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Ahoy, squirts! Quint here with today’s installment of A Movie A Day.
[The regular A Movie A Day list has been frozen in order for me to do an all-horror line-up for October. I’ve pulled many horror titles from my regular “to see” stack and have ordered many more horror and thriller titles to make sure we have some good stuff. Like the regular AMAD column all the movies I’m covering are films I have never seen, but unlike the regular AMAD column I will not connect each film to the one before it. Instead I will pull a title at random every day and watch whatever the movie Gods determine for me.]
Today’s movie, the Amicus production THE BEAST MUST DIE directed by Paul Annett and starring a bunch of incredible actors, including the great Peter Cushing, ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW’s Charles Gray and future Dumbledore Michael Gambon, is actually nearly brilliant. While it falls short of brilliance it still is a lot of fun.

The flick opens on as blaxploitation star Calvin Lockhart (COTTON COMES TO HARLEM, LET’S DO IT AGAIN) is running through the woods in full ‘70s glory. He’s wearing a black leotard and sporting an awesome, perfectly formed afro.
He’s being hunted by something. Is it a werewolf? Nope, it’s a group of white men, being directed by a voice over their headsets. We see cameras in the trees, mics on the ground and the guy gets caught, but is let go.
He finally runs out of the woods, onto a posh lawn as a group of upper class people sit outside, having tea. The group of men close in behind him and fire. He falls to the shocked gasps of the party goers.
But then he pops back up again. He is Tom Newcliffe, owner of the estate and organizer of the hunt. It was all an ultimate test for an extreme security center. If anyone could find a weakness it is this man, an expert hunter. But he could not navigate it, so it passes the test.
The party guests are there at his invitation. He knows many of them and a few he invited blindly, based solely on research.
Like any good Agatha Christie-esque mystery, all of them have something in common. Newcliffe believes one of them to be a werewolf and being bored of having all the power, wealth and experience that his lifestyle has afforded him that leaves only one avenue left for him to get a thrill. He calls them there to spend the weekend, of a full moon, knowing that at least one of them will turn and he’ll have an animal he can hunt.
What a great set-up, right?
And the character work is fantastic. All these different people have different reasons why they’re there. One’s a pianist who is getting over an illness and also, coincidentally, has toured many cities where mutilated bodies popped up. One brags about eating human flesh in his youth, a charming swinger type with unusually hairy hands. Everybody has a background like that or something that may be coincidence, but that’s good enough for Newcliffe.

The one possible exception is Peter Cushing, an expert on lycanthropy. He has never seen one, but has a faith that they exist and has scientifically backed up theories on the legend vs. reality. In fact, a lot of time Cushing explains certain things (like an allergy to silver and the effects of wolfsbane on someone infected) much like Max Brooks would do decades later, but for zombies in his wonderful ZOMBIE SURVIVAL GUIDE.
Cushing has a sort of empathy for someone infected, stressing that if werewolves do in fact exist that the werewolf should always be considered a victim, having no choice in his state and no control over his or her turn.
Now, the central gimmick of the movie is a dare. It dares you to uncover the mystery, decipher the red herrings and guess, correctly, who the werewolf is. It even gives you a time-out, 30 seconds of a clock counting down, to make your guess as the faces of the suspects flash before you. As usual, I overthought it and totally guessed wrong. But it was a good guess.

I thought it was the Polish security guy, not exactly part of the invited guests, but at the same time he was employed specifically for this purpose by Newcliffe. Of course, this dude is the first victim of the real werewolf, which happens off camera, but we see a pretty gory result (face half-gone, open eye-socket gaping), which once again proved my inability to accurately guess the ending to mystery films.
You know what I loved about that guy, though? When Newcliffe reveals his intentions to the group, this guy (like the dude in the Matrix, sitting in front of a bank of floor to ceiling monitors) reacts perfectly. Newcliffe asks him his opinion. Does he believe werewolves exist? He says something like, “Why do you think I left Poland?”
I love it in movies when they have a fantastic element, but portray it as a kind of regular every day reality. They don’t go that far here, but they make it seem like a world where lycanthropy isn’t a thing of mere superstition and fantasy.
There is a downside to this movie, unfortunately and that’s in the execution of the werewolf. I’m not a traditionalist when it comes to my movie monsters, I’m slowly discovering. I don’t like the puppeted VooDoo version of zombies nearly as much as the Romero living dead and I don’t like werewolves that are just dogs. I like my werewolves creatures, be they the bipedal Lon Chaney Jr. version or the quadropedal monsters like the David werewolf in Landis’ AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON.
Here, the werewolf is a dog. Not even a wolf, but a dog forced to wear some lion-like black mane. And not even an angry dog, but a happy, tail-wagging, tongue-lolling dog. Look at the DVD cover and the original poster… nothing close to that is ever seen in this movie, which is its biggest flaw.
I loved the new spin on the werewolf mythos, putting out there that someone infected can show a certain level of control over the change depending on how far along the disease is and how old they are. If it was me, I would have ended it a little differently, though. The surprise pick of the werewolf isn’t a bad one by any means, but I think I would have taken it a step further. Why does there only have to be one of the invited guests? What if he spread his net so wide he got more than one? What if the twist was that they were all werewolves?
Final Thoughts: The time period is almost perfect for this story in all but one aspect. The cast is perfect, just enough old school screen actors like Cushing to give the movie a certain class and enough of the younger, badasses like Gambon and Lockhart that you could only get in the ‘70s. The empowered black man and Michael Caine era stone-cold British dude. Unfortunately this film takes place seemingly after the golden age of innovative Jack Pierce make-up and before the new wave of young talent like Rick Baker and Rob Bottin and the werewolf suffers for it. Thankfully this monster movie had a lot more going for it than the monster. The end result is a really fun, entertaining whodunit that gives us a new look at the werewolf legend.

Here are the titles in the drawing pool for the rest of October:
Wednesday, October 1st – Friday, October 31st: H-MAD! Horror Movie A Day! Check out the list here!
Added two more titles to the drawing pool! Click above to check out the noobs!
Now’s the the time to pull the next HMAD!
Next up is:

HELLGATE! That one promises to be a nice slice of ‘80s cheese, though THE PIT, the other film in that double feature set, is more highly talked about. We'll see tomorrow.
-Quint
quint@aintitcool.com

Previous Movies:
June 2nd: Harper June 3rd: The Drowning Pool June 4th: Papillon June 5th: Gun Crazy June 6th: Never So Few June 7th: A Hole In The Head June 8th: Some Came Running June 9th: Rio Bravo June 10th: Point Blank June 11th: Pocket Money June 12th: Cool Hand Luke June 13th: The Asphalt Jungle June 14th: Clash By Night June 15th: Scarlet Street June 16th: Killer Bait (aka Too Late For Tears) June 17th: Robinson Crusoe On Mars June 18th: City For Conquest June 19th: San Quentin June 20th: 42nd Street June 21st: Dames June 22nd: Gold Diggers of 1935 June 23rd: Murder, My Sweet June 24th: Born To Kill June 25th: The Sound of Music June 26th: Torn Curtain June 27th: The Left Handed Gun June 28th: Caligula June 29th: The Elephant Man June 30th: The Good Father July 1st: Shock Treatment July 2nd: Flashback July 3rd: Klute July 4th: On Golden Pond July 5th: The Cowboys July 6th: The Alamo July 7th: Sands of Iwo Jima July 8th: Wake of the Red Witch July 9th: D.O.A. July 10th: Shadow of A Doubt July 11th: The Matchmaker July 12th: The Black Hole July 13th: Vengeance Is Mine July 14th: Strange Invaders July 15th: Sleuth July 16th: Frenzy July 17th: Kingdom of Heaven: The Director’s Cut July 18th: Cadillac Man July 19th: The Sure Thing July 20th: Moving Violations July 21st: Meatballs July 22nd: Cast a Giant Shadow July 23rd: Out of the Past July 24th: The Big Steal July 25th: Where Danger Lives July 26th: Crossfire July 27th: Ricco, The Mean Machine July 28th: In Harm’s Way July 29th: Firecreek July 30th: The Cheyenne Social Club July 31st: The Man Who Knew Too Much August 1st: The Spirit of St. Louis August 2nd: Von Ryan’s Express August 3rd: Can-Can August 4th: Desperate Characters August 5th: The Possession of Joel Delaney August 6th: Quackser Fortune Has A Cousin In The Bronx August 7th: Start the Revolution Without Me August 8th: Hell Is A City August 9th: The Pied Piper August 10th: Partners August 11th: Barry Lyndon August 12th: The Skull August 13th: The Hellfire Club August 14th: Blood of the Vampire August 15th: Terror of the Tongs August 16th: Pirates of Blood River August 17th: The Devil-Ship Pirates August 18th: Jess Franco’s Count Dracula August 19th: Dracula A.D. 1972 August 20th: The Stranglers of Bombay August 21st: Man, Woman & Child August 22nd: The Little Girl Who Lives Down The Lane August 23rd: The Young Philadelphians August 24th: The Rack August 25th: Until They Sail August 26th: Somebody Up There Likes Me August 27th: The Set-Up August 28th: The Devil & Daniel Webster August 29th: Cat People August 30th: The Curse of the Cat People August 31st: The 7th Victim September 1st: The Ghost Ship September 2nd: Isle of the Dead September 3rd: Bedlam September 4th: Black Sabbath September 5th: Black Sunday September 6th: Twitch of the Death Nerve September 7th: Tragic Ceremony September 8th: Lisa & The Devil September 9th: Baron Blood September 10th: A Shot In The Dark September 11th: The Pink Panther September 12th: The Return of the Pink Panther September 13th: The Pink Panther Strikes Again September 14th: Revenge of the Pink Panther September 15th: Trail of the Pink Panther September 16th: The Real Glory September 17th: The Winning of Barbara Worth September 18th: The Cowboy and the Lady September 19th: Dakota September 20th: Red River September 21st: Terminal Station September 22nd: The Search September 23rd: Act of Violence September 24th: Houdini September 25th: Money From Home September 26th: Papa’s Delicate Condition September 27th: Dillinger September 28th: Battle of the Bulge September 29th: Daisy Kenyon September 30th: Laura October 1st: The Dunwich Horror October 2nd: Experiment In Terror October 3rd: The Devil’s Rain October 4th: Race With The Devil October 5th: Salo, Or The 120 Days of Sodom October 6th: Bad Dreams October 7th: The House Where Evil Dwells October 8th: Memories of Murder October 9th: The Hunger October 10th: I Saw What You Did October 11th: I Spit On Your Grave October 12th: Naked You Die October 13th: The Wraith October 14th: Silent Night, Bloody Night October 15th: I Bury The Living
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