Saturday, October 18, 2008

"When the wolfbane blooms and the autumn moon is bright"

Perhaps the most famous werewolf story and certainly the one that has had the most cultural impact on our society in the past sixty years, The Wolf Man is one of those quintessential horror flicks that everyone needs to watch. I could not find the film in its entirity, but a YouTube user has the entire film posted, albeit divided into seven parts. You can watch the movie starting with the first part here.

Released in 1941 by Universal, the film had an all-star cast, including Claude Rains, Bela Lugosi reprising his famous vampiric role, and none other than the great Lon Chaney Jr. in perhaps some of the most famous and tediously applied stage make up ever. Everyone knows the famous quote from the movie, "Even a man who is pure in heart and says his prayers by night, may become a wolf when the wolfbane blooms and the autumn moon is bright", as well as the additions to the werewolf lore that than can only be killed by a silver bullet, a silver knife, or a stick with a silver handle.

I will sum up the story of The Wolf Man, since most of you know it already. Larry Talbot (Chaney) returns home after the death of his brother to his home in Wales and reconcile with his father (Claude Rains). While there, he buys a silver staff with a wolf for his sweetheart, Gwen (Evelyn Ankers). The villagers recite the wolf poem several times throughout the course of the movie following Gwen informing Larry of the myth and first recitation of the poem. That night, in an attempt to save Gwen's friend Jenny, Larry kills a wolf but is bitten first. A gypsy fortuneteller living in the woods tells him it was not a wolf but a werewolf and now he will become one too. The animal, she says, was actually her son Bela (Lugosi). Now that the curse has been passed to Larry, he must deal with the supernatural forces taking a hold of him.

The werewolf fur Chaney used in his make up was actually yak hair. A plaster mold was made to keep Chaney's face still as his image was photographed then an outline was drawn on glass in front of the camera. The make up wizard behind the monsters, Jack Pierce, used grease paint, a rubber snout appendage, wigs, and glued layers of the yak hair to create the Wolf Man character. This process was repeated over and over again over a period of ten hours to create an image that only took a few seconds on screen. Seventeen face shots were made and it took six hours to put on Chaney's make up though only three to take it off.

The Wolf Man is in the great pantheon of early horror and creature films, along with such other notable classics as Dracula, Frankenstein, The Mummy, Creature from the Black Lagoon, King Kong, Godzilla, and The Invisible Man. The website classic-horror.com has done a great review of The Wolf Man, which you can find here, though word of caution, it does contain spoilers. I would highly recommend that you check out this movie when you can make the time since its legacy continues to live on.

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