Howling III: The Marsupials (1987) - 5/10
A professor searches for the existence of werewolves, while an outlander werewolf leaves her pack to join modern society.
Barry Otto stars as Harry, an Australian anthropologist who finds evidence of werewolves existing via an archival film from 1905. After news of a werewolf attack abroad, Harry tries to warn the US military, but they don't believe him. Meanwhile, Jerboa (Imogen Annesley) - a werewolf living in the outback - flees her home and arrives in Sydney, where she quickly meets an American filmmaker named Donny (Leigh Biolos), who casts her in a werewolf horror movie...
Howling III: The Marsupials was written and directed by Philip Mora. Mora, who directed Howling II (1985), was unhappy with the previous film's story and some of the changes producers made to make the film sleazier. To make amends, he wrote Howling III and as producer raised money for the film. How does it fare?
This is comfortably one of the weirdest movies I've ever seen. I usually don't do this, but I skimmed some Youtube reviews on this film because after finishing it, I was truly at a loss for words. I didn't find any answers in those reviews. And unsurprisingly, the scores are all over the place, with some calling it a hidden gem, and others giving it a 1/5. With seemingly no consensus, let me give my perspective.
Howling III is like a fever dream. It's almost like a shlocky horror movie version of Brazil (1985), or 12 Monkeys (1995), or some other Terry Gilliam movie. For the most part, it's a horror-comedy that borders on parody at times. The movie doesn't attempt to be scary at all, and has a ton of weird in-jokes that leave the whole film feeling surreal. I thought some of the comedy worked fine, but I'm not actually sure how accessible it is. Further adding to that surrealness is the film turns into a drama roughly an hour in. There was some comedy during this portion, but pivoting to slightly more grounded drama just added to the overall bizareness.
As far as the plot goes, it starts off very straightforward. The "A" plot has Harry and his team trying to confirm the existence of werewolves, while the "B" plot is a comedic love story between Jerboa and Donny. I'd be remiss if I didn't mention the prominent Alfred Hitchcock parody character in the "B" plot. I'd be even more remiss if I didn't mention that Barry Otto (the actor who plays Harry) is in the Jackie Chan movie Mr. Nice Guy (1997), a film I watched a hundred million times growing up, so it was nice to see him in another role. Once these two plots merge, that's when things start getting weird. The film doesn't really have an antagonist - the werewolves are seen as sympathetic here - so we instead get a number of random and bizarre werewolf scenes to keep the body count going.
Speaking of the werewolves, they're worlds better than what we got in Howling II... but are worlds worse than what we got in The Howling (1981). I would say in general they're pretty cheesy; but we've seen worse, so beggars can't be choosers. I do want to highlight the film is fairly tame though, as this flick only earned a PG-13 rating in the USA. However, the film makes up for it with the use of very unusual camera work. Lots of POV shots, lots of fish eye lens use, and lots of odd camera angles.
Add it all up, and what do you get? A very niche film, that's what. Howling III has a horrible score on IMDB (3.5) and I can understand why. It's an alienating film, and I can guarantee no one who checks this movie out will be ready for what they're about to watch. Even moreso in my case - I drove nearly 600 miles over the weekend, popped in what I thought was a generic monster movie, and instead my exhausted brain was treated to an acid trip.
However, if you can get invested in what the movie is going for, there is surreal enjoyment to be had. I could, and seemingly the Letterboxd users could too (2.4/5). It's still a flawed movie (as evidenced by my score) that meanders too much and has a ridiculous plot, but I think it has an unexplainable quality that makes it memorable.
Overall, Howling III: The Marsupials is a borderline indescribable movie. For me, it's so crazy I can't help but appreciate it. But for others, it may be the absolute bottom of the barrel. Howling III has a reported budget somewhere between $1M-$2M, but I could not find any earnings information.