|
NATURE OF THE
BEAST
|
|||||||||||
|
When it’s not pushing for burning the candles at both ends, it resorts to sitcom devices. There are your usual clichés for this formula; wacky relatives, a permissive fiancé, a villainous father in law, and of course our hero Rich who has a secret that induces much goofy misunderstandings involving body hair and dogs. To set up poor foreshadowing, our friend Rich thinks back to when he was a college guy and accidentally got bitten by a werewolf, and this coincides with the introduction of his friend, played by Eric Mabius. Mabius is introduced in the most forgettable instance as a jealous studly friend of Rich who seems to resent his astute writing, and then is just completely pushed into the background for the second half of the movie, once Julia discovers the lycanthropy. Mabius has such a minor role, I had a truly difficult time finding his character’s name researching this review, in spite of the fact he’s included in the making of featurettes on the ABC Family website. His name is Donovan, apparently. ABC Family thinks that they’re tapping the horror comedy sub-genre by featuring this character as a werewolf who is not above eating other people, but it clearly underestimates the fans and never rises to the level of an actual horror film at any point, even with the director and writers pushing horror devices on us like the hunter who mysteriously knows what a werewolf is, and Mabius doing his best imitation of James Spader a la “Wolf,” while Eddie Kaye Thomas pretty much phones it in the entire time as a one-dimensional Jack Tripper. When Rich turns into a werewolf, he’s pretty much always out of range of humans who always get away in time, and through those coincidences, “Nature of the Beast” is hardly ever the horror movie it attempts to convince us it is. Actual horror geeks won’t even bother to lump this in with actual horror titles, but ABC Family will sure try their damndest to change their minds, and their efforts are clearly in vain.
|
||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||
|
Have something to say about this review? Pop on over to Cinema-Lunatics
and speak your mind in our Answer Back! Forums >> |
|
[
Link to
Us | FAQ |
Top^
] ¤ ¤ ¤ |