It was supposed to be a simple training mission. What it turned into was a horrific nightmare from which none of them may awake! When a group of British soldiers are dropped into the middle of nowhere for a routine war game, they find more than they bargained for when they stumble upon a batch of mean, nasty werewolves who seemingly can’t be destroyed! Led by the gruff Sgt. Wells (Sean Pertwee), the band of brothers take shelter in an old farmhouse in the middle of nowhere. There they make their stand against the enormous werewolves and their onslaught of violence (spilled intestines, anyone?). In one blood-soaked night, the men will find out what true terror is…and that the night has bite! –DVDVerdict
Neil Marshall (born 25 May 1970) is an English film director and screenwriter. Marshall began his career in editing and in 2002 directed his first feature film Dog Soldiers, which became a cult film. He followed up with the critically acclaimed horror film The Descent in 2005. Marshall also directed Doomsday in 2008, and wrote and directed Centurion in 2010.
Marshall was born in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. He was first inspired to become a film director when he saw Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) at the age of eleven. He began making home movies using Super 8 mm film, and in 1989, he attended film school at Newcastle Polytechnic (now Northumbria University). In the next eight years, he worked as a freelance editor. In 1995, he was hired to co-write and edit for director Bharat Nalluri’s first film, Killing Time. Marshall continued to write and develop his own projects, directing his first film in 2002, Dog Soldiers, a horror film that became a cult film in the United Kingdom… read more
Ranks up there with the strangest, yet most fun b movies of the 2000's. Good friends with one of the main producers. Still talk about it every now and then.
Neil Marshall's men are numerous and largely interchangeable—grizzled genre types vaguely sketched, owing a lot to Hawks-by-way-of-Carpenter
Although there is next to no storyline in this movie, the first 30 minutes of the movie promise to be an interesting take on the classic “man vs. beast” scenario. The setup is as simple as it is effective… read review