
The Werewolf of Paris
Guy Endore
Initial release: 1933 (USA)
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| no, not this movie |
Look, I’m unrepentant furry trash with a thing for transformation and I
still think werewolves are kinda wack. There’s so much room to ruminate on man versus beast, what’s
really human nature, et cetera, et cetera, but all we typically get is
sadomasochism and lycantropic sex. Which is why I must announce with some surprise that Guy Endore's
The Werewolf of Paris, while in practice a lurid shocker, at least
attempts to tie in its werewolf nonsense with a commentary on the
Franco-Prussian war, the
Paris Commune, and
the depravity and brutality that occurred.
Don’t get me wrong: there’s still plenty of sadomasochism and lycantropic sex, plus clergy sexual abuse, incest, et cetera, et cetera. But the bulk of
the second half of the book makes it clear that the real thing we need
to ask ourselves is: aren’t we
all werewolves?
The character of Bertrand, the titular werewolf of Paris, is a tragic one; it’s really
not his fault that he’s a werewolf, and he certainly seems incapable of
controlling his violent urges. His uncle, Aymar, seems to vacillate
between condemning him and pitying him. To be fair, Bertrand’s crimes
are many — everything from slicing up a prostitute, murdering his
friend, eating farm animals, fucking his mom (!), digging up graves,
etc. But he has only a hazy memory of any of it later, and wallows in
shame. At the same time, Aymar, himself a veteran of the 1848 Revolutions,
is absolutely shocked at the paroxysms of violence that signals the end
of the Franco-Prussian war and the Paris commune, to the point where
he’s forced to wonder about the nature of man’s inhumanity, and what the
difference between Bertrand and everyone else really is.
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| The Siege of Paris, 1870, Jean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier |
I’m
torn about this book. On the one hand, the first half of the book is
the same kind of lurid gothic nonsense writers spent over a century
curling out in the 19th century. And to be certain, this book is written
in a gothic style, with a frame story and everything. The first chapter
is the least necessary, some dumb bullshit about feuding families
destroying themselves; the priest who assaults Bertrand’s mother in
chapter two is descended from this family, and that’s somehow why
Bertrand is a werewolf (also he was born on Christmas…okay?) On the
other hand, ruminating on the 1848 revolutions and setting the bulk of
the tale during the violence of 1870–71 is subtly brilliant. A lot of
good horror is about man’s inhumanity to man, and the book smartly
weaves a tale of the beast within to a tale of the beast without.
I
can’t really recommend this book to anyone except the most dedicated
fan of gothic horror; but at the same time, it’s noteworthy both for its
relative literary value compared to others in its genre, as well as
being the closest thing werewolves have to their very own Dracula.
While
there’s been a few attempts at film adaptations, and Endore himself
worked for Universal Studios, none of these have been truly faithful to
the book in text or in spirit. The closest one is probably Hammer’s The Curse of the Werewolf. There’s also 1975’s Legend of the Werewolf, but like Curse, it strips out most of the political context. At the end of the day, while werewolves are still the lamest of the Classic Monsters™, at least this book actually has one.
-june❤
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