"Tales from the Crypt" Werewolf Concerto (TV Episode 1992) Poster

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8/10
Red herrings abound!
eincrouknight8 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
I think the idea behind this episode is very clever. Its goal is to create expectations, then subvert them. I feel that this script accomplishes that better than previous Tales episodes that have tried to do the bait and switch twist ending.

But unfortunately, I don't think this script was executed properly. The episode's pacing is bizarre in how it lingers on irrelevant bantering between characters, but is rushed in the critical moments where the red herrings are established.

There's even a old review on here from 15 years ago that claimed there were no red herrings! The whole episode was a construction of red herrings. Knocking it down with a twist ending was the entire point of this episode! But I can see how a viewer could miss them. I'll list the major ones:

Red Herring #1: The episode heavily implies that Lokai is the secret vampire hunter. He's a smooth talker, towers over everyone, and is doing his own investigation. Lokai fits the image of a hero, so we expect he must be the anonymous vampire hunter.

Red Herring #2: Lokai's investigations lead to him murdering an old German man, Mr. Hertz, who for some reason says he'd rather tear Lokai apart than shoot him - making Lokai (and us!) think he must have been the werewolf. (Lokai didn't *really* think this. We'll get to that later, but notice how neither man explicitly acknowledges that Hertz is the werewolf.)

Red Herring #3: Well, that awkward statement by Mr. Hertz was a red herring for both us and Lokai. Lokai later learns that Hertz' aggressive behavior was because he was an ex-Nazi accused of war crimes. Hertz had just murdered a different guest whom had recognized and reported him. Lokai had killed a murderer, but not the werewolf.

Red Herring #4: Lokai's obvious horror at learning he had killed the wrong man leads us to believe he's upset to have missed his target: the werewolf. This time, the red herring is for us in the audience alone. Lokai knows what he's really trying to do, but we don't yet.

Red Herring #5: Lokai begins to suspect the sultry guest, Janice Baird, is the werewolf. In an earlier conversation, Lokai had made the offhand suggestion that the werewolf could be a woman. It looks like that's the case tonight!

So, I can identify five red herrings that all get shattered in the final scene when it's revealed that Lokai was the werewolf all along!

The red herring I think was most clever is #4. He wasn't upset that he had not killed the werewolf, or even that he had murdered a man. He was upset that he had not killed the real werewolf hunter, so he was still in danger!

The episode has a well-constructed set of misdirections that the writers know we will tend to interpret in a certain way, but are actually vague enough to conceal the truth. In that regard, it's like the modern mainstream media.

"Werewolf Concerto" is subtle in a way some other red herring-focused Tales From the Crypt episodes failed to be, such as the awful season 2 episode, "Three's a Crowd." But execution is critical for getting across the points. Because of the weird pacing that rushed through critical plot developments, I can understand how some viewers missed the chance to enjoy "Werewolf Concerto" as much as I did.
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6/10
Decent Tales from the Crypt episode saved by it's twist.
poolandrews21 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Tales from the Crypt: Werewolf Concerto is set in a mountain resort where Mr Bailey has become the latest victim in a series of murders apparently committed by a Werewolf, unfortunately a mudslide has blocked the highway so not only can no one leave the hotel they no one can get to them. The hotel manager Antoine (Dennis Farina) says he has hired someone to track & kill the Werewolf, Lokai (Timothy Dalton) is a professional Werewolf hunter & exterminator but this time he may have met his match in an unexpected adversary...

This Tales from the Crypt story was episode 13 from season 4, directed by Steve Perry this could have been a brilliant crypt tale but because of sloppy storytelling it's only average. The script by Scott Nimerfro was based on a story from 'The Vault of Horror' comic book & could have been great, it revolves around a Werewolf bumping the guests off at an isolated mountain retreat & a Werewolf hunter who has to figure out who the Werewolf is, now this could have made for a great Agatha Christie murder mystery but instead is a simplistic tale where the narrative jumps about & the whole experience is somewhat disappointing. To be honest I think Werewolf Concerto is one instance where the brief 25 odd minute running time just isn't long enough to develop the character's & story into a good horror mystery, there are a couple of points here where the story feels very rushed. There's no suspects apart from the obvious, there are no character's, no time is taken to establish any red herrings & it's all rather predictable until the twist ending which I have to say is rather cool, self referentially the twist ending is the exact opposite of the twist ending from a previous Tales from the Crypt episode, namely The Secret from season 2 which works well & is good fun.

This one looks really good as usual, the production values are high & it's well made although I have to say that I though the Werewolf & it's transformation looked a little cheap. There's some gore here, there's a decapitation & severed head complete with spinal column still attached, someone is shot through the head, someone gets a spike stuck through their body & the Crypt Keepr (John Kassir) gets to play around with some human brains during his opening segment. As usual there's a good cast here including ex James Bond Dalton & Beverly D'Angelo.

Werewolf Cocerto could have been great if only for a slightly better script which focused on the mystery elements a little more, sure the ending is cool but the previous 20 or so minutes not so much. Still worth a watch but not the best Tales from the Crypt episode.
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7/10
A howling of a time, but a vamp secret lies within this mountain resort!
blanbrn3 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This crypt episode "Werewolf Concerto" might not be one of the best, but I liked the way it ends with a surprise twist ending, just like so many episodes of the series. One by one guests at a mountain resort hotel keep vanishing and start to turn up dead, sparking rumors of a werewolf on the prowl! Timothy Dalton stars here as a guest who claims he can hunt the creature down, only it's another kind of hunting he does he's the hunter that hunts the prey!! His match is found when he encounters a blonde sexy ex-Hollywood star played well by Beverly D'Angelo and their sexual chemistry tension is super! And this werewolf will find he's not the only creature of the night! It was good to see two Hollywood veterans like Dalton and D'Angelo performing well and this episode has such a great twist ending.
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Starts well, but makes a mess at the end
Agnelin26 August 2011
I think Werewolf Concerto is probably one of the worst episodes of Tales from the Crypt. It starts out really promising, with some of the most appreciated TFTC elements: a dark setting (a little hotel out on the countryside), an appealing premise with a supernatural element (a werewolf has been spotted, and the hotel manager has hired a hunter to chase him down, but said hunter's identity is withheld; we're also told that there have been two murders) and a handful of picturesque, mysterious and comical characters thrown in to play villains, victims, and to throw in red herrings. Among them, the usual very familiar actors that TFTC always features: in this case, Timothy Dalton, and also Beverly D'Angelo.

I was particularly appealed at the Agatha-Christie-like setting and the promise of hidden culprits to unmask, plus the hunt for the werewolf and the mystery hunter. But it seems that the writers didn't know exactly where they wanted to take the story, or how to make the most of the many tools they had at hand. About halfway into the episode, there's a quite out-of-place turn that the plot takes, and it all ends up in what feels like a very rushed denouement. I was quite dissatisfied at this episode, especially because so much could be done. I think TFTC works best when the storyline is more simple and straightforward, which, far from detracting from the fun and the quality, enhances it.

My vote is 2/10.
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7/10
aka James Bond
shellytwade20 April 2022
To truly get this episode you have to realize the lead Timothy Dalton was our James Bond at the time. So this episode sort of plays out like a horror version of a James Bond movie. It's pretty tongue in cheek and never gets too dark or serious but it's a good time very much like an Agatha Christie mystery.
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7/10
Predictable episode ruined by the ending
bellino-angelo201427 June 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The episode begins with an old man that has problems with his car and stops in the woods for making it restart, but he has to run because there is a werewolf that chases him (and manages to kill the old man). In the nearby mountain resort the manager and the guests discuss about the fact that the old man was the third victim in one week and the authorities should know about it. Werewolf hunter Lokai (Timothy Dalton) is called for chasing the werewolf and nearly succedds, but just as the episode is about to end he turns into a werewolf and is stabbed with a candlestick and then bitten by a vampire woman.

The ending was tough to swallow as I hoped that the werewolf was somebody else than Lokai, and this for me made me lose a few points. Not a bad episode but an hit and miss one.
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8/10
Immensely enjoyable episode
Woodyanders8 August 2011
Warning: Spoilers
A werewolf stalks the grounds of a swanky resort hotel. However, said werewolf isn't the the creature of the night on the prowl in the area. Director Steve Perry, working from a very clever script by Scott Nimerfro, relates the entertaining story at a snappy pace, delivers a generous serving of graphic gore, and adroitly milks a wickedly amusing line in spot-on sharp and biting humor (pun intended). Moreover, the cast have a ball with the witty material: Timothy Dalton exudes pure smooth class as the suave Lokai, veteran tough guy actor Dennis Farina contributes a hilarious turn in a radical change of pace part as the resort's effeminate owner Antoine, Charles Fleischer does well as the excitable Carl Rechek, Walter Gotell is suitably slimy as secretive Nazi war criminal Mr. Hertz, and, best of all, Beverly D'Angelo vamps it up deliciously as the sultry and elegant Janice Baird. Rick Bota's slick cinematography boasts a few nifty visual flourishes (the werewolf POV shots are especially gnarly). Rick Marotta's jazzy score hits the soulful spot. The surprise twist ending is a real doozy. A hugely fun show.
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6/10
Werewolf Concerto
a_baron8 November 2014
This short TV episode from the "Tales From The Crypt" series begins with a frightened man running through the forest. Not fast enough, unfortunately. He has his head torn off. Good start - though not for him - next we switch to an hotel which is cut off from civilisation by a mudslide.

Fortunately though, one of the guests is a werewolf hunter, and he will slay the beast provided he is allowed to remain anonymous. Or she is allowed to remain anonymous. No, it is not the American tourist, for surely her husband would have sussed. Next there is another murder, but this time the perpetrator is human; the character he kills is a nasty piece of work who might just have killed him, but this guy who was shaping up to be the hero is suddenly not so nice.

Why did the hotel chef have to be called Wolfgang? No, this is not a pun, he really is called Wolfgang, he is celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck, a native of Austria, where this story is set. Or it might be Switzerland.

This really is an abominable miniature, but the surprise ending is its saving grace. On the other hand, you might just see it coming like I did!
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5/10
where's the music?
kapelusznik1821 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
****SPOILERS**** There's a werewolf on the loose and the people trapped in this out of the way Austrians hotel unable to leave, because dangerous road conditions, are scared sh*tless and it up to the manager Antoine,Dennis Farina,to keep things calm until help arrives. It turns out that there's help already there with a professional werewolf hunter among the guests in the hotel but it's up to us watching and the werewolf to figure out just who he is. As for the werewolf he's revealed very early in this "Tales from the Crypt" episode in the person of American tourist and former James Bond still packing, even though he doesn't really need it, his Carl Walther 9.mm automatic Timothy Dalton as the creepy looking Lokia.

Lokia gives himself away when the chef at the hotel Wolfgang Puck, played by "The Pucker" himself,offers to cook him up a fabulous mouth watering meal and all he wants is just a cheeseburger cooked up very rare on both sides. It's Lokia the werewolf who's trying to find out just who this werewolf hunter is and screws up when he kills, with his Walther 9.mm not his teeth, fugitive Nazi war criminal Mr. Hertz, Walter Gotell, whom he suspected of being the werewolf hunter. This action by Lokia tip's off the real werewolf hunter just who he is and sets him up for the kill.

***SPOILERS**** Gory ending with Lokia getting run through the heart with a stake-a wooden one not the typed served up for dinner-through the heart-vampire style-by werewolf hunter as well as , no kidding!, vampires the beautiful Beverly D'Angelo, Janice Baird, who invited him up to her hotel room to have a good time not knowing that it was going to be his last! P.S Debut appearance of Wolfgang Puck as the master chef at the hotel which soon convinced him to stick to cooking, that he's very successful in, not acting where his roles , in playing himself, would be very limited.
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