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View Full Version : American Werewolf in London and the Paris sequel



HLS
10-Sep-2006, 07:55 PM
I really enjoy these movies esp. the first. Now would you consider the undead haunting the werewolfs zombies or ghosts? They seem to have zombie qualities for you see them decomposing threw time but the fact they are invisible to everyone else suggests they are ghosts. Anyways, I think its neat how they combine werewolves and the undead together.:D

EvilNed
10-Sep-2006, 08:26 PM
I see them as ghosts, definetly. Mostly because they act like ghosts, and there are really no set rules for how a ghost can look. So, yeah. They're ghosts to me.

jdog
11-Sep-2006, 07:41 AM
love the movies , and yes i think that they are ghosts also. good effects on the undead and a creepy flick (the first one ).

HLS
12-Sep-2006, 12:24 AM
love the movies , and yes i think that they are ghosts also. good effects on the undead and a creepy flick (the first one ).

It was almost comical, how his buddy haunted him. And no CGI

Fulcifan91
12-Sep-2006, 01:23 AM
I also veiw them as ghosts, or atleast his hauntings. If they were zombies, then they would be eating people, right?:)

TheWalkingDude
12-Sep-2006, 04:27 AM
They was Ghost.......:cool:

Trancelikestate
12-Sep-2006, 04:33 AM
wheres svens reply??? haha he loves AWIL. oh well, i loved it since i was a kid and it made me mad when paris came out cuz dumbarses thought it was original. kinda like seal singing fly like an eagle! :lol: :lol: :lol:

Svengoolie
12-Sep-2006, 06:05 AM
Okay...here's my take--

I don't know.:D

Seriously--they were, by their own admission, "Undead". They were in an active state of decomposition, and it was cool to see Jack moulding away. And yet they were as coherent as you or I, no one but David could see or hear them, and they were able to appear and disappear before his very eyes.

This looks like a job for Mr Owl.;)

As for the flicks themselves, I thought that the original was one of the seminal points in the Werewolf subgenre....and along with Rob Bottin's lycanthropes in The Howling, featured some of the best werewolf SFX seen before or since. The story took the werewolf back to its four-legged roots, while putting a new spin on the whole "curse" angle with the undead following him around.

Also, the progressive make-ups for Jack were impressive, to say the least...and foreshadowed another Landis project that would forever up the ante for zombie make-ups from that point on--the Michael Jackson "Thriller" video.

Say what you will about the King of Pop, the zombies featured in that video became the new standard that all zombie make-ups had to follow from then on...and even GAR himself had to have Tom Savini match them (and ultimately top them) with Day of the Dead.

As for the sequel--you can keep it.:barf: :D

LouCipherr
12-Sep-2006, 02:37 PM
I also veiw them as ghosts, or atleast his hauntings. If they were zombies, then they would be eating people, right?:)

Ditto. They were ghosts. If they were zombies, everyone would be able to see them and the scene in the theatre would've been a buffet.. :D

LC

Danny
12-Sep-2006, 04:27 PM
ghsots, deffo.:cool:

HLS
13-Sep-2006, 12:40 AM
Okay...here's my take--

I don't know.:D

Seriously--they were, by their own admission, "Undead". They were in an active state of decomposition, and it was cool to see Jack moulding away. And yet they were as coherent as you or I, no one but David could see or hear them, and they were able to appear and disappear before his very eyes.

This looks like a job for Mr Owl.;)

As for the flicks themselves, I thought that the original was one of the seminal points in the Werewolf subgenre....and along with Rob Bottin's lycanthropes in The Howling, featured some of the best werewolf SFX seen before or since. The story took the werewolf back to its four-legged roots, while putting a new spin on the whole "curse" angle with the undead following him around.

Also, the progressive make-ups for Jack were impressive, to say the least...and foreshadowed another Landis project that would forever up the ante for zombie make-ups from that point on--the Michael Jackson "Thriller" video.

Say what you will about the King of Pop, the zombies featured in that video became the new standard that all zombie make-ups had to follow from then on...and even GAR himself had to have Tom Savini match them (and ultimately top them) with Day of the Dead.

As for the sequel--you can keep it.:barf: :D

Ya! They do not seem to be ghosts or zombies but something inbetween. Ghosts do not walk around talking to you like best of friends talking about girls but they are invisible to everyone else but the one they are haunting like a ghost. Ghosts tend to not appear decomposing, they looked like a zombie in that aspect. So i suspect they are just the 'undead' and really can not be labeled as anything

tju1973
13-Sep-2006, 05:30 PM
I really enjoy these movies esp. the first. Now would you consider the undead haunting the werewolfs zombies or ghosts? They seem to have zombie qualities for you see them decomposing threw time but the fact they are invisible to everyone else suggests they are ghosts. Anyways, I think its neat how they combine werewolves and the undead together.:D


I hope this one is more akin to the first...

:)

bassman
13-Sep-2006, 05:35 PM
"London" is a classic. "Paris"....about as good as "Batman and Robin".

But yeah....ghosts.