A Year of Bad Movies # 5 — “Bad Moon”
Bad Moon (1996)
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 20 out of 100
IMDB Score: 4.9 out of 10
“Bad Moon” is the latest in a series of films I’ve seen that seem to prove a theory I’ve long suspected: If you go to another country, you’re going to get attacked by a werewolf.

A werwewolf teaches the kid from "Dennis the Menace" that Mr. Wilson was a light-weight when it comes to corporal punishment.
From England to Paris to Canada and now South America, werewolves have offices set up in tourist locations across the world, waiting to chomp down on hapless Americans looking for some photo opportunities.
In “Bad Moon,” Michael Pare plays Ted, a werewolf attack survivor who moves in with his sister Janet (played by Mariel Hemingway) and her son Brett (Mason “Dennis the Menace” Gamble), after returning from an exceptionally exciting trip to the Amazon.
As Ted struggles with his newfound lycanthropy, only Janet’s dog Thor suspects something may be wrong with dear Uncle Ted.
Using his super-canine powers, Thor is able to sniff out the wolf in the fold but, in yet another case of human-pet misunderstanding, is sent to the pound for being a “bad dog” when he decides to nibble on the shapeshifter’s arm.
There are just as many pets-sent-to-the-pound-because-their-attempts-to-save-their-owners-from-supernatural-attacks-are-misconstrued-as-roudy-conduct movies as there are American-tourists-get-attacked-by-international-werewolf movies —which, is to say, there are a handful.
Like “Cat’s Eye” before it, “Bad Moon” has reinforced my almost blind trust in my pet’s intuition. From trolls to werewolves, our pets are just trying to look out for our safety.
If my dog starts to bark at a person, be they stranger or beloved family member, I will instantly assume that I am dealing with a werewolf in disguise. Why waste time with logic and common sense? Movies have taught me that these crutches are just time-wasting plot devices set up to build tension before the eventual moonlit showdown between man and man-beast.
If I could just go through life assuming every one of life’s setbacks was a horror movie plot waiting to happen, I’d save a lot of time and grief in the end.
This is just one of the many life lessons I learned while watching “Bad Moon.”
The 1996 film also taught me that morphing technology, although useful in Michael Jackson music videos or in Ron Howard’s “Willow,” makes for a terrible werewolf transformation sequence.
Seriously, I never would have thought I’d yearn for the days of time-lapse and yak hair.
I also learned that if one needs to measure the circumference of a tree trunk, perhaps there are better times to do this then in the middle of the night — when werewolves might be waiting to pounce at you from on top a tree.
Horror movies are a great teaching tool. Even the cheesiest, lowest budget schlockfest is a great source of wisdom when it comes to what choices not to make if you want to live a long, bloody corpse free life.
I guess what I’m trying to say is that kids don’t need to necessarily go to college as much as they need to watch bad horror movies.
I’m going to be a great parent.

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