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Wolfen By Robert Horton
Wolfen is definitely the oddest and most socially conscious of
the three big werewolf movies released in 1981 (the others were The
Howling and An
American Werewolf in London). Rumpled detective Albert Finney is
investigating some brutal NYC murders, which leads him to discover that
the collapsing buildings of the South Bronx are home to a pack of very
vindictive wolflike creatures. American Indian mythology and environmental
issues are more to the point here than silver-bullet lycanthropy. As a
police procedural, the movie's a bust, its rhythms wrong and Finney's
tortured Brooklyn accent unconvincing. But as a horror-mood piece, it can
get under your skin. Some trippy photography, plus a bunch of interesting
actors at the beginnings of their film careers (Diane Venora, Gregory
Hines, and a lean and hungry Edward James Olmos), outweigh the druggy pace
and period hairstyles. Director Michael Wadleigh (Woodstock) never
made another feature.
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: Michael Wadleigh
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|  | Stars: Albert Finney, Diane Venora, Edward James Olmos, Gregory Hines, Tom Noonan, Dick O'Neill
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|  | Released: July 24, 1981
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|  | Availability: DVD VHS | | |
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