Author: Angela Quinton

Angela Quinton is a writer, designer and web developer from Canada. She's also a colossal werewolf nerd who wrote her first werewolf story on her mom's typewriter at age 11. When not writing code or geeking out over werewolf stuff, Angela runs trails, spots trains, and throws rocks at the Pacific Ocean. She lives near Vancouver, Canada, with their lovely and tolerant wife, three feline malcontents and an increasingly terrible dachshund.

Incredible “World of Warcraft” Worgen cosplay by Shoko & Jérôme

Here’s a little something to bolster the spirits of anyone bummed out by the Worgen-less Warcraft movie. French cosplayers Shoko & Jérôme collaborated on this Worgen cosplay in 2010, for the Cataclysm expansion launch in Paris.

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No Worgen in “World of Warcraft” movie

Worgen - NOPE

It has long been a source of anguish for me that the film adaptation of World of Warcraft is being shot in my town, and even has a production codename based on the neighbourhood where I work. It makes me writhe with anxiety to think that literally minutes away from where I sit for 40 hours a week, there might be a warehouse or a closed set in which someone is doing insanely cool shit while wearing a practical Worgen suit. The fact that these things are purposely executed in a way that keeps nitwits like me (and our cameras) off the set seems like a poor excuse, especially for someone running a web site called “Werewolf News”. The Underworld films were shot here too, and yet I’ve never seen a Lycan suit in person. If I was a cop I’d have to turn in my damn badge.

This is why I’m less bothered than you might think by the news out of BlizzCon that the World of Warcraft film will be based on the original 1994 game, which contains zero (0) Worgen. There will be orcs, of course. Probably trolls and goblins as well, and I believe some of the heavier Horde units rode around on giant wolves, but as long been established on this web site, giant wolves are 1) not very interesting and 2) definitely not werewolves.

That doesn’t mean we’ll never see tailless bipedal werewolf people in a Warcraft film. If this first film succeeds at the 2016 box office (and how could it not? Films based on video game franchises always do well), it’s likely that they’ll expand the scope of any sequels to include plots and characters from more recent entries in the game’s universe. The introduction of the Worgen race was a major point of the Cataclysm expansion, so it’s not unreasonable to think they’ll have a presence in a future Warcraft film. For now, however, the big screen will remain Worgen-less, which is disappointing, but which also means I can stop hyperventilating whenever I see a film crew setting up on the edge of a wooded area.

Upcoming site changes

Hey, friends! I’m working on an update to the features and layout of this site – changes that will make it easier for me to share all the great werewolf stuff that’s out there. (more…)

Lycans vs. Dracula & an Australian Penny Arcade werewolf

Here are two bits of fluff for a post-full-moon-hangover Friday afternoon.

Werewolves vs Vampires by Lauren CampbellThe Easterner, which is the “independent, student-run news site of Eastern Washington University”, has posted an opinion piece that attempts to pinpoint which creatures is more efficient at killing: the vampire, or the werewolf. Opinion Editor Larry Ty Holmes decides to compare the most extreme examples of each monster: Bram Stoker’s Dracula, and the Underworld lycans. It’s a short piece that runs out of gas before reaching a solid conclusion, and I get the feeling it was started before Halloween and only just published Thursday to get it out of the “drafts” folder, but I enjoyed the accompanying artwork by EWU senior Lauren Campbell.

Underworld, Part ThreePAX Australia 2014 just ended, and as is their wont, the Penny Arcade guys documented the week with a few recent comics. This time it involves exposing Sydney to the full Halloween experience via a monster-spewing portal. The episode concludes with a werewolf who has to confront the imperturbability of a populace used to living in a country positively brimming with poisonous creatures. I always like seeing Mike draw werewolves, and I can confirm from firsthand experience that Aussies are the most hardcore people on the planet.

Keep the spirit alive with scary/cute “Happy Happy Halloween!”

Happy Happy Halloween! is your reminder from animator Julia “Hiro” Andersson that Halloween never ends, especially when you can keep its spirit alive by riffing on a sappy tune like “Happy Happy Christmas” in a face-shreddingly cute animated short. The blood from a ritually sacrificed rabbit helps, too.

“Wheelchair Werewolf”: 80’s VHS horror homage from Joe Avella

If you thought the departure of Halloween meant an end to trashy horror movies, think again. (more…)

Today’s Halloween Google Doodles include a werewolf

This little company you may have heard of called Google has a habit of updating their logo to reflect whatever special event is happening on a given day. To celebrate Halloween, they’re showing six spooky animations by Markus Magnusson, Olivia Huyhn and Taylor Price. (more…)

New “Late Phases” trailer isn’t shy about its premise or its werewolf

Happy Halloween! You might remember Adrián García Bogliano’s werewolf film Late Phases from earlier this year, when it premiered at SXSW to pretty good reviews. You might also remember the irritation you felt (as I did) at not being in Austin, TX in March to actually attend SXSW and see the film. (more…)

“The Wereling” by David Robbins

David L. Robbins has published hundreds of books under his own name and half a dozen pen names. Among them is his 1983 novel The Wereling, which has just been re-published in an expanded form. You can get a paperback copy for $11 or on your Kindle for less than a buck on Amazon. (more…)

Cloudwrangler’s free comic short “Been Bit” sinks its teeth in

Been Bit is a great little 8-page comic from Jeff Rider ( also known as Cloudwrangler Comics) about a “a hard man who’d led a hard life and wanted desperately to be good” and inspired, in part, by a song from True Detective. (more…)