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  1. 13 de nov. de 2013 · An American Werewolf in London Behind The Scenes - The Wolf (1981) - Horror Movie - YouTube. Vudu. 969K subscribers. Subscribed. 2.5K. 314K views 10 years ago. Watch more American...

    • 4 min
    • 314.1K
    • Vudu
  2. 9 de nov. de 2023 · An American Werewolf in London hit theaters in 1981 and had audiences both laughing and screaming at its unique blend of scares and dark comedy. From the twisted script to the award-winning special effects makeup, there's plenty to enjoy about the horror classic.

    • Linda Meyers
  3. 6 de may. de 2020 · Secrets Behind the Iconic Transformation | An American Werewolf in London | Bonus Feature Spotlight - YouTube. Universal Pictures All-Access. 2.79M subscribers. Subscribed. 725. 52K views...

    • 13 min
    • 52.6K
    • Universal Pictures All-Access
  4. 31 de ene. de 2023 · Director John Landis stunned audiences with this horror-comedy hybrid in 1981 -- and all these years later, some behind-the-scenes details may surprise you.

    • Rick Baker Left ‘The Howling’ to Work on This Movie
    • John Landis Threatened to Shoot The Movie in Paris Due to A Work Permit Issue
    • John Landis and Rick Baker Had Different Visions For The Werewolf in The Movie
    • Rick Baker Based The Design For The Werewolf on His Dog
    • The Majority of Rik Baker’s Make-Up Team Were Young Fans of His
    • The Wolf’s Howl Was Made Up of Nine Different Sounds
    • David and Jack’s Fate Is Foreshadowed at The Very Beginning
    • British Comedian Rik Mayall Makes A Brief Cameo
    • David Naughton Spent Hours in Make Up
    • The Infamous Transformation Scene Took Months to Prep

    John Landis and Rick Baker had their first collaboration back in their early twenties, on Landis’ first movie Schlock (1973) in which Baker did the make-up. Although this picture was a low budget production, it was here where Landis first mentioned his idea for An American Werewolf in London to Baker. At the time, because Landis wasn’t the renowned...

    Although the majority of the cast and crew were British, four work permits were needed for the American’s on production, John Landis, Rick Baker, David Naughton (David) and Griffin Dunne (Jack). Three out of four permits were granted with ease by the British government, unfortunately, this left Griffin Dunne initially in the lurch after the British...

    Although the particular look for the werewolf in this movie added to the films originality, director John Landis and make-up expert Rick Baker originally had different visions for their blue mooned beast’s features. Rick Baker credits his reason for getting into the business to movies like The Wolf Man, so he always envisaged the upright, on two le...

    As well as the werewolf in this movie differing itself from the usual onscreen lycan’s at the time by being a quadruped, it also had this long-haired shaggy dog-like feature about it. The now-legendary make-up genius that is Rick baker credited the inspiration for this look to his keeshond at the time, in an interview: Thankfully Baker’s dog only i...

    Although now a household name in the world of horror for his make-up and special effects, at the time of this movie, Rick Baker was still finding his feet. In fact, this was the first movie he actually had his own crew to work with. This movie broke ground like never before, not just with its Wolf Man interpretation, but also the gruesome make-up f...

    Much like the appearance and the transformation of the Werewolf in this movie, its howl is also like nothing audiences had ever witnessed before. The reason for that being, in order to make this lunar creature eerier during the night shots, Landis actually made the howl out of about nine different sounds, including a lion, a panther, even a locomot...

    It is common knowledge that directors will throw in Easter eggs or foreshadow events later in the movie via different means. However, in An American Werewolf in London you pretty much get hit with the fate of our two main character’s as soon as they’re introduced, director John Landis backs up in an interview: And if that didn’t come across, their ...

    Blink and you’ll miss him but eagle-eyed fans of British comedian Rik Mayall will have spotted Chess Player #2 a mile off. However, this was quite early on in Mayall’s career just before he skyrocketed into fame with the British sitcom The Young Ones. So, just how did the (not yet) legendary British comedian end up in a horror movie directed by Joh...

    When you first meet Rick Baker, inform him you’re the guy playing the werewolf and get the response “I feel sorry for you.”, you know it’s going to be a trying process. And this is precisely what happenedto David Naughton (David). Although the transformation scene was short-lived on screen, given the number of practical effects used, it might not b...

    As seen in previous Werewolf features (e.g. The Wolf Man) how the transformation scene generally worked would be quite a painless process, overlapping filming to show a gentle transition from man into beast. However director John Landis felt that if the whole structure of your body was changing into a different creature, it would be quite the painf...

  5. Behind the scenes: 'an American Werewolf in London': Directed by Mark Schneider. With John Landis, Rick Baker, David Naughton, Griffin Dunne. A short documentary on the making of An American Werewolf in London (1981).

  6. 9 de feb. de 2019 · February 9, 2019January 4, 2024 ~ Karli Ray. Welcome back to Behind The Scenes Saturday! I ended up missing last week because I was with my family and I ran out of time. This week I’m paying tribute to one of the greatest werewolf films of all time, An American Werewolf In London!