The Current & upcoming werewolf movie home releases post has just been updated to include everything I can think of from 2015, plus the first 2016 entry, Uncaged. It’s a popular enough post that it’s now a permanent fixture in the site sidebar! From now on I’ll be updating it forwards and backwards in time, so expect to see films from 2014 and 2013 appearing at the bottom of the list. If I’m missing anything that’s available on home media, let me know in the comments.
Category: Film, Television & Music
Believe it or not, there are werewolf movies other than “An American Werewolf in London”.
Test your classic werewolf film knowledge with TFH’s Famous Monster quizes
You think you know werewolf movies? Prove it (and don’t use IMDB!) with this Trailers From Hell werewolf quiz, which came to my attention via Craig J. Clark (who got 10/10, because of course he did). These questions will seriously test your mastery of lycanthropic film lore! If you waltz in there all smug because you watched Werewolves on Wheels once, be prepared to receive the same ignominious score I did. I can only hope to redeem myself on Thursday, when TFH posts “Part Two of our Werewolves quiz” – hopefully with an 80’s theme.
Update 2015-10-08: Part Two is up now, and my 10/10 score on today’s quiz brings my overall average to a solid B–. I’ll take it!
Full Moon Features: Blood Moon

With the super blood moon upon us — for the last time until 2033 — it’s fortuitous that there’s a new werewolf movie out called Blood Moon. What’s unfortunate is that it’s not a very good one. Set in Colorado in the year 1887, but filmed in the South of England for reasons known only to its financiers, Blood Moon is about a Native American Skinwalker — a warrior who’s able to take the form of a bipedal wolf creature and is at his strongest during the blood moon according to the film’s resident half-breed font of Navajo legends and dream visions — who has chosen to bedevil the abandoned mining town of Pine Flats and all who pass through it.
Taking its cues from classic Hollywood westerns like John Ford’s Stagecoach as much as modern revisionist ones like Clint Eastwood’s Unforgiven, Blood Moon is populated by all the expected character types. There’s Calhoun (Shaun Dooley), the mysterious gunslinger about whose past there is much speculation, who stops a stagecoach on the road to Pine Flats and talks his way onto it. His fellow passengers are deputy marshal Jake Norman (George Blagden), his blushing bride Sarah (Amber Jean Rowan), saucy saloon owner Marie (Anna Skellern), baby-faced London Times reporter Henry Lester (George Webster), and requisite priest Father Dominic (Kerry Shale), who’s the first to get plugged when the travelers are ambushed by outlaw half-brothers Hank and Jeb Norton (Corey Johnson and Raffaello Degruttola), who are on the run after a bank robbery gone bad. In addition to the repeated references to their deplorable personal hygiene, both are repugnant in their own unique ways. While Jeb has an eye for the ladies and makes plain that he plans to rape Sarah before they move on, Hank can’t go five minutes without spitting and sounds so much like Yosemite Sam that it: a) must have been a deliberate choice, and b) is incredibly distracting.
Speaking of distractions, director Jeremy Wooding and screenwriter Alan Wightman include numerous cutaways to Jake’s cousin, Marshal Wade (Jack Fox), who hires the aforementioned half-breed Black Deer (Eleanor Matsuura) to track down the Nortons, hand-waving her concerns about going out during the blood moon. Once it rises, that should mean the end of the tedium (“Jesus Christ, Jeb. Pull the trigger,” Hank says, speaking for the audience. “Shoot somebody.”), but even when one of the Nortons is put out of his misery and one of the passengers is attacked off-screen by the Skinwalker, the others seem unnaturally unperturbed when it drags the victim’s legs away, leaving the head and torso on the front porch of the inn where they’re holed up. Meanwhile, Wooding reveals the creature incrementally, progressing from an over-the-hairy-shoulder shot to the hairy arm that breaks through a window and grasps at the unwary soul who had their back to it. Then there are the closeups of its hairy back as it’s repeatedly shot so Wooding can show that the bullet wounds heal instantly thanks to the magic of CGI. What’s surprising about this is he was actually given a decent-looking practical werewolf costume to work with, so waiting until the last fifteen minutes to show it off just seems like a waste.
Also puzzling are the film’s attempts to prop up Calhoun like he’s some sort of icon who should be mentioned in the same breath as Eastwood’s Man with No Name. Based on his refusal to ever say where he’s from, despite being asked repeatedly, perhaps he should be known as the Man with No Birth Certificate. Also, his reputation as a crack shot may be somewhat overstated since the Skinwalker has to wait patiently up on the roof for Calhoun to fire a shotgun shell filled with silver jewelry into its heart. Then again, it was probably still dazed after being run over by that stagecoach. Blood Moon may not be a classic, but that’s still a moment for the record books.
Review: an incomplete “Angelic Wolves” sells itself short

I recently received some very polite emails from whoever’s in charge of Dark Libra Films, asking if I would like to review their short film Angelic Wolves, available now to rent or purchase on Amazon. My unofficial policy for the past few years is that only Craig gets to review films on Werewolf News because he’s better at it than I in every way, but I wanted to field this one because I want to combine my “review” with some meta-commentary.
In their email to me, Dark Libra wrote:
The film only runs 25 minutes and is supposed to be a reminder of what horror films were once like with classics such as “Nosferatu”, “Werewolf in London”, etc. We intended for the film to look as though it was shot with some scrappy old film camera, while editing in some more modern sounds.
Judged by the criteria its makers set out for it here, Angelic Wolves is not good. It’s a weird, over-long student film with bad dialogue and a narrative arc that never lands. The premise from which the title is derived takes too long to establish – not because it’s complicated, but because the thin setup takes forever – and then the concept goes nowhere. It doesn’t succeed as a campy or sincere throwback to the “classics” because its only nod to proto horror films is a distressed sepia tone filter that blows out all the highlights.
If I’d never heard of Angelic Wolves before September, I’d leave it at that, or perhaps I wouldn’t have posted about it at all. But I have more to say, because I did hear about it before September, and I know that the in the email quoted above, the filmmaker is sandbagging and selling themselves short.
Angelic Wolves isn’t a short film. It’s a web series that Dark Libra Films tweeted to me about in April. They released four or five episodes over several weeks (which I regret to say I did not watch at the time). What’s available on Amazon feels like the first episode, or maybe two or three stitched together, in which we meet the main characters and learn what’s at stake over the remaining instalments. I have to assume from the abrupt, cliffhanger ending that there are more episodes, either unreleased or unshot, and that’s a shame.
Viewed from the “web series” angle, Angelic Wolves is a gothic-y, ultra-low-budget production with amateur (but charming) actors, a distinct visual style, and a premise that could have gone to some interesting places. As an ongoing a web series with more space to establish its world-building chops (and some tighter editing), I’d watch it with interest. I sincerely hope Dark Libra Films return to these woods (without the old-timey filter) to complete Eve and Johnny’s story.
Here are the notes I took while watching:
- interesting camera angles
- too many fast crossfades
- Eve likes turtles
- found footage or documentary vibe?
- introduction of Johnny is effective and his weirdness is charismatic
- Eve’s bemused “what the fuck” is a good line reading
- Johnny’s gratuitous shirtless pull-ups
- Bone-nub hands! And that spinal column is suspiciously clean
- “werewolves are angels” is cheesy but I’ll stay for the guardian / agent of justice thing
- Line of the day: “Did you place that strange skull next to my bed last night?”
Monster Legacy shares everything you want to know about Underworld’s Lycans

The always-fascinating Monster Legacy snuck up on me this weekend with three huge posts dedicated to the werewolves of the Underworld movie franchise. I didn’t see the “Lycans of the Underworld” posts when they first appeared because I sometimes forget that I can subscribe to RSS feeds instead of manually checking sites like a nana with a Dell from 1997, but @Crystalakhanna hooked me up.
As with their Cabin In The Woods coverage, Monster Legacy goes deep on the concept, design, construction and on-set practicalities of the Lycans. From the post on Underworld: Awakening:
For the first time since Underworld, new sculpts for the Lycans were created — based on production photographs of maquettes and suits from the first film. The design, again, underwent some cosmetic changes: different angles and details in the facial structures were added, and the ribcage and pectoral muscles were made more pronounced. The fur on the neck was decreased in mass and length. Certain changes were also applied to the overall color scheme of the creatures, which now featured a darker nose area and different patterns. MastersFX built three Lycan suits, two of which were provided with mechanized hero heads.
This is just a small quote – these articles are long, well-researched, and packed with great photos. You can read equally detailed articles on the Lycan designs from Underworld: Rise of the Lycans, Underworld: Evolution, or the original Underworld.
“Uncaged” DVD cover & release date

Via Bloody Disgusting:
We’ve scored a first look at the DVD cover for Daniel Robbins’ werewolf flick Uncaged, which is being distributed by RLJ Entertainment. The cover is a side shot of the upper chest and lower half of the face of a werewolf, who is covered in blood and filth… Uncaged comes to DVD and digital on February 2nd, 2016.
My comments on the trailer and overall concept still stand, but if I was the sort of person to judge a movie by its key art, Uncaged would get top marks. That’s one mean, grimy looking werewolf.
Side effects may also include murder fugues
Want to start the week with a “hell yes, people are making cool stuff” boost of energy? Check out the latest promo video for Hair of the Dog, the crowdfunding-in-progress werewolf/addiction feature film by Michael Butts, Scott Crain and Will Cassidy. It’s called “Side Effects”, and was “inspired by all the cheesy medical commercials that list all those crazy side effects.”
Every time I see a promo piece from this crew, I’m impressed by the production quality and the tone of the humour they’re extracting from the material. For a deeper look at the concept, read this interview Michael and I did back in June.
They’re looking to raise another $7,300 so they can get this thing shot, so if you have a few bucks laying around, consider chipping in instead of buying that tenth pumpkin spice latte of the month (typed while drinking my second of the month).
Hippie werewolves vs squares! Elijah Wood confirms “Bad Vibes”

The guys on the Nerdist podcast conducted a fantastic horror-heavy interview with Elijah Wood in their September 2nd episode, number 726. Wood was there to promote his latest film, Cooties, but he also talked about his involvement in a film I’d assumed was long dead: Bad Vibes.
The last I head about Bad Vibes was in 2011, when news first broke about writer/director David Gebroe‘s weird horror movie about hippie werewolves hosting a love-in to kill or infect “the terminally unhip”. Now, Elijah Wood has confirmed that he’s involved, that photography begins this October in Austin, and that Ariel Pink is still writing all the songs.
Here’s a partial transcript of his comments on the film, starting around 1:13 of the podcast:
It’s a movie about – it’s set in 1969 – it’s about a feel-good sort of sunshine and hippie flowers sort of rock band that are very popular at the time. The lead singer of this band, a band called Sunshine Majesty, he sleeps with a groupie. The groupie gives him an STD. That STD is basically like a lycan disease. There’s a slight physical transformation, but the main thing is ideological, so he becomes a nihilist…. he starts writing this new sound, and it’s like this really gnarly discordant dark music. And the whole thing is about, like, killing “squares”.
This seems like such a weird and incongruous combination of elements, but to hear Wood talk about it (and his role producing and staring in “killing raving zombie children” horror-comedy Cooties), I can believe this will work, especially with Ariel Pink’s psychedelic music.
A young Scandinavian werewolf claims her heritage in “When Animals Dream”

The 2014 “Danish dramatic horror mystery” When Animals Dream is now available to buy or stream in North America. Everything I’ve seen and heard about it since it premiered at Cannes last year has been extremely compelling, and I’m really looking forward to seeing it. (more…)
Wes Craven passes away at 76

As reported by The Hollywood Reporter and many other sources, film director and horror impresario Wes Craven passed away at his Los Angeles home this weekend after a battle with brain cancer. He was 76. (more…)