Willard Movie Review
Willard Review

"Willard" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Glen MorganProducer : Bill Carraro,James Wong,Glen Morgan
Screenwiter : Glen Morgan
Starring : Crispin Glover,Jackie Burroughs,Laura Elena Harring,R. Lee Ermey
A pallid complexion, stuttered speech pattern, and naturally creepy persona
have prevented Crispin Glover from achieving leading man status over the course
of his 20-year career. Best known as George McFly from Back to the Future,
Glover’s main challenge lies in finding the right role for his unmistakable
screen presence.
One such role is Willard, an introverted loner who discovers an innate ability
to control rats. When the original Willard was released in 1971 with Bruce
Davison in the title role, Glover was seven years old and probably horrifying a
helpless babysitter. Thirty-two years later, with this remake from director
Glen Morgan, the actor finally sinks his teeth into the role of his lifetime.
Social interaction with fellow human beings physically pains Willard. He still
lives at home with his widowed mother (Jackie Burroughs), a bed-ridden waif who
resembles Gollum in a nightgown. Not to say that Willard’s relationship with
his mom is deranged, but even Norman Bates would snicker and call this guy a
weirdo.
By day, Willard works at the company his long-dead father founded. He’s unhappy
and unproductive, which gives his vindictive boss (R. Lee Ermey) reason to
belittle Willard at every turn. In the evening, he finds solace training the
rats that occupy the basement of his parent’s gloomy tomb of a home. He favors
a white lab rat, which he names Socrates, but also recognizes that one brown
beast – a shoe-sized creature named Ben – leads the rat pack and just might
offer a challenge to Willard’s command.
What we’re seeing on screen in this updated Willard is a perfect synthesis of
actor and role. It would be difficult to imagine a better Willard than Glover,
and director Morgan knows it. His lens stays tight on Glover for long frames,
capturing every nervous facial tic, every bead of sweat on the actor’s furrowed
brow. It’s a showcase for Glover’s… talents? I guess that’s the right word.
But Willard isn’t a one-man show, as Morgan knows his way around the horror
genre. He consistently strikes the right mood, hopping from comical to chilling
at the drop of a rat. The film’s playfully ominous cinematography adds
spectacular camp value and calls to mind the works of David Lynch or Tim
Burton. Composer Shirley Walker chips in with a gleefully sinister score that
puts Danny Elfman to shame.
Like most guilty pleasures, Willard has glaring but forgivable faults. Morgan’s
screenplay contains more holes than Swiss cheese. It can be grossly immature in
spots, but maintains its horror street cred by being shamelessly prophetic.
When Willard’s boss persists that he will not be devoured by the rat race of
the business world, we snicker knowingly and patiently await his gruesome fate.
How could Morgan have built a better rat trap? Perhaps going the extra mile for
the R-rating would have intensified the wrath of Willard’s pets, which can come
off as slighted but satisfyingly disgusting. Save for one CGI scene depicting
Willard exiting an elevator brimming with rats, Morgan’s film disturbs at the
deepest level by using real rats for its multiple infestation scenes. Glover
comes in closest contact with his furry co-stars, though armies of rats can be
seen covering kitchen countertops and crawling on the bodies of deceased
characters. Morgan gets his lens up close and personal as well, capturing
priceless reaction shots from his rats that turn them into characters, not just
creepy elements.
As the film winds down, a touching and surprisingly relevant Ben/Socrates
rivalry stretches too far, reminding us that this film is too silly to be this
involving. And as Willard scurries to its natural conclusion, we’re stuck
waiting too long for what we paid to see – retribution at the tiny hands of the
rats. But it’s still a terribly good time. I laughed. I cried. It was better
than watching Willard’s rats devour a cat.
The Willard DVD is a fun experience -- watch it with surround sound and you'll
be convinced there really are rats in the walls. Deleted scenes, commentary
(yep, Glover is included), and a making-of feature that's as long as the movie
itself round out the extras.
Where did I put the strychnine?
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Review by Sean O'Connell
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