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Rumours of lost subplots have circulated in the horror community for years. While some were written into the script, others were filmed but remain locked away in studio vaults. 7. The Dream Within a Dream Expansion
John Landis has stated that he does not own the film and cannot release a new version. Furthermore, much of the cut footage—specifically the tramp attack—is considered lost media , meaning the original film elements may no longer exist. special effects used in the famous transformation scene? Alternate versions - An American Werewolf in London - IMDb
Which would you like?
Early UK television broadcasts often heavily edited the final werewolf rampage and removed shots of the dead werewolf in human form on the moors.
It was removed to help the film secure an "R" rating in the U.S.. David’s Phone Call Home
Landis later admitted to regretting the removal of the scene. However, the director’s regret is compounded by a cinematic tragedy: the footage no longer exists. It is believed that the “trims and cuts”—the unused negatives—were accidentally thrown out at Twickenham Studios in the UK. As a result, there is no known video or audio footage of the scene, and no detailed descriptions of exactly what happened in it have ever surfaced.
This is the most famous "lost" sequence. It featured the werewolf attacking and killing three homeless men along the Thames. Test audiences found it too distracting and intense, leading Landis to remove it entirely. Landis later expressed regret for this cut, as it left viewers wondering how the tramps died when they appeared as ghosts later in the film.
Regardless of whether the footage ever existed, the legend has become a powerful part of the film’s legacy. The fact that the tramps appear as ghosts in the porn theater later in the film, with no visible wounds, only deepens the mystery. As the film stands today, there are no decent views of the tramps as ghosts, leaving their method of death—and the reality of the lost scene—frustratingly ambiguous.
Landis felt the joke disrupted the building dread. Removing it made the villagers seem instantly more hostile and secretive, heightening the audience's anxiety. 2. The Full "Blue Moon" Transformation Excess
Before David attacks the commuters in the subway, a deleted sequence showed him prowling through a dimly lit London park. He stalks a young couple sitting on a bench.
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An extended shot of the werewolf ripping the throat out of a riot policeman.
Yet, for decades, horror cinephiles have whispered about a longer, more disturbing cut of the movie. While the theatrical release clocks in at a lean, perfectly paced 97 minutes, significant portions of footage were left on the cutting room floor. Some scenes were trimmed to keep the pacing brisk, while others were aggressively excised to escape the ratings board's dreaded X rating.
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Landis shot this sequence. According to production notes, it was a logistical nightmare involving dozens of extras fitted with the same blonde wig and blue jacket. The purpose was to drive home David’s fractured psyche before the finale. So why was it cut?
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