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43 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gothic fantasy take on a classic story
The screenplay of this film was a colloboration between director Neil Jordan (Interview With A Vampire, The Crying Game) and feminist author Angela Carter, and is based upon a short story by Carter from her collection of short stories 'The Bloody Chamber'. This story, in turn, is based upon the classic children's story 'Little Red Riding Hood', but is filled with dark,...
Published on April 15, 2003 by Touring Mars

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Visually Arresting, Pointedly Feminist Tale
I have mixed feelings about this film. It's visually stunning, with great art direction and cinematography plus some beautifully haunting soundtrack music. Yet the "all men are pigs" (or in this case wolves) message, thinly disguised as a fairy story, bothered me. If there were some balance here I'd give it a better rating, but the only counter-point to the general...
Published 5 months ago by venussansfurs


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43 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gothic fantasy take on a classic story, April 15, 2003
By 
This review is from: The Company of Wolves (DVD)
The screenplay of this film was a colloboration between director Neil Jordan (Interview With A Vampire, The Crying Game) and feminist author Angela Carter, and is based upon a short story by Carter from her collection of short stories 'The Bloody Chamber'. This story, in turn, is based upon the classic children's story 'Little Red Riding Hood', but is filled with dark, menacing, and sexual imagery, all of which are used in the screenplay to create this stunning piece of gothic 'horror'.

That said, I always balk when I see this film placed in the 'Horror' section of any store, and cringe whenever I read a synopsis describing this film as a story about werewolves. Both descriptions are very wide of the mark. This is a story about the transition from childhood to adulthood of a teenage girl, and the symbolism throughout the film is subtle and powerful simultaneously. As such, it pretty much goes without saying that if you are looking for a scary movie, you're probably in the wrong place.

The highlights of this movie are:- Angela Lansbury as 'Granny', who turns in a wonderful performance and really adds a touch of class to the film. Also, the set design and lighting is brilliant, evoking a truly gothic feel to the scenes. For example, most of the movie is based 'outdoors' (like in the woods or in the village), and yet you always get the feeling of an enclosed and somewhat foreboding environment. This feels exactly right given that the story is centred around the character of a young girl, whose world consists solely of the small and familiar surroundings of home, where the outside world is only known to her through the fantastic stories of her Grandmother, where men, wolves and 'straying from the path' are to be feared.

Another, and major, highlight of this movie is the wonderful soundtrack by George Fenton, which is worth having on CD itself. Combining adaptations of traditional folk music with eerie, ominous synth sounds does as much to enhance the gothic atmosphere as the visual effects and set design.

Other than that, the rest of the performances are generally pretty good, especially Neil Jordan's staple actor, Stephen Rea, as well as a fine cameo from Brian Glover and debut from the beautiful and talented Sarah Patterson as the lead charcter 'Rosaleen', who sadly hasn't done much else since as far as I know. The film is also quite famous for it's man-to-wolf scenes and an early use of animatronics. The effects, sadly, do look pretty dated now, but the context of the scenes in which they are used is untainted, and remain powerful scenes both visually and emotionally. The fact that Rosaleen, after witnessing the pain and anquish that such a transition entails, openly weeps and says 'I'm sorry, I didn't know a wolf could cry', is brilliantly emotional and indicative of her almost complete transition from unknowing child, to compassionate and knowing young adult.

The DVD is not perfect by any stretch of the imagination. First of all, it's not widescreen (although oddly the title sequence at the beginning is!) which is a real shame. Also, the menu navigation is pretty tacky and amatuerish. Indeed, even the inlay and cover leave something to be desired. The tagline, which goes something like, "In the dead of night, the beast is unleashed!" is as misleading as it is cringe-worthy, and sounds like it was probably written by someone who has only seen excerpts of the movie once, as opposed to someone like me who has seen this film over 50 times! A plus for the DVD is the 'Promotional Video' which is basically an extended trailer (around 20 minutes long), and is interesting as it contains many scenes that differ slightly from the film itself. In this video, Rosaleen reveals that she is twelve and three-quarter years old, a fact that is not mentioned in the short story or the finished movie!

All in all, this is a great movie, if not a great DVD, that is so full of rich imagery and subtlety, that it promises to provide great re-watch value, and should not be considered as a 'horror-flick'... unfortunately, most stores don't have a section entitled 'Enchanting fantasy gothic adult fairytale stories'...

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31 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent film, July 28, 2002
By 
C. A Baker (Santa Rosa CA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Company of Wolves (DVD)
FINALLY this is on DVD, or will be soon. What a beautiful and mysterious film this is. Based on several of Angela Carter's short stories(she also did the screen play for this film) this film deals with maturity, sex and mythology in a truly facinating way.
One of the early films for Neil Jordon(Crying Game) and just brilliantly done. Full of magic the story has brief opening and closing sequences in the modern world while the majority takes place in the world of fairy tales. Using the the tale of Red Riding Hood as well as Werewolf mythos and the blooming maturity of a young girl the metaphors and mysterious landscape is truly marvelous.
With dark and haunting score by George Fenton(Ever After) this film has everything for the true fan of what fairy tales are supposed to be, a lesson for those too foolish to listen.
Angela Lansbury is Red's granny and plays a rolle not the norm for this icon of old and new Hollywood. It is truly an original film and not a story for young children.

"As your pretty, so be wise, wolves may lurk in any guise. Now, as then, tis simple truth; sweetest tongue has sharpest tooth."

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dazzling In It's Darkness, November 21, 2002
This review is from: The Company of Wolves (DVD)
Long before Tim Burton released his beloved Sleepy Hollow and just on year before Silver Bullet, Neil Jordan had released his little known but divine masterpiece which most of us have perhaps forgotten over the years.

Let's get a few things straight before we begin though. This is not one of the cutesy, cool horror films like Scream which will have teenagers bouncing off the wall nor is Company a gentle fairytale for the younger audience. Neil Jordan has fabricated a vivid but nightmarish, atmospheric drama which literally takes a wicked twist on the classic Little Red Riding Hood story.

What not to like? Angela Lansbury is wonderful as always but our young actress Sarah Patterson also makes a splendid young Rosaleen dressed in soft red wool. In comparison to most horror films, this wonderful piece of art is perhaps less gory but nevertheless still has the power to haunt and provoke while holding you breathless in it's beauty. Imagine your favorite classic horror films and what they might've been like with a bit more fantasy or perhaps had they been a bit more visual.

While the film has no explicit sex, it's evident throughout the whole film that director Neil Jordan had orignally intended to make a movie which would completely explore the mysterious relationships between man and woman. He clearly identifies strengths, weaknesses, fears, and longing as if he were a psychology teacher and we were the students.

Perhaps this is the most intellectual werewolf flick ever made and it's release on DVD is long overdue. Many kudos to Hen's Tooth for seeing fit to bring this wonderful film back into our lives on DVD.
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21 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars As You're Pretty, So Be Wise....., March 23, 2003
By 
Daniel V. Reilly (Upstate New York, United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: The Company of Wolves (DVD)
I saw The Company of Wolves with my best friend Bryan when we were both thirteen, and I must confess, we both left the theater totally perplexed. What the hell did we just see? With almost twenty years more maturity under my belt, and having seen (And loved!) most of Director Neil Jordan's films, I decided to give "Company" another try...

It's still a deeply challenging film. The story is basically a fever-dream committed to film. Rosaleen is a young girl on the cusp of becoming a young woman. Her dreams place her in a fairy-tale land where her older sister has strayed from the path and been killed by a pack of wolves. Rosaleen's Granny (The excellent Angela Lansbury) tries to teach her about the ways of wolves (and men...), but will Rosaleen listen? Her burgeoning sexuality is about to lead her off the path, and into the arms of a big bad wolf....

The film is absolutely drenched in rich symbolism and deep parables that resonate strongly in this day of seemingly commonplace child abductions. As Rosaleen's family strives to keep her safe, they must also deal with her desire to forge her own path in life. Director Neil Jordan has crafted a film that rewards multiple viewings, adapting Angela Carter's stories to great effect. The colors are simply gorgeous to look at, and the sets and effects are staggeringly effective. The performances are marvelously understated, and Terrence Stamp steals the show in an all-too-brief cameo. Sarah Patterson plays young Rosaleen, and does a great job. Her recitation of the closing quotation is superbly chilling.

The disc comes with a photo gallery, promo reel, and trailer. Highly recommended for horror fans who are sick of screaming teens running from knife-wielding maniacs....

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Better pay attention to granny, May 18, 2004
By 
C. O. DeRiemer (San Antonio, Texas, USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Company of Wolves (DVD)
The Company of Wolves, Neil Jordan's violent retelling of the Little Red Riding Hood tale, is weird, wonderful and gorgeously photographed. It's a story of a young girl's transition to adulthood, with all the sexual awakening and conflicted feelings one might suppose. This part of the story is told with great empathy and imagination. However, be prepared for werewolves, gore, creepy woods and creepy characters. It's hard to tell who's more unsettling, the wolves or granny. A very good movie. The DVD transfer is quite watchable.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lovely Horror, October 23, 2002
By 
Steve Mobia (Brisbane, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Company of Wolves (DVD)
The widescreen DVD version is much better than the old VHS transfer in displaying the sumptuous visual style of this special film. Originally marketed in the US as a genre horror movie, Neil Jordan's "The Company of Wolves" is anything but commonplace. Based on stories in "The Bloody Chamber" by Angela Carter, this film is a flood of imaginative and sensual images depicting the emerging adolescence of a thirteen year old girl. She dreams herself as a young villager in a fairy tale world built around an old well in the woods. The village is besieged by wolf attacks and at becomes apparent that these wolves turn into humans and vice versa. Ultimately the girl herself (or at least her childhood - you decide) becomes the victim of her own untamed wolf nature. Only marred by one gratuitous gore scene of a man peeling bloody skin from his face while turning into a wolf (using latex and prosthetic work popular at the time). Beautiful and rich music score by George Fenton.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Atmospheric visual and musical beauty beyond comparison..., December 3, 2001
I was amazed when I first saw this film in the mid-1980s. This film captured my heart and touched on that fantasy world atmosphere I've envisioned since I was a child more so than any other film I've ever seen. The Company Of Wolves is a sort of glamourised, horrific telling of the tale, Little Red Riding Hood. The casting, the lighting, the camera angles, the beautiful dream world atmosphere, the special effects, and the old world-style of story telling is remarkable. This film has a passionate soul. Equally remarkable and integral is George Fenton's fantastic impressionist/romantic musical score to the film.

If you are a fan of well-made, intelligent horror films, and/or of atmospheric fantasy films like, for example, "Legend", you'll simply fall in love with this buried and thoroughly underrated gem of a film by Neil Jordan.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THE COMPANY OF WOLVES, September 11, 2002
By 
"valeska_" (The Pacific Northwest) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Company of Wolves (DVD)
This is a kind of "gothic" retelling of the Red Riding Hood story.
From director Neil Jordan (Interview With The Vampire)From a story by Angela Carter. The screenplay is co-written by her and Neil Jordan.

It's deliciously infused with sensual/sexual undertones.

It begins in modern times. A girl, named Rosaleen, has locked herself in her room, to get away from her older sister, Alice, who regards her as a "pest". There she falls asleep, where she dreams that her sister is being chased by a pack of hungry wolves with glowing eyes. She is suddenly at Alice's funeral (she was killed by a wolf.. obviously), and the setting is a small english village (maybe 17th-18th century?)

She's now an only child living with her parents, and her old grandmother (played by Angela Landsbury) who lives in the woods. She goes to stay with her after the death of Alice.
And her grandmother tells her about different types of wolves, the ones hairy on the outside and ones who are "hairy on the inside"---"wolves come in many guises"
She tells Rosaleen a story about a werewolf (played by Stephen Rea) And warns her never to stray from the path in the woods "or you'll be lost entirely" And be cautious of men whose eyebrows meet (a tell-tale sign of a werewolf!) .........

I think "The Company of Wolves" is a wonderful enchanting film, with an ABSOLUTELY MAGICAL ENDING!
I think that anyone who enjoys things with "gothic" themes, will like it. I loved the performance by Sarah Patterson (who I had never seen anywhere before) as Rosaleen. Shane Johnstone as the boy from Rosaleen's village who has a crush on her (listed in the credits only as "amorous boy"!) Of course great performances from Angela Landsbury as Rosaleen's old granny & Stephen Rea. I thought the script was very good, and I loved the dark mystical settings.
And I'm SO glad it's on DVD! It's an excellent film!

Quote from the end of the film:
"Little girls this seems to say...never stop upon your way. Never trust a stranger friend. No one knows how it will end. As you're pretty, so be wise. Wolves may lurk in every guise. Now as then tis simple true. Sweetest tongue has sharpest tooth"
From "Petit Chaperon Rouge" by Charles Perrault, 1912.

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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantasy Horror Metaphor for Blossoming Sexuality, July 23, 2007
This review is from: The Company of Wolves (DVD)
Neil Jordan (the Crying Game, Interview with The Vampire) directs a screenplay co-written by Angela Carter and based on the short stories concerning werewolves from her collection of short stories, The Bloody Chamber. The film is about a young adolescent named Rosaleen who dreams of various encounters with werewolves. The film has a consistent fairytale theme and it carries strongly into its visual style which stands out, in that it seemingly sprung right out of an old storybook. It is an absolutely gorgeous film. The art director for The Company of Wolves, Anton Furst, of course went on to create Gotham City and the Bat-mobile for Tim Burton's Batman. Ultimately, the dreams that Rosaleen has and the many stories within them circle around her aroused apprehension toward entering puberty.

We meet Rosaleen (Sara Patterson) while she is asleep at the beginning of the movie. She is dreaming of being chased through the forest by wolves that killed her sister. After her sister's funeral, she goes to live with her Granny (Angela Lansbury). Soon Rosaleen dons a red hood and her Grandmother begins to tell her a story that warns her about the dangers of werewolves. This story makes for some of the best visuals in the film and the segment stars Stephen Rea. Rosaleen sees her parents having sex and finds out a bit more when a boy begins to flirt with her. Eventually we see many references to Rosaleen's new sexuality after she kisses the boy. After several other short stores told by Granny (including one with Terrence Stamp as the devil) it is soon revealed that werewolves are indeed in the village. Rosaleen's family even kills a wolf and its paw turns into a human hand. As times passes, Rosaleen ventures out into the woods to her Granny's house only now she seems more aware of the dangers and is armed with a knife. Before she begins her travels she is challenged to a race to get there by a young hunter. If she wins she gets his compass and if he wins, he gets to kiss her. He is of course a werewolf and he arrives first, eating Granny. Rosaleen arrives and the hunter has her remove her red hood and burn it. Then he attempts to charm her. She shoots him and he transforms into a wolf. She pities the injured animal and decides to tell him a story about a young nude wolf-girl (played by experimental musician Danielle Dax) who arrives in the village. Later, Rosaleen's family and the villagers arrive at Granny's house and find two wolves there. Rosaleen's parents recognize that one of the wolves is a transformed Rosaleen. The wolves run into the forest and eventually show up inside the house where Rosaleen is dreaming.

The fact that this is a series of stories being told within a dream is significant as a sexual commentary via the subconscious mind. I don't believe Carter's stories would've been effective on film were they not framed within the context of a dream. Given that narrative, it is amazing how these ideas managed to translate so precisely. There must've been great communication between Jordan and Carter. The stories themselves are a culmination of some of Carter's best work and a whole lifetime of brainstorming. A lot of credit also goes to the cast, especially Sarah Patterson, who was likely a young teen at the time. It is a wonder Patterson didn't go on to become a big star and many still hold out hope that she will surface again in some capacity, even now...decades later.

Maybe some of it is coincidence and no doubt much of it is the talent of the cast and crew, but it seems like everything comes together just right for this film and it comes off as even more cohesive and poetic to me with each subsequent viewing. I've watched the Company of Wolves many times and it still remains one of the best movies I have ever seen.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb fantasy; beautiful; haunting; unforgettable., June 10, 2011
By 
Anne Rice "Anne Rice" (Little Paradise, California) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Company of Wolves (DVD)
This is a masterpiece from Neil Jordan --- a disturbing and mesmerizing film filled with originality and sensuality and beauty. I hope it enjoys a rediscovery during this frenzied period of vampire -- werewolf popularity. It deserves it. Werewolf films have for decades dealt with the emerging sexuality of adolescents --- Teen Wolf, Ginger Snaps, etc. But this film outdoes them all with its magnificent imagery and delicate performances. There are moments in this film that will haunt you forever --- like the conversation between the (Little Red Riding Hood)girl and the Huntsman in the Grandmother's cottage, in which the Huntsman's facial expressions and elegant gentlemanly speech are every bit as terrifying as any special effects could ever be. The film is always psychologically engaging as well as downright scary. It's suspenseful, filled with delicious menace, and at the same time enchanting. Highly recommended. It's in a class with films like Cocteau's Beauty and the Beast. It goes deep to the very core of what the werewolf myth has always been about. I long to see a blu ray in the future.
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The Company of Wolves [VHS]
The Company of Wolves [VHS] by Neil Jordan (VHS Tape - 2002)
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