Dog Soldiers Movie Review
Dog Soldiers Review
"Dog Soldiers" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Neil MarshallProducer : David E. Allen,Christopher Figg,Tom Reeve
Screenwiter : Neil Marshall
Starring : Sean Pertwee,Kevin McKidd,Emma Cleasby,Liam Cunningham,Thomas Lockyer
It's a little bit Predator. It's a little bit American Werewolf in London. It
says so right there on the DVD case. Too bad it's nowhere close to as much fun
as either of its inspirations.
I'm guessing the "dog soldiers" in question are the bipedal werewolf creatures
who attack our would-be heroes, a group of military soldiers on an exercise in
the Scottish highlands. (Then again, for all I know, they're meant to be the
dog soldiers.) When the soldiers come across another squad -- their torn-up
remains, anyway -- they realize their little wargame has become a fight for
survival against the werewolves on the loose.
If you can call them werewolves, that is. These dog-men look like normal
people in tights with dog-head masks and long-clawed gloves. More laughable
than scary, the movie degenerates into garden-variety horror as the soldiers
hole up in local shack and fend off the creatures. Whether beating them back
out of windows with pots and pans or recreating the obligitory
arm-caught-in-the-slamming-door scene, the body count rises regardless, thanks
to the inability of the soldiers to sit still until morning (when the full
moon's effect will be gone and the creatures will turn back into people).
Much of Dog Soldiers consists of the characters just sitting around, with the
soldiers jabberring in soldier-speak. The first half hour is dreadfully slow
as nothing at all happens. Once they're in the house, the slowness continues,
as idiotic plan after idiotic plan ends up failing. I've got no military
training, but I'm convinced I could keep a family of five blind, crippled,
Amish people alive in this situation better than these British soldiers do at
keeping themselves kicking.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



