Screams & Streams

Ep. 134: Neil Marshall's "Dog Soldiers" (2002)


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They kick off a training exercise and end up barricaded in a farmhouse with eight-foot problems outside the door. We’re talking Neil Marshall’s Dog Soldiers (2002), the British werewolf horror movie that somehow turns “soldiers vs lycanthropes in the Scottish wilderness” into a surprisingly fun, surprisingly funny survival night.

We start with a quick spoiler warning, a tight plot summary, and our themed drink the Warrior Dog (vodka, lemon juice, simple syrup, topped with sparkling wine). Then we get honest about first impressions: werewolf movies are notoriously hard to pull off, so we judge this one as military horror with creature-feature rules. From there we run Dog Soldiers through our categories, including Tropes Hall of Shame, Don’t Go Back in the House, and our favorite one-liners.

We break down what doesn’t hold up (erratic early cuts, a few “too bright” blood moments, and suit shots that wobble between good and not great) while giving credit where it’s due: committed gore, tense siege pacing, strong banter, and smart choices around when not to show the full transformation. We also talk sound design, howling overload, the scenes that made us laugh out loud, and the big “what the fuck” moments. Finally, we compare it to American Werewolf in London and other horror-with-military vibes, share production trivia, and place it on our watchability scale.

If you like werewolf horror movies, practical effects creature features, or action-forward horror, hit play and let us know where you land. Subscribe, share with a horror friend, and please leave a rating and review so more people can find the show.

 Head to www.screamsandstreams.com for more information related to our episode.

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Screams & StreamsBy Chad, Mike, & Sam