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  1. Willard is a 1971 American horror film directed by Daniel Mann and written by Gilbert Ralston, based on Stephen Gilbert 's novel Ratman's Notebooks. Bruce Davison stars as social misfit Willard Stiles, who is squeezed out of the company started by his deceased father.

  2. www.imdb.com › title › tt0067991Willard (1971) - IMDb

    Jul 30, 1971 · Willard Stiles (Bruce Davison) is a lonely and bullied man who befriends and trains his pet rats to seek revenge on his enemies. The film, directed by Daniel Mann and starring Elsa Lanchester and Ernest Borgnine, was a surprise box office hit and inspired many animal-themed horror movies.

    • (5.6K)
    • Horror
    • Daniel Mann
    • 1971-07-30
  3. Willard is a 2003 American psychological horror film written and directed by Glen Morgan and starring Crispin Glover, R. Lee Ermey and Laura Elena Harring. It is loosely based on the novel Ratman's Notebooks by Stephen Gilbert, as well as on the novel's first film adaptation, Willard (1971), and its sequel, Ben (1972).

  4. May 1, 2017 · He lives alone in a crumbling house with his ailing mother (Elsa Lanchester, Arnold, Bride of Frankenstein). His boss, Al Martin (Ernest Borgnine, Escape from New York) is a vulgar, cruel man who...

    • 3 min
    • 268.3K
    • ScreamFactoryTV
  5. www.imdb.com › title › tt0310357Willard (2003) - IMDb

    Mar 14, 2003 · Willard: Directed by Glen Morgan. With Crispin Glover, R. Lee Ermey, Laura Harring, Jackie Burroughs. A young man with an unusual connection to rats uses them at his own sociopathic will.

    • (20K)
    • Drama, Horror, Thriller
    • Glen Morgan
    • 2003-03-14
  6. Life has become one big trap for 32-year-old Willard Stiles. Haunted by the ghost of his dead father, psychologically suffocated by his mother and ridiculed by his co-workers, Willard makes an ...

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  8. Willard is a young man who can talk to rats and uses them to exact revenge on his enemies. Roger Ebert analyzes the film's sociological and psychological implications and praises Ernest Borgnine's performance.