Capital Celluloid 2018 - Day 288: Wed Oct 24

Wolfen (Wadleigh, 1981): Prince Charles Cinema, 9pm


This screening, which is part of the Horroctober season at the Prince Charles, is being shown from a 35mm print and is also only £1 as part of the cinema's weekly Members Screenings.

Time Out review:
School-leavers whose ambitions lean towards criminal pathology will pick up useful tips on wielding the scalpel and the white sheet in this foray into the bleakly explicit world of the contemporary shocker: a werewolf movie for an ecology-conscious age. The last-reel process whereby the lurking terror breaks cover and is transformed into a 'sympathetic' but unconquerable force is smoothly convincing: we are a long way here from simply feeling a bit sorry for King Kong. The setting is two New Yorks: that of the multinational, politically-amoral corporations, and that of the slum wastelands, both with the same landlords. The camera's vision is a fresh one, and though the wolf's eye view sequences threaten at first to become a nuisance, they are soon justified as a dramatic device, and ultimately as essential to the plot.
John Collis


Here (and above) is the trailer.

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