French Canadian werewolf film “Le poil de la bête” (The Hair of the Beast) looks awesome

Every now and then I see something werewolf-related that makes me giddy. This is one of them. I’ve only seen a trailer and a poster for “Le poil de la bête” (The Hair of the Beast) and already I’m in love. The problem is, everything to do with the movie is in French, and I’m one of those Canadians who didn’t pay attention during high school French. Here’s what I’ve put together thanks to Google Translate and the film’s IMDB page: It’s 1665 and scruffy con-man / swindler Joseph Côté manages to escape a Québec (née New France) prison mere hours before he’s scheduled to be hanged. He flees to the seigneury of Beaufort, where the main activity is waiting for “Daughters of the King”– French women who’ve been sent to Canada to find husbands. To avoid capture by the colonial soldiers searching for him, Côté assumes the identity of a Jesuit priest who, unbeknownst to him, is a famed hunter of werewolves. And wouldn’t you know it! Beaufort has a werewolf problem.

It’s Canadian, it’s photographed well, it’s a period piece and it has a werewolf that looks great (from what I could see). This particular mix of ingredients has got me excited! It’s been out for a month in Québec, but I’m not sure if / when / how us Anglos will get a chance to see it. In the meantime, here’s a trailer (love that hand transformation) and a poster. There are more clips and images available at www.lepoildelabete.com. If any French readers (I know there are a few of you out there) learn anything about a larger release on that site, please let us know.

Hat tip: Roger Flavell

Original Kyoht werewolf art up for auction

Want some original werewolf art by the talented Kyoht? Now’s your chance. Here are four eBay auctions, two for original paintings, two for original sketches. They’ve each got a day left, so if you’re interested, keep the lollygagging to a minimum.

“Human Bones”

“Council of Fangs”

“A Dandy Dinner”

“Feast”

Standard Thompson music video “Fireworks”: female werewolves want more than a daisy on the first date

[insert lame joke about “dinner and a date” here]

Lovely cinematography and good solid rock music by a group of guys who all look like they call their mothers at least once a week. I wish they would have shown more than a glimpse of the werewolf costume, though. It looked pretty good, at least from the shoulders up.

Hat tip: lessthanhuman

“High Moon” Turns Three

Three years ago this month, Zuda Comics launched a web-based graphic novel called “High Moon”, written by David Gallaher and drawn by Steve Ellis. It blended werewolves, arcane horror and the Old West in way that was fascinating to read and beautiful to look at. High Moon went on to win a contract with DC Comics after only two months, and in 2009 it won a Harvey Award for Best Online Work. Zuda Comics is now gone, but High Moon lives on at comiXology, where you can read the first issue for free, and the rest are available for purchase at a whopping 99 cents each. You can also purchase Volume 1 as a trade paperback from any decent comic shop or from Amazon. Whatever you do, however you do it, check it out– aside from being one hell of a read, it’s proof (in my opinion) that the Internet is fertile ground in which truly excellent comics can take root and thrive.

Comic Review: Harbor Moon

When my copy of Harbor Moon arrived I just held it and looked at the cover for a few minutes. This was out of character for me. When some new and interesting werewolf item arrives on my desk I normally handle it the way a raccoon approaches a closed bin: there are things inside I want, delicious, intriguing things, and the outside is merely an impediment to the sating of my hunger. This book, though, wouldn’t let itself be torn open. I simply had to hold it, enjoying its satisfying matte cover stock, its oversized dimensions and the vivid red splatter on the front. Later, after reading it, one of my first thoughts was that if Harbor Moon’s contents had been as confident and vivid as its covers, it would have been a great book instead of a good one.

When condensed down to a synopsis, Harbor Moon’s premise doesn’t sound like it’s breaking much new ground. Timothy Vance is drawn to an isolated Maine town after receiving a phone call from a man claiming to be his long-lost father, but upon arriving in Harbor Moon, the man is nowhere to be found and Timothy gets tangled in the town’s dangerous secrets– secrets that involve him more than he knows. At first I felt like I’d heard similar stories before, and in fact I got Harbor Moon confused with the Syfy show Haven, which is also about an orphaned protagonist who visits a mysterious Maine town and becomes entangled in its secrets. (In my defense, I heard about both of them on the same day.) What I learned is that it’s foolish to judge a book by its back cover teaser copy.

Writers Ryan Colucci and Dikran Ornekian tell a story that’s comfortably familiar rather than derivative, and so self-contained and well-paced that it reads like a tightened-up film adaptation of a longer, less focused work. I was reminded several times of The Wrong Night in Texas, which has a similarly confrontational “you think you can predict things but you’re WRONG” vibe, although Texas‘s twists were delivered via manic episodes of hyper-violence and Harbor Moon’s surprises are instead revealed in tense, nightmarish languor. This dream-like atmosphere is expertly balanced by the dialog’s bright jabs of lucidity – there are longish sections of exposition that never get tiresome or tedious, and multi-page passages where a single sentence is successfully employed to keep the narrative thread intact. Characters that seem flat when they’re introduced become fully-realized and carefully, confidently articulated. In the hands of lesser writers this material could have been predictable, or worse, boring, but Colucci and Ornekian keep the reader on their toes until the end.

Artist Pawel Sambor (and supporting artist Nikodem Cabala) worried me at first. In places the artwork’s lines are frustratingly inconsistent– many of the male characters suffer from the same square-jaw & crew-cut look, perspectives are a little wonky at times, and in panels where there’s a lot of inking to be done, things look unbalanced. The drawing style changes every few pages, cycling through hard-edged lines with stark shadows, softer and richer lines with gradated shadows, and even a few pages where the lines are merely implied through contrast. If Harbor Moon was a black and white publication, these issues would be problematic, but Harbor Moon is in full colour, and the colouring work might be the best I’ve ever seen in a graphic novel.

Every page feels like it should be wet with something: water, sweat, blood, animal saliva, clinging mist. The dreamlike quality of the story is enhanced tenfold by super-saturated washes, texture overlays both diaphanous and grimy, pools of the deepest, subtlest blacks and gradients whose boundaries seem to shift as the eye moves across the page. There are panels and even entire pages where the hard black inks are traded for what looks like coloured pencil or conté, and when combined with the vivid colours, the results are simply gorgeous. And when the werewolves appear (they’re scarce at first but by the end there’s no shortage), the inconsistency disappears entirely: the lines are as confident, savage and graceful as the the creatures they render; the colour as graphic and brutal as the violence it depicts. It’s almost as though the scenes involving werewolves are reality, and everything else is a feverish hallucination.

Harbor Moon seems like a depiction of someone’s dream– a dream constantly on the brink of becoming a nightmare. There are a lot of factors at play, and not all of them are strictly under control– the originality of the story doesn’t make itself clear right away, and the artwork, though beautifully coloured, suffers from bouts of schizophrenia. In the end, though, I believe these imperfections add character, rather than detracting from the whole. There’s a lot to like here; the writing is sharp, and when the visuals work, they work beautifully. Harbor Moon is a good graphic novel, and when its creators exercise their confidence, it’s great.

Buy, borrow or skip?

Buy if you’re all about horror comics or werewolves, and if you like the idea of a lush-looking oversized graphic novel on your coffee table. Borrow if you’re a comics fan first and a werewolf fan second; you’ll want to see if the elements mix in a way that grabs you.

Available now, direct from Harbor-Moon.com for $19.95 + $2.75 shipping. Available for pre-order from Amazon for $13.64.

Yeah, Gabriel Belmont is kind of a dick

The fine fellows at Penny Arcade have opinions about most games, and the recently released Castlevania: Lords of Shadow is no exception. Tycho seems to like it, in any case. However, their Wednesday comic indicates a certain reluctance to condone Gabriel Belmont’s habit of just, like, randomly staking werewolves.

I love it that these guys include werewolves in their comics so often (relatively speaking), and that Gabe draws them differently every time.

Classic “The Howling”, t-shirt style

How can you prove your love for “The Howling“? Get this t-shirt from Fright-Rags onto your body. There’s just no other way!

Hat tip: ArcLight

In Russia, Wolves Pull You Over

If you haven’t already seen this, just watch.

After that, I hope that cop didn’t write the guy a ticket for the burned-out headlight.

“Sins Of The Past” – a new album from The Young Werewolves

I like these guys (and gal). I like them a lot. Here’s a press release about their new album, Sins Of The Past.

Philadelphia, PA  October 1, 2010 – The Young Werewolves, the Philadelphia based rockabilly, garage, punk trio, are set to release their third studio recording titled, ‘Sins of the Past.’  The timing of the new release coincides with recent trends toward all things vampire and horror.

With the popular Twilight movies, True Blood television program and even the Harry Potter books all referencing werewolf characters, the music of The Young Werewolves is right on time and with the times to such a degree that within the last year the band’s back catalogue has been raided for programs like Vampire Diaries and Supernatural (the proceeds from the licensing helped fund the recording of the new album).

‘Twelve Steps to Rock N Roll’ is the first single from the album and is available for download through The Young Werewolves’ bandcamp site which is linked from their official website.  ‘Sins of the Past’ had its official release at the beginning of the Halloween season when The Young Werewolves performed at The Trocadero Theater in Philadelphia on Saturday September 25, 2010 during the annual Zombie Prom.  Attendance was sold out with over 1000 tickets purchased for the event.

The release follows the band’s 2008 recording, ‘Cheat The Devil,’ produced by horror film star Sid Haig.  The Young Werewolves blend the styles of rockabilly, psychobilly, surf, punk, garage and pop music into an infectious mix.  For further information visit the band’s facebook and myspace profiles.  Their official website is www.theyoungwerewolves.com.

Are you a werewolf? Let the Supernatural Registration Authority know

The government needs to know about you. Vampires and zombies, too.

In all seriousness, this is a side-project I’ve been working on for a while now, and it’s finally ready. You can register yourself as one of three supernatural creatures. You get a printable electronic registration certificate for free, or for $5 (including postage) you get the electronic certificate and a much nicer and more detailed print version in the mail. I’d be obliged if you’d check it out, and even if you don’t want the print version, take a second to register yourself as a monster. Thanks, and we now return you to a more consistent update schedule (it’s flippin’ Halloween!)