| Ginger Snaps | 
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Buy New/Used/Collectible from $4.74
Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 197 reviews) Sales Rank: 92687 Category: DVD
Actors: Emily Perkins, Katharine Isabelle, Kris Lemche, Mimi Rogers, Jesse Moss (ii) Director: John Fawcett Publisher: Live / Artisan Studio: Live / Artisan Manufacturer: Live / Artisan Label: Live / Artisan Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Unrated Media: DVD Running Time: 108 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
UPC: 012236122111 EAN: 0012236122111 ASIN: B00005NKSD
Release Date: October 23, 2001 Theatrical Release Date: 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Like Carrie before it, Ginger Snaps uses horror-movie conventions as an inspired metaphor for puberty. When beautiful but reclusive goth teenager Ginger (Katharine Isabelle) is attacked by a monstrous wolf on the eve of her first period, her body starts changing in a big way, as do her suddenly lusty, feral appetites. Director John Fawcett masterfully balances the expectations of teen horror exploitation (blood, bodies, sex, smart dialogue, and good old-fashioned monster-movie scares) with clever black humor and tender sisterly solidarity. Only devoted sister Brigitte (gloomy Emily Perkins) knows the truth, and even as Ginger's abrupt transformation threatens their once unbreakable friendship, bonds of blood and love keep them together: Brigitte disposes of Ginger's victims while searching for a cure. Mimi Rogers costars as their dotty but unexpectedly sensitive mom, ready to sacrifice all to protect her daughter. Blood and blood ties have never been more evocative. --Sean Axmaker
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| Customer Reviews: Read 192 more reviews...
  PMS is deadly October 23, 2008 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
Since Eden, good wholesome hard-working friendly members of the male gender have felt the effects of "that time of the month".
Here we have a horror movie metaphor called Ginger Snaps. Even the title itself sounds so friendly, warm, cute, and inviting.
But as guys we soon learn that's b.s.
Ginger is a young high school chick anticipating her first period. Well, it comes, more like an exclamation point.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The monster smells the menstruation. Attacks. Spreads the sickness.
And men everywhere are in some deep trouble.
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Cult classic!!! 4.5 stars. Midol will not save you!
  Awesome movie!!! June 19, 2008 This movie is so awesome, has humor, plus horror, what more can u ask for!!!
  Teen agnst with a bite June 5, 2008 I admit I love this movie. It's dark and gothic and has a lot of teeth for a teen horror movie. The ending is a bit of a bummer, but there is a lot of fun along the way.
  "We're almost not even related anymore . . . . " March 28, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Ginger (Katharine Isabelle) and Bridgette (Emily Perkins) are two misfit sisters whose favorite "bonding" activity is to take pictures of their own fake (gory) deaths, some of which they submit as a slideshow for a school assignment, much to their teacher's horror. They have a pact that they will be "out by sixteen or dead in the scene" but "together forever" regardless. Needless to say, no one at school - teachers, students, BOYS, quite know what's up with them or what to do with them. But they get each other.
In Bailey Downs, where our two heroines live, something - and it is definitely a SOMETHING, not a SOMEONE - is killing locals' pet dogs. This mysterious creature has been dubbed, appropriately, "The Beast of Bailey Downs".
And Ginger and her sis are about to meet him/it.
You see, they are out to play a nasty prank on a particularly snotty female classmate, Katrina, making her think her own dog is a victim of the Beast. But in the process, Ginger discovers that she just got "the curse", her first menstrual period, and, almost immediately upon noticing this, is attacked and wounded. She manages to get away, and, while running for their lives, the girls cross a road and the Beast is hit by the van of none other than Sam (Kris Lemche), a local drug-dealer and Katrina's sometime boyfriend.
They manage to get home, their parents gone, and Ginger's wounds, which looked quite severe, seem to be healing rapidly - TOO rapidly, thinks Bridgette, but Ginger convinces her not to call 911, or tell their mother what happened.
Time goes on, Halloween approaches, and Ginger starts to change in ways that may not be explainable as "just part of becoming a woman", unless that normally involves thick white hair growing out of her healing wounds, growing fangs, long nails, and a tail. That's right: Bridgette realizes that it may be time to start looking for a cure for lycanthropy that doesn't involve a gun and a silver bullet.
She enlists the help of Sam as she and her sister grow farther and farther apart and Ginger becomes more and more monstrous - in every way.
The ending is not to be given away to anyone who has not yet seen the film. Just know that this is a top-notch horror film: Acting, music, makeup, it's all there. Highly recommended for fans of the genre.
Cheers.
  I've seen this movie way too many times... February 9, 2008 I won't get into an intricate plot outline, because other reviewers have done that so well. The things that I love about the movie are: acting, setting, costumes, music, story, and I could go on. Sometimes everything comes together in a movie, and this is one of those. It is a perfect for comparing getting the "curse", something all girls go through, to getting the CURSE, the mark of the beast, which few people have. I love the similarities between the two.
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