Cry of the Werewolf | |
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Directed by | Henry Levin |
Screenplay by | Griffin Jay Charles O'Neal[1] |
Story by | Griffin Jay[1] |
Produced by | Wallace MacDonald[1] |
Starring | Nina Foch Stephen Crane Osa Massen Blanche Yurka Barton MacLane |
Cinematography | L. William O'Connell (as L.W. O'Connell)[1] |
Edited by | Reg Browne[1] |
Color process | Black and white |
Production company | Columbia Pictures[1] |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 63 minutes |
Country | United States[1] |
Language | English |
Cry of the Werewolf is a 1944 Americanhorror film directed byHenry Levin and starringNina Foch,Stephen Crane,Osa Massen,Blanche Yurka andBarton MacLane.[1]
ARomani princess descended from Marie LaTour has the ability to change into awolf at will, just like her late mother. When she learns that Marie LaTour's tomb has been discovered, she decides to use her talent to kill everyone who knows the location, because it is asacred secret that only her people are allowed to know.
The film was developed with the working title ofBride of the Vampire.[1]
Cry of the Werewolf premiered in New York on August 17, 1944.[1]Cry of the Werewolf was issued theatrically as a double feature withThe Soul of a Monster and continued to receive theatrical re-releases into the early 1950s.[2]
Michael R. Pitts described the film's reception as "mixed" on its initial release.[2]The New York Times stated that "[T]here is absolutely nothing original in this utterly suspenseless film" while a reviewer inThe Sunday Times Signal (Zanesville, Ohio) proclaimed that "Horror fans are in for a thrill [with] the story of dread voodoo murders, horrifying tribal rites and a fantastic feast of death in which lovely and talented Nina Foch plays the woman werewolf whose mother terrorized millions and because of whose sins Nina can never marry."[2]
In 1962,Joe Dante included the film in his list of worst horror films list inFamous Monsters.[3] Dante stated the film was "a pretty dismal hunk of nonsense. Tho Nina Foch as the werewoman killed people left & right it was still a bore."[3]
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