galloping along roof tops. The entire transformation is of course a metaphor for his personal torment coming to the surface, and he must soon figure out a way to end his torment, or embrace it and become pure evil. Johnston is never afraid to stretch his legs with the narrative allowing for some dashes of fantasy and whimsy along with wild hallucinations from Talbot who is taken in to a sanitarium after his first rampage. Johnston examines this small meandering by explaining that perhaps this wolf transformation is half a curse and half Talbot's own psychoses and trauma. "The Wolfman" for what it promises is a much more intelligent and complex movie than it looks combining a great murder mystery, some introspection, and fantastic monster movie madness for fans who can appreciate it all, and I enjoyed it as a companion piece to the superior original.
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