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Belinda Balaski snooping around THE HOWLING Year: 1981 |
“I kind of cross this line where... I see it whether it's really
there or not,” actress Dee Wallace wrote in a Cult Film Freak interview.
“Kind of like the monster in the closet when we're little… You just
know it's there, so it is.”
And that’s how Joe Dante’s
THE HOWLING begins, without seeing too much of anything – more of a
creepy Film Noir look than outright horror flick as Dee Wallace’s Karen
White, an intrepid anchorwoman at a local news station, has planned to
meet a mysterious man named Eddie Quist somewhere within the shadowy
downtown city streets... And what Karen witnesses, kept from the
audience, really sticks with her... Thus
the investigation trades off to snoopy reporter Terry Fisher, played by
versatile character-actress Belinda Balaski, who, as a doomed camp
counselor in Dante’s PIRANHA a few years earlier, resulted in a
memorable death scene...
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Joe Dante filmed this to be neon noir w/ Dee Wallace |
Not much difference here as rotten luck goes,
but Terry is the person we follow as she, along with Dennis Dugan’s
reluctant Chris, investigate Eddie's apartment (after he's "killed" by
police) and find several interesting sketches... Leading to an Occult
Book Store where Terry and Chris get information from owner (and
Roger Corman's BUCKET OF BLOOD hero) Walter Paisley…
Dick
Miller spouts classic exposition about werewolves… That’s right, Eddie
Quist might be one since his body went missing from the morgue… And
Terry Fisher's on the case… But what about Karen White? There’s
this mountain resort where an assortment of oddballs, including a
suicidal John Carradine and a primitive white trash sister and brother
straight out of THE HILLS HAVE EYES, reside. Turns out Marsha Quist and
her brother are related to Eddie…
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Legendary John Carradine in THE HOWLING |
Elisabeth
Brooks makes for an intoxicating, gorgeous, dangerous, primal and especially sexy wolf girl...
A fanged femme
fatale that winds up seducing Karen's boyfriend, played by Dee's real
life husband Christopher Stone, into the formidably furry legion...
In
THE HOWLING, Joe Dante, at his exploitation peak after PIRANHA and right before teaming with
Steven Spielberg (it was JAWS that PIRANHA was somewhat parodying) in the more conventional and mainstream GREMLINS, provides an ominous
backdrop but not without quirky humor: And as Eddie, played by an
extremely hairy Robert Picardo, is reintroduced, the movie thrusts into
overdrive with hands-on special effects you can’t get with today's
computer technology...
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Rob Bottin's wolf with his meal Belinda Balaski |
“When
we shot THE HOWLING there was no werewolf," writes Belinda Balaski.
"Rob Bottin hadn’t finished him yet! So all takes without the werewolf
were shot first! We didn’t even know what he was going to look like,
much less how big he was… So all my close-ups with the gurney and they
rigged hanging (my feet dangling) were done without...”
THE
HOWLING has many elements of Film Noir, and that’s not only during the
opening city street nightlife… The fate of Belinda’s character occurs
because her investigative determination wouldn’t let up… She opened
Pandora’s box and, like in all things Noir, pays the ultimate price for
curiosity… And
while the title alone is a dead giveaway for what and who the movie's
about, the characters remain in the dark as suspenseful mystery
unfolds...
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Belinda Balaski studying up THE HOWLING Rates: ****1/2 |
Scriptwriter John Sayles, who also penned Dante's PIRANHA and
Lewis Teague's ALLIGATOR, brought the Creature-Feature genre to another
level entirely, adding a multilevel of creativity to a source novel that deals with a couple, a rural cabin, and an ancient werewolf... And the director brought it wonderfully to life...
According
to Belinda Balaski: “Working with Joe Dante is always fun and no one
ever made me look better than cinematographer John Hora! The stuff in
the shed where the hand pulses was just John and I in this tiny space,
and of course the hand was done months later too! So virtually you are
stuck with your ability to imagine!” And that’s part of
what makes THE HOWLING such a unique and personal experience: much of
the chills and thrills, like in horror and in Noir – or in this
particular case, Horror/Noir – are left to the viewer’s imagination…
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Book of Werewolves signed by Joe Dante, Belinda Balaski, Bob Picardo (w/ John Landis and David Naughton) |
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Christopher Stone, Dennis Dugan, Belinda Balaski, Kevin McCarthy in THE HOWLING |
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Dick Miller with Belinda Balaski and Dennis Dugan in THE HOWLING Occult bookstore |
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The late, beautiful Elizabeth Brooks steals scenes in THE HOWLING |
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Screenwriting/Screenwriter Genius John Sayes cameo in THE HOWLING |
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Robert Picardo as Eddie with Dee Wallace as Karen White in THE HOWLING |
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Belinda Balasmi in her last stretch of the Eddie Investigation |
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Belinda Balaski The Howling Belinda Balaski THE HOWLING REVIEW by James M. Tate |
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