A routine military exercise turns into a nightmare in the Scottish wilderness.A routine military exercise turns into a nightmare in the Scottish wilderness.A routine military exercise turns into a nightmare in the Scottish wilderness.
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- 5 wins & 7 nominations total
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Featured review
It's easy to make a bad horror film, and, sadly, not too many people have the drive or imagination to make a decent one. I heard about Dog Soldiers through Fangoria, and though they've been wrong before I thought it was worth a go. In a word, it was fantastic!! I was willing to overlook the slightly convoluted plot (especially when people turned into werewolves at any old time, as opposed to the beginning of the full moon...) for the action and tension. I rather liked the werewolf costumes, because even though their range of motion was limited they made for some divinely creepy silhouettes. I even got interested in and attached to the soldiers, action-film archetypes though they were. If you're not willing to follow the movie where it takes you, then I wouldn't recommend it. But if you're ready for a deliciously gory bit of fun, I doubt you'll be disappointed. 8/10
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe super-glue scene is referenced in Small Favor (Dresden files) a book by Jim Butcher. A female character is disembowelled and talks about super-glue being invented in the Vietnam war in order to stick wounded soldiers back together but then says she saw it in a movie about werewolves.
- GoofsDespite what Cooper says, super-glue was not developed for medical use during the Vietnam War. It was first created in the 1940s as a strong glue but the original formula often caused skin irritation. Because of its strength when bonding skin, a spray version with a slightly different formula which didn't cause irritation was developed for medical use in Vietnam.
- Crazy creditsDuring the closing credits b&w photographs are shown from the camera used during the siege in the cottage.
- Alternate versionsAccording to Neil Marshall, he did film a scene where Spoon gets horrifically killed by the werewolves. The scene never made it into the finished film, and it is unknown if the scene actually exists.
- SoundtracksTom Hark
Written and Composed by Rupert Bopape (as R. Bopape)
(c) 1958 by EMI (South Africa) PTY Ltd
Peermusic (UK) Ltd, London
Used by permisison
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $2,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $3,537,283
- Runtime1 hour 45 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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