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Lewis Teague

Author of The Jewel of the Nile [1985 film]

23 Works 619 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Lewis Teague

Image credit: Lewis Teague at a CharlottaTS party, May 2009 [source: Rodleen Getsic via Wikipedia]

Works by Lewis Teague

The Jewel of the Nile [1985 film] (1985) — Director — 175 copies
Cujo [1983 film] (1983) 147 copies, 2 reviews
Cat’s Eye [1985 film] (1985) — Director — 71 copies
Navy Seals [1990 film] (1990) — Director — 49 copies, 1 review
Storm of the Century: Includes 6 Bonus Movies (2015) — Director — 26 copies
Alligator [1980 film] (1980) — Director — 15 copies
Tom Clancy's Op Center [1995 Videorecording] (1995) — Director — 4 copies
Wedlock aka Deadlock [1991 film] (1991) — Director — 4 copies
6 Disasters Land & Sea [DVD] (2012) — Director — 2 copies
Fighting Back [1982 film] (1982) — Director — 2 copies
The Dukes of Hazzard: Reunion! [1997 TV Movie] (1997) — Director — 2 copies
The Triangle [2001 TV Movie] — Director — 1 copy
The Triangle, 2103 The Deadly Wake (2011) — Director — 1 copy
Dirty O'Neil [1974 Film] (1974) — Director — 1 copy
The Lady in Red [1979 film] (1979) — Director — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Teague, Lewis
Birthdate
1938-03-08
Gender
male
Occupations
film director
television director
film editor
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Associated Place (for map)
New York, USA

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
Donna Trenton (Dee Wallace) is a housewife who is having an affair behind the back of her workaholic husband, Vic (Daniel Hugh-Kelly) while their young son Tad (Danny Pintauro) becomes collateral damage in the marriage breakdown. As the family drama plays out, across town an old St. Bernard named Cujo is devolving into a ravenous monster after being bitten by a rabid bat. Coincidence finds Donna and Tad trapped in their broken-down car down close to the garage where Cujo lives and the pair show more find themselves under siege by the now vicious monster dog. Writers Don Carlos Dunaway and Lauren Currier lose some of the sub-textural nuance of Stephen King’s famous novel but manage to maintain the heart and soul of the story. King has always been a master of character and domestic small-town situations and Dunaway and Currier do well with this element of the story nicely capturing the disintegrating Trenton family dynamics and the various characters inhabiting the small town of Castle Rock. Director Lewis Teague handles this part of the film in a no-nonsense rudimentary way but really comes into his own when Cujo begins attacking mother and son in their broken-down car. At this point he quickly pivots the film from dysfunctional family drama into a tense animal attack horror. Teague uses different methods and angles to film the attacks and cleverly manages to balance elements of quiet calm before the next wild, slavering assault. Slick editing also ensures that the assaults on the car never become boring or fall into the trap of repetition. He also cleverly manages to extract a degree of tension out of the isolated garage locale. An old, lumbering St. Bernard wouldn’t appear on the face of it to make much of a monster, but its slow disintegration, some clever make-up and Teague’s approach to shooting the attacks all ensure that Cujo comes across as a reasonably credible and scary creature. From a cast perspective, the great Dee Wallace is excellent as the emotional mother, while Danny Pintauro looks genuinely terrified during the Cujo attacks. Although most of the rest of the cast have relatively small roles, they go about their business well breathing life into a set of stereotypical small-town characters. Overall “Cujo” is a fine effort for what it is. It has a workmanlike feel throughout, but it is well-constructed and provides some genuinely tense and finely tuned moments when Cujo lays siege to the Donna and Tad. show less
Monstrous canine evil stalks a helpless, isolated family.
2000 digitally mastered version

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Awards

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Associated Authors

Stephen King Original book, Screenplay, Author
Lauren Currier Screenwriter
ROZE Director
Jose L. Cruz Director
Bradford May Director
Daryl Duke Director
Harris Done Director

Statistics

Works
23
Members
619
Popularity
#40,645
Rating
3.0
Reviews
3
ISBNs
24

Charts & Graphs