Year: 2012

“Mrs. Peterson and the Wolf”: a ‘screw you, nosy kid’ comic by Rachel Deering & Glen Ostrander

Every creative person cringes when they see / hear / read their first widely-exposed creation. My wife Tandye does it with her early art, my friend Colin does it with the early incarnations of his music, I did with with my first published story, and Rachel Deering does it with her early work in comics. “You gotta start somewhere”, Rachel tweeted yesterday, along with a link to Mrs. Peterson and the Wolf – her “first attempt at writing AND lettering”.

Illustrated and coloured by Glen Ostrander and originally published in Nix Comics Quarterly #3, “Mrs. Peterson” is like a Tales from the Crypt episode condensed into five pages: smart alec kid sticks his nose where he shouldn’t, smart alex kid gets fucked up. It’s fun in a way that makes me want to high-five someone and then play Rob Zombie really loudly. You can read the first two pages below, then visit Rachel’s site to read the whole thing (or buy Nix Quarterly #3, loaded with lots of other comics too and a steal at five bucks).


Given my mandate of only sharing werewolf stuff I like, “Mrs. Peterson and the Wolf” is certainly worth posting about on its own merits. However, I particularly wanted to share it with Werewolf News readers because I think Rachel’s feelings about it are a prime example of the self-critical tunnel vision that afflicts creative people.

This is Rachel’s first published writing and lettering job, so all she can see are its flaws. I can totally relate to that. I can’t read my own story in Wolf-Girls without cringing at what I perceive to be sloppy mistakes and missed opportunities. Nevertheless, I think creative types (including myself) would do well to remember that audiences won’t notice 99% of the flaws we see in our own work. We’re too close to be objective, and so over-exposed to the thing, whatever it is, that even the subtlest nuance seems hamfisted and strident. Irrelevant. As creators, we must be kind to our first creations. If anyone likes it, we have succeeded, and the fact that we made and finished a thing at all is something to celebrate.

And of course, when we’re done celebrating, we can always go and make something new.

Full Moon Features: Comedy — Where the Werewolf Film Went to Die in the ’80s

Michael J. Fox in "Teen Wolf"Inspired by the twin successes of The Howling and An American Werewolf in London, the ’80s yielded a veritable bumper crop of werewolf-centric horror comedies, most of which chose to accentuate the comedy over the horror. Whether this tendency arose out of a misreading of what made those hit films resonate with audiences or the desire to keep budgets down by limiting the mayhem, the end result was the same: almost to a man (and, in one case, woman), they were effectively defanged.

That’s definitely the case with 1981’s Full Moon High, which was written, produced and directed by perpetual triple threat Larry Cohen, whose approach to comedy is scattershot at best. The story opens in 1959, when high school football star Adam Arkin is attacked by the cheesiest-looking werewolf imaginable while accompanying his super-patriotic father (Ed McMahon!) on a super-secret mission to communist Romania. Upon their return home, Arkin takes to attacking young women, but the most he does is nip them in the butt, inspiring the local paper to run the understated headline “Werewolf Annoys Community.” After transforming in front of McMahon, who freaks out and accidentally shoots himself, Arkin leaves town just before the big game, which his school loses in his absence. The film then leaps forward 21 years, at which point he returns home and, posing as his own son, hopes to fulfill his destiny.

Chock full of non sequiturs, one-liners and running gags (such as the pesky gypsy violinist who seems to follow Arkin everywhere), Full Moon High comes equipped with a supporting cast augmented by the likes of Kenneth Mars, Jim J. Bullock, Bob Saget, Pat Morita, and Alan Arkin (a.k.a. Adam’s father), who plays a famous abnormal psychologist who specializes in insult therapy. In the end, though, the film is a little too chaotic for its own good, but that’s pretty much par for the course for Cohen. Still, it does cause me to wonder whether the makers of Teen Wolf, which came along four years later, ever looked at Full Moon High and said, “Hey, we could make a movie like that, only not so schticky.”

In many ways, Teen Wolf‘s Scott Howard (played by Michael J. Fox, as if I needed to tell you that) is one of cinema’s most nonthreatening werewolves, so much so that the movie even spawned a Saturday morning cartoon. A wholly unremarkable small-town youth, Scott plays for his high school’s lousy basketball team, hangs out with his slacker friend Stiles, is mooned over by his best friend Boof, and works part-time at his father’s hardware store. Then he starts noticing some things — extra hair on his chest and hands, heightened senses of smell and hearing, pointy ears — that aren’t the sorts of changes that they talk about in health class. Everything becomes clear on the night of the full moon, though, when he undergoes a full transformation and discovers that his father is also a werewolf (just not of the teen variety).

Since Teen Wolf is primarily a comedy as opposed to a straight-up horror film (or even a send-up like Full Moon High), being a werewolf turns out to be a pretty sweet deal for Scott, especially once he demonstrates his prowess on the basketball court. All of a sudden, the hot blond he has the hots for is giving him the time of day, the drama teacher is writing a part into the school play just for him, and his coach has a winning team on his hands. His only problems are the vice principal who’s gunning for him for some unknown reason, a sporting and romantic rival who knows how to push his buttons, and his teammates who grow to resent his ball-hogging antics. Will Scott learn to control the wolf within in time to help his school win the state championship? Do I even need to answer that?

When the time came to make a sequel to Teen Wolf, Michael J. Fox was far too big a star to want to don the hair, fangs and claws a second time, so it was left up to his sitcom sister’s real-life brother Jason Bateman to take on the role of his college-bound cousin for 1987’s Teen Wolf Too. Of course, his casting may have also had something to do with the fact that the film was produced by Jason’s father Kent Bateman, who in all honesty should have held out for a better vehicle for his talented son’s feature debut. I’m not saying Teen Wolf is an unassailable classic or anything, but on the list of unnecessary sequels Teen Wolf Too has to rank somewhere near the bottom.

Believing the werewolf gene has skipped his generation, Bateman’s Todd Howard has landed at a second-tier college where he wants to study science to become a vet, but the imposing Dean of Men (John Astin) would rather he concentrate on boxing since he’s there on a sports scholarship due to the machinations of Scott’s old coach, who has graduated from high school basketball to college boxing. From there, the story follows the Teen Wolf template almost to the letter (there’s even a direct callback to the first film in the scene where Todd’s eyes go red and he uses a deep voice to intimidate an unbending registrar into changing his classes), even to the point of giving Todd a nerdy, Karen Allen-ish biology lab partner who’s hopelessly hung up on him. And like in the first film, Todd doesn’t know quite how to handle his new-found popularity after he becomes the wolf during his first boxing match and cleans his opponent’s clock. The post-fight celebration is something else entirely, though, with Todd singing “Do You Love Me?” and leading an embarrassing dance number. And his cousin Scott would have never consented to catching a Frisbee in the air, which is beyond degrading.

If Full Moon High and the Teen Wolf diptych tipped more toward the comedy end of the spectrum, then The Monster Squad (also from 1987) made up for them by not skimping on the horrific aspects of its story. Of course, instead of being centered on a sympathetic (and occasionally just plain pathetic) werewolf, it had the advantage of having five kinds of monsters to work with, led by a ruthless Count Dracula bent on world domination. Written by Shane Black and director Fred Dekker, The Monster Squad follows the titular quintet of grade-school Van Helsings as they take on not only Dracula, but also Frankenstein’s Monster, Wolfman, the Mummy and the Gill-Man in a bid to restore the balance of power.

A real treat for horror movie fans, The Monster Squad gave special effects wizard Stan Winston the opportunity to have a go at all of Universal’s iconic monsters. He does an especially good job on Frankenstein’s Monster (who’s played quite effectively by Tom Noonan), although I’m less impressed with his Wolfman since the poor guy’s completely unable to turn his head and his face is pretty immobile. And then, of course, there’s the Scary German Guy (played by veteran character actor Leonardo Cimino), who turns out not to be so scary after all. So I guess the moral of the story is don’t be afraid of the German guy who lives down the road because he just might be able to help you banish the bad guys to limbo where they belong. Also, Wolfman’s totally got nards.

Skipping over 1988’s Scooby-Doo and the Reluctant Werewolf and Curse of the Queerwolf (something I recommend you do as well), the final werewolf comedy of the decade is 1989’s My Mom’s a Werewolf, which was directed by Michael Fischa (who apparently felt that he was under no obligation to make it a good one). As it opens, klutzy housewife Susan Blakely is feeling decidedly unappreciated, both by her schlubby hubby (a well-cast John Schuck) and her headstrong teenage daughter (Tina Caspary). Then, while out running errands one day, she meets charming pet shop owner John Saxon, a werewolf on the prowl for a mate who seduces her and, one bite on the toe later (shades of Adam Arkin’s butt-nipping), she’s on her way to becoming the wolf woman of his dreams. She also goes from being a strict vegetarian to eating raw meat and growing fangs, pointy ears and hair all over her body. (And she thought Saxon was a “furry little devil.”)

At first Caspary merely thinks her mother is having an affair, but when the truth comes out she turns to a gypsy fortune teller (played by Laugh-In‘s Ruth Buzzi) for help. Along the way there’s a lot of silly gags, forced physical comedy and cartoony sound effects, and more dog- and hair-related jokes than you can throw a stick at. These would be tolerable if they were even marginally funny, but alas, that is not the case. It may have taken a decade, but My Mom’s a Werewolf proved that the werewolf comedy had finally had its day and needed to be put down.

Universal Monsters Online: “Don’t hide from the Monster. Be the Monster”

This morning I received an email inviting me to be part of a beta for a new browser-based game – Universal Monsters Online.

Play as your favorite characters from the Universal Monsters films including Frankenstein, Dracula, The Wolf Man and a multitude of other classic Monsters. Be part of the fast paced action-strategy MOBA (Multiplayer Online Battle Arena). UMO combines high-end 3D isometric graphics, cinematic audio and deep gameplay in a setting from the greatest monster films. Defeat your opponents – get the girl!

For an unorthodox definition of “get”, I would imagine! When I accepted, registered, and hit the big PLAY NOW button, I was greeted by a closed message, probably because of the influx of beta testers, but I’m looking forward to getting in there! The action seems geared towards, you know, being a monster and fucking people up, which is (as Finn would say) kind of my deal.

At the moment, it looks like you can play as the Wolf Man, Dracula, Gill Man, Frankenstein’s Monster, or Bride of Frankenstein. The characters page has this to say about The Wolf Man:

The Wolf Man is a force of cunning rage. A beast of nightmares realized, this monstrous terror used to be locked away inside a human host. It was released only by the light of a full moon…not any more. The Wolf Man has mastered the confines of his curse and now roams free and can appear at will. Fueled by bloodlust and the craft of the hunt, the world’s most feared werewolf is on the loose, stalking his next victim.

The game is in “closed beta”, but my wife registered and immediately got an invitation emailed to her, so if you want to try it out, I recommend signing up.

Play as a werewolf in “Saint’s Row: The Third” or its polar opposite “The Sims 3”

Let’s step away from indie games for a minute and take a look at two A-list titles that are publishing werewolf-related expansions.

First up is The Sims 3 Supernatural, a limited edition expansion for the The Sims 3. It’s available for preorder for $40, and ships September 4th. From the game’s web site:

Enter the mysterious town of Moonlight Falls where strange things happen by the light of the moon. Create supernatural beings from menacing werewolves and cackling witches, to mischievous fairies and more intriguing vampires. Then stalk the night, use your wand to cast spells, claw the furniture and more. You can mix dozens of elixirs that can turn Sims into zombies or transform them into gold. Share your enchanted brews with any friends who have The Sims 3! Spooky surprises are in store for you in the world of The Sims 3 Supernatural!

GameZone has a write-up that describes the specifics of the changes your werewolf Sim will go through, although the screenshot above shows the bulk of what you can expect: hairy shoulders, claws, a caveman face, and ripped pants that will terrify your effete friend and the maid, but which will impress the dickens out of ladies in very shiny pantyhose.

Not into The Sims? You can also get your werewolf DLC via a game that lists the ability to “take on a Mexican wrestling gang in a satellite-targeted airstrike” as a selling point: Saint’s Row: The Third. The Horror Pack is available today, and offers mix-and-match Werewolf, Zombie, Slasher and Horror Mask components. The game looks like a sugar-addled 13-year-old boy’s escapist fantasy, but I actually kind of like the werewolf suit design.

The Horror Pack is available as DLC on the PlayStation Network, Xbox Live and OnLive for less than the price of an expensive fancy coffee.

What other games out there would you like to see werewolf DLC for?

Trailer, DVD Cover & Release Date for Universal’s “Wolfman” Follow-Up

As previously mentioned on Werewolf News, Universal has decided to reboot/refresh/rehash the lycanthropic segment of their monster movie franchise with a brand new direct-to-disc werewolf movie.

Yesterday, Collider got first dibs on the PR package, which includes promotional stills, a trailer, Blu-ray features – and a release date. You’ll be able to buy Werewolf: The Beast Among Us on October 9th, 2012. Here’s the trailer and synopsis, to help with your purchase decision.

A monstrous creature terrorizes a 19th Century European village by moonlight and a young man struggles to protect his loved ones from an unspeakable scourge in Werewolf: The Beast Among Us, Universal Studios’ all-new addition to its time-honored legacy of classic monsters. During his studies with the local doctor (Stephen Rea), Daniel (Guy Wilson) witnesses the horrific consequences of werewolf attacks. Watching as the beast’s fearsome reputation draws bounty hunters, thrill seekers and charlatans to the tiny town, Daniel dreams of destroying the ruthless predator. So when a mysterious stranger (Ed Quinn) and his team of skilled werewolf hunters (Stephen Bauer, Adam Croasdell) arrive to pursue the monster, he offers to join them, despite his mother’s (Nia Peeples) protests. But it soon becomes clear that this creature is stronger, smarter and more dangerous than anything they have faced before. As casualties mount and villagers see their neighbors transformed into ravening monsters, the townsfolk take up arms against each other to find the true identity of the werewolf. Amid the hysteria, Daniel begins to suspect he’s closer to his target than he ever dreamed.

I’m trying to picture myself enjoying this, and in order to make it happen I have to set the film up as an exquisitely self-aware and dark, dark comedy. This doesn’t sound much like the film I was imaging when I was daydreaming about what Universal could do with a direct-to-home feature:

Universal can make this Wolfman re-imagining as dark, gory, twisted and otherwise stylistically radical as the material warrants without having to worry about what mainstream reviewers, audiences or Cate Blanchett think.

I will reserve judgement until I’ve seen it, though – I’ve put my foot in my mouth too many times to go off on a tear based on some marketdroid’s “fit the whole cast in” synopsis.

There’s one disc extra in particular that I’m interested in seeing, a la Underworld Awakening‘s Building a Better Lycan feature:

“Transformation: Man To Beast” – Revealing behind-the-scenes footage and interviews with director Louis Morneau, producer Mike Elliott, production designer David Hirschfield and makeup SFX designer Paul Hyatt show viewers how the monster in Werewolf: The Beast Among Us was brought to life using a mix of computer-generated graphics and practical makeup.

Here’s hoping they used more practical makeup than CG! For a full listing of disc features and extras, and to see a selection of werewolfless promotional stills, visit the Collider article. And keep your fingers crossed for something dark, gory and twisted.

20-minute “Freeborn” short bolsters feature length appeal, confirms Tasha is a total bitch

Anthony Brownrigg’s Freeborn project has moved into phase 3 of its fundraising effort, and this round is supported by a short film that looks pretty slick. Tasha’s Decision provides 20 minutes of backstory for an antagonist Brownrigg describes as “quite the witch with a B.”

I liked Tasha’s Decision the movie, but I detested Tasha’s actual decision, and I found her throughly unlikeable besides. I guess that was the point, though! Check it out yourself, and if you’d like a chance to hate Tasha for 120 minutes instead of just 20, consider contributing to the Indiegogo campaign.

Want a classic werewolf figure? Vote up this design by Kyoht on Patch Together

If you have a hole in your life that’s shaped like a snarling werewolf figure (I know do), artist Kyoht and “vote for it and we’ll probably create it” collectible site Patch Together are here to help.

Kyoht has designed a classic werewolf figure, and if it gets enough votes and comments on Patch Together, you’ll be able to buy it. Sound good? Sure it goes! So go vote!

Next up on my list of games to play: “Sang-Froid: Tales of Werewolves”

Sang-Froid: Tales of Werewolves is a hybrid action / strategy / tower defence game being developed by Quebec-based Artifice Studio. It’s slated for a Windows release sometime this summer. From the press release:

Artifice Studio Inc. is pleased to announce their upcoming PC game Sang-Froid: Tales of Werewolves. Sang-Froid is set in a legendary 19th century Canada, and offers innovative gameplay mechanics mixed with a captivating narrative co-written with acclaimed author Bryan Perro.

Created in the spirit of the Indie Game movement, Sang-Froid combines elements from both action and strategy games in other to create a unique experience inspired by genres such as tower defence, 3rd person action games and RPGs. The player will control one of the two O’Carroll brothers in the forest of Wolvesvale. Night after night, they must defend their cabin from the hordes of werewolves, will o’ the wisps, and other creatures, all derived from Canadian and Amerindian legends. In order to survive, the player must outwit his enemies by strategically placing traps in the forest and lure them to their doom with the help of some bait and the wind.  The player can also count on a large variety of muskets and axes to heroically fight back the creatures.

I’m ethically opposed to games where the point is to kill werewolves instead of killing as a werewolf, but the “werewolves circling the campfire” scene in this gameplay trailer won me over. I love games that combine resource management with the construction of lethal Rube Goldberg-style defences (shout-out to my Warcraft 3 pals). If Artifice releases an OS X or Xbox Marketplace version, I’ll definitely be picking up a copy of Sang-Froid. I have to admit, though – most of my setups will probably involve the O’Carroll brothers getting fucked over when they least expect it.

More details are available at the game’s web site, Facebook page and Twitter account.

The Cover For Penny Arcade’s 9th Book, “Passion’s Howl”, is Making Me Feel Weird

This morning on Twitter, Penny Arcade’s Mike Krahulik (aka Gabe) posted the cover art for the ninth Penny Arcade book, “Passion’s Howl“. Here it is.

I’ve been delighted by every werewolf-related endeavour Penny Arcade has undertaken. This image is no different, despite the fact that it’s making me feel skittish and antsy in ways I can’t quite define. No word on a release date yet.

GrimWolf: Pure American Werewolf Metal

Werewolf News reader Tah the Trickster wrote in to tell me about some werewolf-related music that will nicely counter-balance the last music post I did. I’m just going to quote Tah’s email, since it says 95% of what you need to know.

There is a small Californian metal band by the name of GrimWolf that I really think you’d be interested in. Their tagline is “Pure American Werewolf Metal” so their subject material is obviously relevant to your interests.

GrimWolf currently has only two releases – their debut EP “Pure American Werewolf Metal,” which is available for free download on signing up for their newsletter, and their debut full-length album “Lycanthrope.” I realize it might not be your preferred genre of music – it’s very loud and very heavy, which I understand not everyone likes – but I think it’s definitely worth it to check them out and give these guys a mention.

Hey, now. Just because I listen to Fiona Apple and drink tea doesn’t mean I need my music served lukewarm in a porcelain bowl! Last year I blew a $200 pair of Sennheisers listening to Pelican too loud. But I digress.

I don’t know much about metal, but I know what I like, and after listening to two songs, I can confirm that I like GrimWolf. Tasty riffs, just the right amount of face-shredding abrasiveness, and pretty much the only “guttural growl” vocals I’ve been able to get into. Plus, all of their songs really do seem to be about werewolves, just like it says on the tin. Below is the video for “Moonshine”, the first single from Lycanthrope. For more on the band, including upcoming gigs, check out their site GrimWolf.net.