A Freaky Forum for Groovy Ghouls and Retro Rock.

twitterfacebook

_________

The Morgue

July 26, 2010: Psychobabble Has Moved!

July 24, 2010: Gloria Stuart Attends her Centennial Celebration

July 21, 2010: Psychobabble recommends John Cale’s ‘Fear’

July 20, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Psycho II’

July 19, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Jack Bruce: Composing Himself’

July 16, 2010: Psychobabble’s Twelve Greatest Albums of 1980!

July 15, 2010: ‘House of the Wolf Man’ finally coming to DVD

July 13, 2010: Join Psychobabble’s All-New Facebook Group… Join It, I Say!

July 13, 2010: You too can help back the new David Lynch doc…

July 12, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘White Light/White Heat: The Velvet Underground Day-By-Day

July 10, 2010: Farewell, Pete Quaife of The Kinks

July 8, 2010: ‘Psycho’ documentary coming this Halloween season…

July 7, 2010: Ringo’s Ten Greatest Beats

June 29, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘The Bat Whispers’

June 28, 2010: 21 Underrated Beach Boys Songs You Need to Hear Now!

June 24, 2010: Psychobabble recommends Philip J. Riley’s ‘Lon Chaney as Dracula’

June 23, 2010: “Twin Peaks” producer says network execs want the show back

June 21, 2010: Super ‘70s Time Capsule: “Mr. Jaws” edition

June 20, 2010: An Open Letter to ‘Jaws’

June 18, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Stones in Exile’

June 17, 2010: ‘Plan 9 From Outer Space’ in 3-D coming…

June 16, 2010: Anatomy of a Psycho: 50 Years of Hitch’s Masterpiece

June 14, 2010: The Vaselines set to release their second LP…

June 8, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Mellodrama: The Mellotron Movie’

June 7, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘The Jaws Log’

June 3, 2010: ‘Mellodrama : The Mellotron Movie’

June 1, 2010: 15 Amazing Uses of the Mellotron

May 27, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Monkey Shines: An Experiment in Fear’

May 26, 2010: 20 Things You May Not Have Known About George Romero

May 23, 2010: Psychobabble News Round-Up: Beatles and Stones edition

May 17, 2010: Boris Karloff’s ‘Thriller’ finally coming to DVD!

May 13, 2010: Stones dish out the jive with ‘Exile’ reissues

May 13, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Forever Changes: Arthur Lee and the Book of Love’

May 11, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘I Was a Teenage Werewolf’

May 7, 2010: “Twilight Zone"-inspired exhibit coming to Gallery 1988 in LA

May 6, 2010: Punk Trainspotting with Captain Sensible

May 4, 2010: Watch ‘Nick Drake- A Skin Too Few’ on Psychobabble

May 1, 2010: “Night Gallery” on Hulu

April 30, 2010: Psychobabble’s Eleven Greatest Albums of 1970!

April 28, 2010: Here Comes Yet Another Kinks Movie

April 22, 2010: The Bride’s Many Veils: 75 Years of Bride of Frankenstein

April 19, 2010: Newly released Beatles and Stones singles

April 17, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘The Nanny’

April 14, 2010: Psychobabble recommends Philip J. Riley’s ‘The Wolfman vs. Dracula’

April 13, 2010: Simon Pegg and Nick Frost on “Twin Peaks”!

April 12, 2010: 10 Great Dylan Versions That Aren’t by The Byrds

April 9, 2010: Farewell, Malcolm McLaren

April 8, 2010: “Twin Peaks” A-Z

April 7, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Small Faces: All or Nothing 1965-1968’

April 6, 2010: Keith Moon biopic still looning about

April 3, 2010: Full specs on deluxe ‘Exile on Main Street’

April 2, 2010: New Small Faces DVD comp

April 1, 2010: Six Creepifying Decades of ‘Tales From the Crypt’!

March 29, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Troll 2’

March 26, 2010: Alien vs. Pooh

March 25, 2010: Psychobabbling about ‘The Runaways’

March 24, 2010: A Touch of Hitchcock to Tide You Over

March 20, 2010: Chilton tributes and Ray Davies rarity at SXSW

March 18, 2010: Farewell, Alex Chilton…

March 18, 2010: 100 Years of ‘Edison’s Frankenstein’!

March 16, 2010: ‘Night of the Hunter’, ‘Dawn of the Dead’, Elvis, and more in New Jersey

March 12, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht’

March 10, 2010: Feed Your Baby Acid: 14 Psychedelic Songs Aimed at Kids

March 8, 2010: That Oscar Horror Tribute Thing

March 5, 2010: The Awkward Movie Challenge: Oscar Picks

March 3, 2010: Mark Frost spreads “Twin Peaks” “resolution” rumors?

March 1, 2010: Sly Stone is Coming Back For More

February 25, 2010: Finally some details about Deluxe ‘Exile On Main Street’

February 24, 2010: 20 Things You May Not Have Known About The Creature From the Black Lagoon

February 23, 2010: Abbey Road drama reaches The End

February 22, 2010: EMI to sell Abbey Road? Scratch that.

February 20, 2010: Psychobabble News Round-Up: Townshend, Costello, Hawkins, Weller, etc.

February 18, 2010: The Awkward Movie Challenge: ‘Suite 208 does David Lynch’

February 16, 2010: Psychobabble’s 10 Greatest Horror Movies of 1960!

February 14, 2010: ‘Live at Leeds’: 40 Years of Rock’s Definitive Live Album

February 13, 2009: The Psychobabble Double-Feature: ‘Bride of Frankenstein’ and ‘Eraserhead’

February 10, 2010: Asinine ‘Jaws’ remake rumors start to fly

February 8, 2010: Track by Track: ‘Psonic Psunspot’ by The Dukes of Stratosphear

February 5, 2010: A few thoughts on John Landis’s ‘Burke and Hare’

February 3, 2010: Johnny Depp to direct Keith Richards doc!

February 2, 2010: Darlene Love film in the works

February 1, 2010: The Awkward Movie Challenge: ‘The Lawnmower Man’

January 28, 2010: Zelda Rubenstein goes into the light…

January 26, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘The Black Room’

January 25, 2010: Track by Track: ‘Their Satanic Majesties Request’ by The Rolling Stones

January 24, 2010: Danny Boyle to bring ‘Frankenstein’ to the London stage

January 23, 2010: The Psychobabble Search Bar

January 22, 2010: Six Hammer Films to Make DVD Debut

January 21, 2010: Things That Scare Me: Case Study #10

January 18, 2010: 21 Underrated Songs by The Who You Need to Hear Now!

January 16, 2010: Rhino records to release ‘The Birds, The Bees, & The Monkees box set’

January 15, 2010: Theatrical re-release of ‘Evil Dead’!

January 14, 2010: Psychobabble recommends ‘Listen & See’ by The Blue Things

January 13, 2010: Shout! Factory opens floodgates on the Roger Corman catalogue

January 11, 2010: The Nuggets Record Buying Guide: Love

January 8, 2010: Five Classic Monster Movies for a Snowy Day

January 5, 2010: Jagger spends “some time” on “The Ed Sullivan Show”

January 4, 2010: Christopher Lee Sings!

January 2, 2010: Psychobabble’s Ten Greatest Albums of 1965!

December 30, 2009: A change of gears for Julien Temple’s Kinks movie

May 11, 2010: Psychobabble recommends 'I Was a Teenage Werewolf'

Movie monsters have always been handy vessels for metaphor. Dracula is the embodiment of sexual terror and venereal disease. Frankenstein plays on distrust of science. Dr. Jekyll is a junkie. The Creature from the Black Lagoon symbolizes man’s inherent fear of fish. But no monster is as metaphorically ripe as the werewolf. Werewolves represent the subsumption of the ego by the id… an inarticulate, self-control devoid, hairy-palmed, snarling, drooling, havoc-by-moonlight-raising id. Sound like someone you know? No? Well then you’ve never been or spent time around a teenager. By all accounts, teenagers are pimply, violent, amoral, unhygienic creatures, and no one believed this more than the adults of the 1950s. Before that decade of pre-fab housing and six-martini lunches, teens were essentially societal nonentities. They were only bit players in both everyday life and fiction. Hell, even the fucking Bible totally skips over Jesus’s teen years. This changed in the ‘50s when things like TV-watching, comic book-reading, and record-buying made teens viable demographics to advertisers. In other words: they became actual people. But the programs they watched, the comics they read, and the records they dug convinced a good portion of adults that this once invisible minority was being pumped with a disturbing dose of rebelliousness. Adults imagined a generation of kids hopped up on the dope, filled with murderous impulses by E.C. comics, and driven to unimagined heights of sexual mania by Buddy Holly records. Teenagers became enemies every bit as formidable as Joe Commie. They were all id.



So it was only a matter of time before some cagey maker of B-pictures drew the parallel between teens and werewolves. That someone was Herman Cohen of American International Pictures (AIP), the gentleman responsible for such classics as Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla and Magnificent Roughnecks. The film: 1957’s I Was a Teenage Werewolf starring that icon of unfettered sexuality and carnal rage, Michael Landon. When I was a kid, the image of Landon with his facial pompadour, bucky fangs, and letterman jacket as Tony the Teen Werewolf glowered back at me from many a library book about monster movies. But that was as close as I could come to seeing the movie because it almost never played on TV. It still remains unissued on DVD, so it has taken me about thirty years to finally see the movie often used to illustrate the junk proliferating drive-ins after the end of horror’s 1930s/1940s golden age. Once again, You Tube is our knight in shining armor:



No one is going to argue that I Was a Teenage Werewolf is a work of monstery art on the level of Bride of Frankenstein or Mamoulian’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, but as far as ‘50s drive-in junk goes, it’s top-drawer stuff. Tony is a sullen rebel-without-a-cause getting heavy slabs of jive from his high school peers, his perky blonde girlfriend Arlene (Yvonne Lime), and the fuzz (Barney Phillips, a ubiquitous presence in the ‘50s perhaps best known for playing an alien diner cook on “The Twilight Zone”). A possible cure to Tony’s teenagerness arrives in the form of geeky shrink Dr. Brandon (Whit Bissell, the Olivier of geeky-doctor roles), who employs a radical treatment of hypnotherapy and hypodermic drugs to stop Tony from obsessing about fighting and fucking. But it backfires, and in a nutso departure from the usual mythology, the treatment causes Tony to transform into a murderous teen wolf.

Hey kids, it ain’t cool to drool.



Questioning the logic of this is kind of dumb considering how illogical werewolves are in the first place, so let’s just skip to the reasons why I Was a Teenage Werewolf is such a stand-out in its genre. Teenage culture is basically presented as cluelessly here as it is in any other picture of its era. Adults apparently thought their kids all spoke in a non-stop stream of hipster lingo and broke out into spontaneous song-and-dance routines to faux-Rock & Roll tunes way jazzier than the real stuff. But the movie does a good job of capturing the inarticulateness, frustration, and sexual confusion one experiences while slouching toward adulthood, which surely resonated with the teens who were the main audience for this kind of picture. Significantly, adults —not comics, not Rock & Roll— are portrayed as the culprits behind their kids’ waywardness, which probably also appealed to the movie’s young audience. Dr. Brandon is a brain-tinkering quack (read as: your science teacher’s a psycho). Barney Phillips’s Detective Donovan is a stupid flatfoot who paves the way for Tony’s werewolfism by hooking him up with the mad doc in the first place, and the janitor at the police station does a better job of solving the murders than the cops do (read as: the cops that hassle you and your friends are morons). Arlene’s parents spend their nights sitting on opposite ends of their living room (read as: your girlfriend’s parents have intimacy problems); her dad pounding beer and playing solitaire (read as: your girlfriend’s dad drinks while he masturbates). Tony’s dad is a milquetoast too busy obsessing about his late wife to notice his son’s antisocial behavior (read as: your dad’s a necro). The adults in I Was a Teenage Werewolf are uniformly unappealing— notice the cops’ callous self-concern during the grim denouement— while Landon’s wolf is rather sympathetic, even if he is a killer. He brings a disarmingly complex combo of unruly darkness and little-boy vulnerability to the hormonal lycanthrope. The music and daddy-o dialogue are a hoot, and the wolf make-up is memorably cheesy, but the film never dives into the camp deep end as other AIP flicks like The Screaming Skull and The Brain That Wouldn’t Die did. That means I Was a Teenage Werewolf may not be as much fun as these other pictures for some viewers, but I also cared more about Tony than I did about anyone in The Headless Ghost.



Comments



Post your comment

Your Name:

Your Email:

Comment:

Please enter the word you see in the image below:


PREVIOUS ENTRY

NEXT ENTRY