I'm gonna watch it again. I've always loved this film, but it's been awhile since I've seen it.
-
sadfilmophile — 13 years ago(October 17, 2012 11:25 AM)
This is so rubbish. Flanders ^ has already listed reason after reason why it cant be her.
To that I'll add this - during the rape scene wouldnt she defend herself like a wolf if she had those powers, ie high jumps etc. -
snikt_snakt — 13 years ago(October 27, 2012 07:04 PM)
I'm always saddened when I see a movie that dumbs itself down for the stupid people in the audience and I think to myself, "Come on. We don't need to be spoon-fed this crap. We aren't morons."
Then I see a thread like this.
And I realize that roughly half the audience out there are indeed morons.
"
What the f-ck is the internet?
" -
Jay
, Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back -
pw90 — 13 years ago(October 31, 2012 07:52 PM)
I myself wondered if it was her or one of her family (brother, or maybe somehow dad?) because of something that her father does at the end of the movie.
When she asks the cop about the vodka tonic and then tells him "she could smell it a mile away" her dad just laughs and then gets real straight-faced when the cop looks at him. That always stuck me as kinda odd.. -
snikt_snakt — 13 years ago(November 12, 2012 09:46 AM)
Jay and Silent Bob might be morons but that doesn't make me one just because I enjoyed the movie.
On the other hand, everyone who thinks that Michelle's character was the wolf that bit Jack's character has identified themselves as morons.
"
What the f-ck is the internet?
" -
Jay
, Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back -
MrRazorz — 10 years ago(September 30, 2015 07:01 PM)
This theory seems to spring from two misconceptions about the werewolves in this film. Firstly, that a person has to be bitten to become a werewolf, when the film clearly explains that this isn't the case. Secondly, that these werewolves can change back and forth from "full wolf" to "full human". Will's conversation with the professor implies that he'll become more wolf-like every night until the next full moon and then become a wolf for good, and the film seems to bear this out.
Besides that, there's no evidence in the film to support the idea of Laura having been a werewolf all along. She displays no wolf-like characteristics until the last scene, animals aren't afraid of her, and there are several scenes where she's freaking out over the very
idea
of werewolves, which would be odd if she were one herself.
The real nail in the coffin for this idea, of course, is the climactic scene in the stable. If Laura is a werewolf, then why doesn't she change when Will and Stewart do? Why is she running away from Stewart and feebly trying to fend him off with fire extinguishers and pitchforks, when she could just "wolf out" and fight him
lobo e lobo
, as it were?
When I first saw the film in 1994, my first assumption was that Stewart must have bitten or scratched Laura while he was tossing her around on the stable floor. While discussing it with my friends on the way home, we remembered the whole "passion of the wolf" thing, which made a lot more sense (because why would they have put that idea into the script if it wasn't going to play out in the story?). It's not that complicated a film, as much fun as it is, so the simplest explanation really is the best one. -
Soxsista — 9 years ago(May 04, 2016 05:56 PM)
I really love this movie and I try to watch it every time it's on. I think I must have seen this movie over a dozen times. I never, ever in a million years thought that I would see a thread like this. I thank all who tried to explain in "rational and exhaustive" detail why the cockamamie theory of Laura being the wolf that bit Will is preposterous, absurd, and totally counterproductive to the story.