Here it is folks. My latest entry for The Movie Waffler’s 1001 Overlooked Movies(You Should See Before You Die) blogathon.
Cast: Katherine Isabelle, Emily Perkins, Mimi Rogers
Writers: John Fawcett, Karen Walton
Director: John Fawcett
Going through adolescence and puberty is never an easy thing. Your body is becoming something very different and your personality is changing too. You are turning into a different creature in some ways. Ginger Fitzgerald(Katherine Isabelle) is also going through such changes, but her journey to womanhood is a lot different from that of her usual age group. She is becoming an animal and I don’t mean she has animal like instincts. I mean she is literally starting to grow hair and fangs. Ginger is becoming a werewolf and although many may feel that her erratic behavior is that of a normal girl. Her sister Brigitte(Emily Perkins) knows otherwise. This is one of the best horror films to involve teens because it uses the werewolf mythology as a metaphor for the female puberty cycle.
The Fitzgerald sisters were never the popular ones in school. Labeled as outcasts the two spend their days thinking about death and making mock suicide photos. Neither of them have had their periods before and both think very little about sex. Ginger is in the beginning stages of her puberty when she is attacked by a werewolf. In an earlier scene she refers to her first period as “The Curse”. After the attack, things begin to change for Ginger, and it’s not just the normal menstrual cycle that others including her mother(Mimi Rogers) thinks it is. While Brigitte is busy trying to find a cure that will help her sister. Ginger embraces her new attitude and becomes more self-confident then she did before. She has sex with one of the guys in her school,and thinks her lust for him was purely sexual. Instead it was to and I’m paraphrasing here. “Tear everything into fucking pieces” The bigger her level of lust grows the more she changes into a beast. The guy she has sex with also starts to change too which I feel is a comment on S.T.D.’s that kids still face today. Brigitte seeks the help of a local drug dealer(Kris Lemche) who tells him that she is the one who is infected and the two come up with a plan to help save Ginger. Will they be able to save her sister in time or will she just have to live outside on a chain from now on.
The basic idea for “Ginger Snaps” could have been handled like a horror comedy. But writers John Fawcett and Karen Walton keep the story and characters at a realistic level. The script does have humor throughout it but that element stops when scenes need to be more serious and scary. Emily Perkins and Katherine Isabelle are believable as siblings and you really feel for them when Ginger’s condition gets worse. It reminds me of movies where someone is a drug addict and their friend tries their best to help them out. They may be gone to the rest of the world, but that person still sees something there and wants to help. There were moments that brought me to tears when I watched this, which makes it stand out from other horror stories. The make up and special effects are impressive. Especially for a film made on a low-budget. Ginger’s slow transformation for the most part is really quite cool, but there was one moment that felt a little fake. Still I got to give this one props for using practical effects instead of just CGI.
The movie does have other flaws include one that involves the mother character. She begins to play a bigger part in the story near the end, but is soon forgotten about and we never see her again. I also thought the moment where Ginger attacks the school counselor during the day and no one else notices took a lot to buy into as well. Still, those are just small issues in another wise great horror fable.
“Ginger Snaps” became so popular that it spawned two more sequels. “Ginger Snaps: Unleashed” while not as good as the first one, does benefit from having a good story line that picks up right after the end of this one. “Ginger Snaps Back” takes place in a different century and wants to be a prequel, but ends up feeling a bit out of place. I still recommend all three, especially if you are fans of this movie.
I’ve never got round to seeing Ginger Snaps, reading this review makes me want to change that.
It is better then a lot of other teen horror movies. Thanks for the compliment.
Watch it Vinnieh 😀
Couldnt have said it better myself. Thanks for the comment
This is a great choice. In my opinion, Ginger Snaps is just about the only modern werewolf movie that deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as The Howling and An American Werewolf In London. I first saw this (on a Halloween!) by way of the truly substandard and embarrassing full screen Artisan Entertainment US release of this. Even so, I loved it. Fans of the movie should definitely seek out the Canadian collector’s edition dvd release by TVA Films. Ginger Snaps 2 is damn solid, too, though GS3 left me cold. Where’s the Blu Ray?
Thank you Brandon. I will look for that collector’s edition. As much as I was diapointed with number 3. I would still love to own all of these on Blue Ray. I like how you put this with An American Werewolf in London and The Howling. I never thought of that before but it makes sense
Man, I love that film. I remember seeing it on TV and wasn’t really thinking much but damn. It became so fucking good and really inventive in the way it approached horror.
I cant wait to rewatch Unleashed and Snaps Back again. I would love to see another one that picks up where the 2nd one ends Thanks for the comment
Good review. 🙂 I remember thinking this was pretty decent but no one else I knew liked it…
Sounds like you need to hang around better people. Everyone I showed this too liked it. They even liked the 2nd one too. Thanks for the comment
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