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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Dog Soldiers
I originally rented this movie because I had a free rental coupon. My comment to the guy working in the video store as I left was I know I'm going to regret this, but its free.
After watching the movie I went nuts trying to find a copy that I could own. I had never heard of the movie before seeing it, and instantly loved it.
If you can get at chance to watch...
Published on Oct 27 2003 by doug cooke

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars Excellent modern Werewolf Film
A modern werewolf movie with great looking old school effects!! Gore is minimal and perfect! Convincing enough to make you think twice that werewolves are only located in one locale, but could be found anywhere with woods!! I like the approach of the story line and the rest falls into place. I dont find this one to be disappointing but a good werewolf flick that could be...
Published on Oct 11 2006 by A. Chaney


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Dog Soldiers, Oct 27 2003
By 
doug cooke (Courtice Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dog Soldiers (DVD)
I originally rented this movie because I had a free rental coupon. My comment to the guy working in the video store as I left was I know I'm going to regret this, but its free.
After watching the movie I went nuts trying to find a copy that I could own. I had never heard of the movie before seeing it, and instantly loved it.
If you can get at chance to watch this movie, do it.
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4.0 out of 5 stars These soldiers show great strategy and determination, Dec 2 2007
By 
Jenny J.J.I. "A New Yorker" (That Lives in Carolinas) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Dog Soldiers (Widescreen) (DVD)
There are great classics related to werewolves, The Howling, Wolfen, and the superior American Werewolf in London. After watching "Dog Soldiers" it can easily be part of this pack. I fine this movie to be very exciting and pleasant B movie. This was recommended to me by Caesar M. Warrington, who is also a great reviewer, during the month of Halloween. Werewolves fascinate me more then Vampires so I couldn't wait till next Halloween to watch this. You will not a fine a major city, silly people or unneeded love story involved in this film. Just a couple of cool soldiers who are willing to do anything to survive. In here we have a group of six British Soldiers spend time on the Scottish highlands to do a special training but one Soldier is whining about missing a soccer game between England versus Germany, a little like the tension you get when America versus Canada or something! Apparently Story goes that where the soldiers are standing, they hear about gruesome "true" tales of people go missing but savage and gory murder scenes are simultaneously found as potential evidence. A leader, Captain Ryan happens to be the sole survivor of another team that becomes a 'dog's breakfast'! Is he hiding a secret that the remaining team should know about? Who knows?

That is when Luna-loving furry doggies with rabies come into view, and they look like muscular, mutant gerbils in mink coats, with Freddy Claws. The Team have to drop their blank bullets for real ones as a locally rural girl, Megan, comes in as GI Jane to save them by escaping out of the woods by a Jeep, taking the remaining Soldiers with her, and sheltered into a remote Country Farm House. Trouble starts brewing because the Soldiers are running out of Ammunition, Howlings are drawing nearer, and how long will sunlight come before people die like flies?

"Dog Soldiers" does start slow and is a bit predictable but the humor is wicked. I also give credit to the gory scenes where the Sergeant's guts were exposed and the sheep dog was toying with it; thinking they were sausages. There are flaws with the film, but it is still fun and entertaining. Influences from other movies stand out here, but they still don't take away from 'Dog Soldiers', I feel that they've just used an idea and modified it to produce something new. Much better than the current Hollywood mentality of making a horror - take a half-good idea and drive it into the ground with continuous knock-off after knock-off. The best part is when the Sergeant shares a chilling camp fire story about "Eddie Oswald"; a private he once knew in Kuwait 1991, and then raised a toast for him!! One Private tells a joke about a man and his dog, suddenly on that 'cue' a dead stuffed Cow drops from the sky to join them, literally!

For a low-budget movie this is quite a gem. Fans of the movies I mentioned previously should check it out, it's not strictly horror. I believe the director said that it was a soldier film with werewolves, not the other way round, so it could also be classed as an action film. Either way, that is really of no relevance. If you like Movies with a hardcore script, Dark Humor, and action then give it a try.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Excellent modern Werewolf Film, Oct 11 2006
By 
A. Chaney "Hammer Wolf" (Lincoln,NE) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dog Soldiers (DVD)
A modern werewolf movie with great looking old school effects!! Gore is minimal and perfect! Convincing enough to make you think twice that werewolves are only located in one locale, but could be found anywhere with woods!! I like the approach of the story line and the rest falls into place. I dont find this one to be disappointing but a good werewolf flick that could be watched from time to time.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A training exercise for a squad of soldiers becomes a running battle with werewolves, July 20 2006
By 
Lawrance M. Bernabo (The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (HALL OF FAME)   
This review is from: Dog Soldiers (Widescreen) (DVD)
A couple are out enjoying the romantic seclusion of a tent in the Scottish Highlands when a werewolf interrupts their love making. Meanwhile, in another part of those woods Private Cooper (Kevin McKidd) is proving to Captain Ryan (Liam Cunningham) that he does not have what it takes to be part of Ryan's elite special operations force. The bone of contention is being ordered to shoot a dog just because Ryan says so. Ryan accuses Cooper of having a conscience, as if this is a bad thing in a military man. But Cooper washes out and ends up back in the area some time later with the other members of his squad, under the command of Sgt. Wells (Sean Pertwee). Around the campfire they hear about the local stories about people disappearing in the woods and never being found, which engenders a round of "ooohs" and "aahs." Then they find Ryan's squad ripped to itsey bitsey pieces and the Captain just about over the edge and the hunt is on. As this 2002's tagline tells us: "Six soldiers. Full moon. No chance."

Well, that is not exactly true. Once the squad finds Ryan they are up to seven and then there is Megan (Emma Cleasby), a scientist whose function is more as the mistress of exposition than as a damsel in distress. In other words, she is the one who knows that there is a pack of lycanthropes (werewolves to ordinary folk) out there hunting the soldiers and has a good explanation for why they are holed up in a house without any silver in it. Apparently the full moon matters even when the sun is up, and there are very few films of this type where it is literally true that nobody has a chance of getting out alive. After all, Cooper has a few things to prove to Ryan before everybody ends up dead (although it is so strange to see McKidd look so talk after watching Titus Pullo tower over Lucius Vorenus all the time on "Rome").

Werewolf movies often come down to how well you like the werewolves once you actually see them and get a good look at them, assuming this happens, and in "Dog Soldiers" writer-director Neil Marshall ("The Descent") makes sure that happens. Just keep in mind that this is a fairly low budget film and that Marshall was determined not to rely on CGI to make the werewolves work, because by those standards I think they exceed expectations. Another thing that this movie does is avoid talking about werewolf movies, although everything from the "Kobiashi Maru" to the defense of Roark's Drift depicted in "Zulu" make there was into the pop culture references scattered throughout the film. I really have not gotten to the point where I can cite a specific movie as being a really great werewolf film ("Brotherhood of the Wolf" might be my favorite at this point), and while "Dog Soldiers" is not great, I still think it is really good.

My only real complaint is that things slow down a bit too much once they get to the house in the woods, because I really liked the whole idea of having a fire fight while retreating through the woods. The appeal to me here is the whole idea of doing "Aliens" with werewolves as opposed to being trapped in the building and doing "The Night of the Living Dead" with werewolves (Yes, I know there is a point in "Aliens" where they are trapped as well, but that gets back to beating a hasty retreat and then a rescue mission, so I feel I can stand by my analogies). When soldiers are the cornered rats instead of ordinary civilians, I would expect there to be some more significant differences. Oh, and bonus points to Spoon (Darren Morfitt) for coming up with a really great line to say to a werewolf that is about to kill you and in case you really need to know the results of match, England beat Germany 5-1.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Evil Dead of werewolf movies, Mar 3 2003
This review is from: Dog Soldiers (DVD)
I didn't know what to expect from this film. I'm usually on top of knowing good horror films when they come out but this one fell through the cracks somehow. I found out about it from Canadian horror magazine "Rue Morgue" where it won the year end readers poll for best death scene. Me being a gorehound went and rented it the same day.

I had a smile on my face the entire movie. THIS is what a werewolf movie should be! Fast-paced, violent, tense, and claustorphic, this movie also packs a good punch for gorehounds like me. A couple really good gooey moments! What I also really liked about the movie, was after reading it was a "horror-comedy", I expected outright goofeyness. But not the case. A number of really good laughs are had by some clever lines, old-war stories, and some unfortunate injuries. But it all works.

Definately in my top three werewolf movies along with Ginger Snaps and An American Werewolf in London.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A real horror movie find...scary, bloody, and well-acted, Jun 16 2004
This review is from: Dog Soldiers (DVD)
Usually straight-to-DVD films are junk, but there are some surprises out there, and this is one of them. A British horror/action film that was never released theatrically in the U.S., and starring faces mostly unfamiliar to American viewers, "Dog Soldiers" is an exciting, well-written and well acted horror flick with no pretensions. It's actually a much better film than some the recent indie horror flicks that received a lot of critical praise, like "28 Days Later" and "Cabin Fever." For horror and action fans, you can't miss this one.

"Dog Soldiers" is essentially a mixture of "Southern Comfort" and "The Warriors" with werewolves: a military unit finds itself trapped in a wilderness, surrounding by merciless foes -- who in this case happen to be huge two-legged wolves. The film also borrows heavily from many other movies: "Alien," "Aliens," "Predator," "The Night of the Living Dead," "The Birds," "Zulu" (the characters even make direct mention of the film), "The Balir Witch Project," and "Straw Dogs."

The plot follows a British squad on a training exercise in the Scottish Highlands (actually filmed in Luxembourg). The squad comes across their target, a Special Ops unit, but it has been mysteriously and viciously wiped out. The culprits are werewolves, and soon the squad and a local biologist are fighting to live through a night of the full moon in the middle of nowhere. There are a couple of nice twists in the story along the way that shift it in unexpected directions.

The acting is uniformly superb, something you wouldn't expect from this kind of lower-budget horror film. Because none of the actors are big-named stars, you really have no idea who will live through to the end and who will become werewolf-chow. Kevin McKidd (from "Trainspotting") and Sean Pertwee (son of one of the men who played Doctor Who) take the lead roles and do great, believable jobs as military figures under intense pressure who nonetheless rise to the occasion. The real scene-stealer is Liam Cunningham as the sole survivor of the Special Ops unit, a vile but secretive man who may be hiding something very important from the others.

The visual effects, thankfully, avoid CG as much as possible. The werewolves are achieved using full-body suits and robotic heads. They don't look very convincing in longer shots, but the filmmakers cleverly keep them mostly hidden or shown in very quick shots -- which makes them much scarier. There is quite a bit of gore, although not all of the grisly effects are believable. For the most part, the horror scenes rely on fast-moving and exciting action, but there are some very good 'jump' scares and creepy, drawn-out sequences. Hard-core horror buffs and fans of military action will both find the results satisfying.

The DVD contains a twenty-minute 'making of' featurette. Much of the running time is taken up with clips from the film, but there is some interesting information about the visual effects and the anti-CG philosophy behind them. The commentary is from the two producers, and had a lot of good info in it. The 5.1 sound mix is adequate; there are some juicy howling and explosions on the back speakers, but most of the sound is pushed to the front speakers and the volume is a bit low.

"Dog Soldiers" is a real find if you want some good, old-fashioned horror movie scares and rugged violence. It's smart and well-acted, in the bargain. I hope director Neil Marshall does more films like this (maybe they'll even receive a theatrical release).

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars "Dog Soldiers" will grab you by the throat, July 18 2004
By 
mark (tennessee) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dog Soldiers (DVD)
This is one helluva good little movie.A group of British soldiers in the Scottish Highlands fight off a pack of wolfmen while hold up in an old cottage.Great suspense and terrific action abound in this low budget jewel while the soldiers try to survive until daylight.Its really good to see a film work with downhome special effects to make a good movie as opposed to those computer generated Hollywood slick looking movies.The wolves are believable as hell and the gore is really....well.... very gory.Intestines are ripped out and meat is eaten when the pack makes a kill and they make quite a few.
This is the first werewolf movie Ive seen that made the wolves look real and act scary.Face it , the werewolves reputation suffered at the hands of David Naughton and Jason Bateman so its really hard to make a movie where werewolves really come across scary .In this movie they do.
Just about everything is perfect in this little movie--a secluded cottage and the misty Scottish weather and the gloom of the woods and the impending nightfall all add up to a great setting for this man vs werewolf fight for survival.
If you like horror then see this movie ,it will put those big budget slick Hollywood pieces of crap you usually watch to shame.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A lot more than I expected, Oct 20 2003
By 
This review is from: Dog Soldiers (DVD)
Being a B movie horror lover I was expecting nothing more. We have to admit that all recent Werewolf movies are B movies or romantic/comedy movies like "American werewolf in Paris". So I sat down expecting a lot of gore and a story line that a chimp could easily follow. I was in for a surprise. In fact it is by far the best werewolf movie I have ever seen. This high octane action horror movie is a must see!

This movie was intended to be the first of a trilogy so there's hope for a sequel.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars One of the better werewolf movies of the genre, Nov 22 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Dog Soldiers (DVD)
The premise: a small group of British soldiers are sent into the highlands of Scotland on a wargames reconnaissance mission. Instead, they end up getting stalked by a pack of werewolves.

This multi-faceted movie has so many things going for it, one can only wonder why it was never given a North American theatrical release. In spite of the title, it's no dog.

The cinematography is several notches above the typical horror film style. The acting.... well.... they're British so that goes without saying. The pacing is brisk and, wonder of wonders, the story actually makes sense and works.

And the special effects and werewolf makeup are surprisingly good.

Even though the audience knows from the get go that this is a monster flick, the director knows that what works best is what's not seen. So instead we only get flashing glimpses of the creatures and lots of suspense, progressively revealing more and more of the hairy hoard.

I half expected to find this film a turkey, but was pleasantly surprised.

Definitely not to be missed if you're a fan of creature features.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Dog Soldiers (DVD, widesvreen), Nov 30 2010
By 
David J. Thompson (Napanee, Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dog Soldiers (Widescreen) (DVD)
An excellent twist on the werewolf tale! Though obviously made on a tight budget, this film has it all: great actors/acting, action, gallows humour, horror, and one of the better endings I've seen in a film of this genre. Re-view quotient: HIGH!
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Dog Soldiers by Neil Marshall (DVD - 2003)
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