Metacritic Film

Willard

Starring Crispin Glover, David Parker, Laura Harring, R. Lee Ermey, Jackie Burroughs, Kristen Cloke, Rick Lazzarini, and Kim McKamy

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for terror/violence, some sexual content and language

New Line Cinema
Suspense/Thriller
105 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters March 14, 2003

Socially inept and saddled with a miserable job, Willard shares a powerful bond with the rats who dwell in his basement. When Willard's world is turned upside down by tragedy, those responsible must answer to his rapidly growing pack of ravenous, fearsome friends. (New Line Cinema)

WRITTEN BY
Glen Morgan
Gilbert Ralston (1971 screenplay and book Ratman's Notebook)

DIRECTED BY
Glen Morgan

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

61 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Film Threat Kevin Carr
Willard doesn’t try to be great art (although if you really think about it, there are plenty of themes borrowed from “Hamlet,” “The Birds” and “Frankenstein” to name a few). Willard just is.
90 Time Joel Stein
Glover, as usual, is phenomenal.
89 Austin Chronicle
Cooly feral in dark suit and tie, Glover’s the man in the gray flannel suit gone way, way over the edge, and it’s one of the most fully realized screen performances in ages, rats and all.
83 Portland Oregonian
The "Citizen Kane" of rat movies makes for a terrific overhaul in this wonderfully entertaining and, yes, touching take on that terribly confused man/child named Willard.
80 Village Voice
In a culture clogged with appropriated effluvia and remake cop-outs, Willard is wittier and nastier than we deserve.
80 Washington Post
This is a one-riff movie and instant cult classic.
80 LA Weekly
It's one of many references to the movie-wise, but a resonant one, for Glover's performance turns out to be shockingly emotional, drawn as daringly close to the bone -- within this story's limited thematic range -- as Anthony Perkins' work in Hitchcock's seminal film.
80 The Onion (A.V. Club)
It only takes rat trainers and CGI artists to create swarms of vermin, but it takes a twisted kind of genius to treat them as equals.
75 Chicago Tribune Kevin M. Williams
This faithful resurrection of the original "Willard," a twisted gem in its own right, also is funny.
75 Boston Globe
Wonderfully deranged.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
A silly, snarling romp -- a fun (if you're in the mood for it), sometimes scary look at the life of a socially awkward man whose best friend is a white rodent he names Socrates.
75 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Has the modesty of a savvy, smart drive-in movie with Hollywood studio polish and a movie buff's loving care.
75 Entertainment Weekly
The new version is actually better. It's still a fairly ham-handed revenge-of-the-nerd horror fable, but you don't go to a movie like Willard for subtlety. You go to be skeeved out by rats, rats, and more rats, and I'm tempted to say that Willard does a fairly rat-tastic job of it.
75 Rolling Stone
Want your skin to crawl? This one's for you.
75 New York Post
Morgan never reaches the heights the film probably would have hit if had been directed by Tim Burton, whose style is frequently evoked -- especially Shirley Walker's playful score, which seems channeled directly from Burton's frequent collaborator Danny Elfman.
70 Dallas Observer
Has plenty of dark horror style, but it lacks the weird charm of the 1971 original starring Bruce Davison...It's a nice homage.
70 Los Angeles Times
The new Willard, which has taken the original's humanity and the psychological validity, leavened with a dollop of dark humor, and replaced them with a technically impressive but essentially heartless spoof.
63 Charlotte Observer
The pleasure comes from watching the clever rodents do their stuff. Computerized images have been kept to a minimum, and real animals provide most of the film's atmosphere.
63 Miami Herald
As filler for the long, dry winter movie season, the movie is more than passable, and its sense of humor has a wicked, unforgiving spin that is decidedly pro-rodent.
63 Baltimore Sun
Simply twiddling with the fine-tuning on the central character is not enough to warrant remaking a film. Both Glover and Willard deserve better.
63 Chicago Sun-Times
There is real wit in Glover's performance. And wit, too, in R. Lee Ermey's performance as the boss, which draws heavily on Ermey's real-life experience as a drill sergeant.
63 New York Daily News
Glover, wearing his close-cropped hair in a pompadour and striking beady-eyed, furrow-browed poses that scare the hair off a tarantula, makes it as much fun as a rat revenge movie can be.
50 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Perhaps too much energy was spent on being stylish rather than simply low-rent horrifying. The upshot is not very stylish and not very scary.
50 USA Today
The movie isn't without style, but the material can't remotely sustain 100 minutes.
50 Chicago Reader
The chills are functional at best and the attempts at pathos negligible.
50 ReelViews
As high camp, Willard might have something going for it, but not as a horror movie.
40 Salon.com
You're just sitting there, somewhere between mildly amused and fairly bored, watching the filmmakers squander Hollywood's most eccentric character actor and a lot of very fine specimens of the order Rodentia.
40 TV Guide
Production-designed within an inch of its life, this remake's best conceit is the casting of Crispin Glover as its socially maladroit rat fancier.
30 Variety
Strictly for the birds.
20 Wall Street Journal
Everything that was modest, soundly grounded and therefore horrifying about the 1971 rodentarama that starred Bruce Davison is now insistent, Grand-Guignol-intense and therefore shrug-offable when it isn't downright awful.
20 The New York Times
The worst flaw of Willard is a clunky tone-deaf screenplay based on Gilbert Ralston's original and updated by the director. Barely a line flies by that doesn't land with a wooden thud.

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