Yeah, that's you, well and truly fucked.
A group of British soldiers are dropped into the Scottish Highlands for
exercises against a squad of elite SAS operatives, only to find that the
SAS unit has been savagely torn apart, apparently by vicious animals.
The unit's lone survivor, Captain Ryan (Liam Cunnigham), is seriously
wounded but apparently knows what wiped out his men, though he remains
kind of cagey about that information. Taking the captain with them, the
soldiers realize they are being pursued by...something. They encounter a
zoologist Megan (Emma Cleasby), who takes them to a house whose
dwellers are nowhere to be found, and that timely bit of shelter proves
their only defense as the place is surrounded by the returning family,
who just so happen to be a pack of ravening werewolves. As the soldiers
fight to survive against insurmountable odds, details of the how and why
of the soldiers being dropped into this particular remote area are
revealed, and it's only a matter of time until the inevitable...
I wanted to close this year's round of 31 DAYS OF HORROR with something
strong, and DOG SOLDIERS qualifies in no uncertain terms. I discovered
it with a friend during Thanksgiving in 2003, when we had nothing better
to do in Connecticut, so we drove around to several of the county's
mom-and-pop video rental joints in search of entertainment. We ended up
snagging both DOG SOLDIERS and DAGON in
what turned out the be the best randomly-selected double-feature of our
lives up to that point. Both films went on to become personal favorites
and I immediately purchased DVD copies for my own collection.
Taking the tried and true "base under siege" setup carved in stone by the original NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
DOG SOLDIERS proves to be a savage, visceral treat for horror-lovers in
general and werewolf fans in particular. The list of genuinely great
werewolf movies is a rather short one — I cite THE WOLF MAN (original
version), THE HOWLING, AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON, WOLF, and LATE PHASES —
and DOG SOLDIERS can proudly be counted among the best of the best.
It's got a story that is best approached with a minimum of plot
foreknowledge (hence my not going into too much detail), but it can be
said that the werewolf effects are superb, it's gory as a motherfucker
(to most sensibilities), features a solid script and performances, and
the set pieces are all memorable and engrossing.
When you know you're gonna die horribly anyway, why not go out like a man and fist fight a fucking werewolf?
As previously noted, it's pretty much a re-staging of NIGHT OF THE
LIVING DEAD's no-way-out scenario, only ramped-up on a fistful of Study
City animal stimulants. Trust me on this one. You absolutely will not be
disappointed.
And with that I wish you a safe and Happy Halloween 2019!!! And remember: "Evil" spelled backwards is "live."
Poster from the original release.



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