Skinwalkers Movie Review
Skinwalkers Review

"Skinwalkers" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : James IsaacProducer : Dennis Berardi,Don Carmody,Robert Kulzer
Screenwiter : James DeMonaco,Todd Harthan,James Roday
Starring : Jason Behr,Elias Koteas,Rhona Mitra,Kim Coates,Natassia Malthe,Sarah Carter,Lyriq Bent
Apparently, it's pretty hard to update the classic movie monsters. When
filmmakers aren't turning every well known cinematic creep into a fey Eurotrash
version of their former scary selves, they're reinventing the mythology into a
mindless "gee whiz" joke. So it only seems fair that after zombies got
hyper-activated and vampires gained the glum Goth seal of approval, werewolves
would be next on the pointless reinvention list. And thanks to the New Age
Native American tweak entitled Skinwalkers, these formerly ferocious beasts got
the incredibly short end of the post-modern scream stick.
There's an ongoing war between two lupine factions. On the one side are those
who feel that the ancient ability to shapeshift is a curse, and want
desperately for an ambiguous prophecy to be fulfilled. Then there are the
blood-addicted, supernatural junkies who love killing so much that they want to
keep the foretold omen from occurring. And what is this fabled forecast? Seems
a young boy, born of human mother and wolfman seed, will turn 13 and… well,
that part's not all that clear. Apparently, once the kid hits puberty, he will
put the depressed beasts out of their misery while buzz killing the other
lycanthropes happy hunting. So naturally, one side protects the brat (named
Timmy), while the other is looking to carve up his adolescent guts.
In the unsure hands of Jason X director James Isaac, what we wind up with is a
creaky, quasi-spaghetti splatter fest without a drop of blood or a set of
believable baddies. It really is hard to tell what's more depressing here --
the lack of gore (the film was apparently ravaged to earn that mainstream
mandated PG-13) or the so-called "special" effects created by Stan Winston's
studios. While fright fans can accept a lack of gore, the incredibly lame
werewolf makeup is an unconscionable fright film shonda. The creatures look
like pissed off members of the Beauty and the Beast touring company, except far
less realistic. It's safe to say that monkeys with a pile of modeling clay and
their slight simian knowledge of horror movie icons could devise better beasts
than these.
The acting doesn't help matters either. Among the good guy/ghouls are Elias
Koteas (as low key leader Jonas) and the mannequin-like Rhona Mitra (who plays
Timmy's brooder as a combination of wide-eyed wails), while evil is represented
by the hellbent for leather and rock and roll clichés of Jason Behr (as the
cocksure Varek) and Natassai Malthe (as his always horny hot side-chick). Among
abandoned, atmospheric one horse towns and equally unoccupied woodland
settings, the battle to save/slaughter Tim rages in Hong Kong-copied slo-mo
bullet ballets and one too many animalistic shrieks. When not emptying
semi-automatics into each other, we get moments of werewolf sex and scenes
where our heroes apply an elaborate series of restraints to themselves so as to
survive the night without the temptation of tearing flesh.
In the end, none of it makes a lick of sense. Guns can apparently kill these
fiends (though possibly with the help of some silvered ammunition) while their
own bite fails to turn a single slain victim. Timmy's power is never made
clear, and when it finally arrives, it seems like the biggest case of
paranormal happenstance in the history of monsters (either that, or a direct
rip-off of X-Men 3). Issac wants to make a moody, revisionist macabre where
reality merges with the unreal to create a grave sense of plausibility. But the
dumb as dirt effects, along with the paltry performances, mean that Skinwalkers
stinks like a mangy animal's fetid coat. You'll be "howling" with laughter over
this unnecessary creature update.
The DVD contains a making-of featurette, pre-visualization and digital effects
comparisons, deleted scenes, and an audio commentary with director Isaac.
This bites.
Reviewer: Bill Gibron





