Music Video: “Hide On The Moon” by For Those Who Still Exist

Music and video by Kevin Kopacka. The music and lyrics are dreamy/heartbreaking, and I like how well Kevin’s original footage cuts together with clips from other werewolf films to create something that’s simultaneously nostalgic and menacing. Bonus points for nail polish.

“The Skin Trade” Signed, Limited Edition Illustrated Hardcover

These are the WSFA Press hardcover limited edition copies of George R.R. Martin’s werewolf novella I told you about last month, but they’re not pre-orders anymore. They’re signed by Martin and the artist Rick Berry, who did 10 original illustrations + the cover, and at only $35 each, if you want a copy you better hustle – there are only 500 in total!

Full Moon Features: The Werewolf of Washington Wants You!

Over the past few weeks, as partisan politics has resulted in a partial government shutdown and petty bickering over the budget and raising the debt limit, it has pleased me to consider what it would be like if there were a hairy beast prowling the dark alleys of the nation’s capital, culling some of our more contentious congressmen. (more…)

The Capclave limited collector’s edition of GRR’s “The Skin Trade” is still available

capclave-skintradeEdit: shortly after posting this, I received some updated info from Paul Haggerty of WFSA Press Books. I’ve edited the post in situ, so all information presented below is correct. Thanks, Paul!

Last month, Game of Thrones author George R. R. Martin announced that a limited collector’s edition of his werewolf novella The Skin Trade would be available at the 2013 Capclave convention, as part of WSFA Press‘s tradition of honouring the convention’s guest of honour (Martin, in this case). This edition was limited to 500 trade hardcover and 500 signed/numbered hardcovers, and contains artwork by Rick Berry – 10 pieces of interior artwork, plus the cover.

500 copies were signed by Martin and Berry, and those were to be sold exclusively at Capclave, but it seems that a printer error caused a delay, and WFSA won’t be taking delivery of the signed/numbered edition until the end of the month. That means you can buy the trade hardcover edition right now at the WSFA Press Bookstore for the very reasonable price of $25, or you can pre-order the signed hardcover edition for $35. I know which one I’d get.

I wish I had some larger cover art to show you, but details are scarce. Nevertheless, this story is still pretty hard to obtain through legitimate means, so if you’ve been waiting for a chance to lay your hands on a physical copy of The Skin Trade, now’s your chance!

Trailer & poster for straightforward werewolf thriller “Wer”

Wer is an upcoming horror film by William Brent Bell and Matthew Peterman. Bell and Peterman previously collaborated on The Devil Inside, which is maybe not the best portfolio showcase, but from what I’ve heard, Devil was pretty gimmicky, and Wer seems very straightforward. You’ve got a grisly double murder, a maybe-not-so-gentle giant of a suspect, a lot of people in suits earnestly seeking justice, and a SWAT team that’s totally not going to survive the climax. Those aren’t complicated ingredients, but if used in the right proportions, I think they can make a satisfying meal. And despite all the blather about porphyria at the trailer’s beginning, it’s clear that this is a werewolf movie – there’s transformation footage, some very lupine jaws, and someone comes right out and authoritatively says “werewolf” by the end.

It stars A.J. Cook (who’s tied with Matthew Grey Gubler for second place on my list of favourite Criminal Minds actors, right after my one and only celebrity crush Kirsten Vangsness) and Sebastian Roché, who’s no stranger to acting with monsters on Grimm, Supernatural and The Vampire Diaries. There’s no release date, but if they’ve got a trailer and a poster, it’s a safe bet it’ll be early 2014.

Here’s the official synopsis:

Following the brutal slaying of an American family vacationing in rural France, a peculiar man living near the crime scene is blindly charged with their murders. Believing her client is innocent, expatriate American defense attorney Kate Moore [Cook] and her team decide to take a scientific approach in order to prove his physical incapability to local authorities. As she delves into his enigmatic family history, she uncovers evidence that suggests the rebirth of an unexpected legend. When a bloodbath ensues, Kate must do whatever she can to survive the surrounding terror and prevent the chaos from spreading.

And below is the poster. What do you think – is this gonna be a straightforward action/horror werewolf film, or will it turn out that Cook’s “suspect” was actually a bear all along, and she was the only person who saw him as a man because of a repressed childhood trauma involving a tragic incident at the zoo?

wer-poster-rev

Say “yes” to Scientifically Proven werewolf blood

I’ve mentioned the game Blood of the Werewolf before, but it’s not out yet, and like any good Internet denizen, I tend to talk about things I want until I have them. Further whetting my appetite for the promise of this punishingly difficult side-scroller is the enthusiasm of the game’s progenitor, Nathaniel ‘Than’ McClure. I’m gonna quote from an email he sent me late last week:

Last year I started on a dream project that our studio owns outright, Blood of the Werewolf. Blood of the Werewolf is my love letter to the games that we grew up playing. It doesn’t have the most features and it has little to no marketing budget. What is does have is heart. The game shines propped on its key design pillars of challenge and mastery.

I have a lot of love for people who put their hearts and souls into the things they make, especially when the thing they’re making is right up my alley, so I want to help Than get BotW out there.

  • Go click the “yes” button on the “Blood of the Werewolf” Steam Greenlight page. If you have a Steam account, it’s literally a single click. If you don’t have a Steam account, I suggest you get one, click “yes”, and then let me know so we can play Borderlands 2 forever.
  • Pre-order the game today, directly from Scientifically Proven, and get it for 50% off ($5 instead of $10).

Where AQ at?

Hi everyone! I apologize for the lengthy drought in posts, particularly at this most werewolfy time of year. Werewolf News is mostly just one person – me – posting stuff (Craig J. Clark’s Full Moon Features column being the primary, and most awesome exception) and due to work obligations, I simply have not had the time or energy to keep up with the site lately. That really sucks, because there’s a lot of cool stuff going on – WolfCop is well underway, issue #4 of Rachel Deering’s Anathema arrived for Kickstarter backers (warning, it contains spiders, ugh), and I’m sure there’s tons of comics and film-related happenings that I don’t know about because I haven’t had the mental cycles to pay attention.

However, there is light at the end of this boring, werewolf-less tunnel. I have accepted a position at a different company – one closer to my home, and which will likely afford more time for things that aren’t work, or thinking about work, or waiting for texts about work. That means I’ll have more time for the projects I love – writing, the SRA (new site coming, and new products too, I promise), and posting awesome werewolf stuff here.

In the meantime, thanks for your patience, for your readership, and for being super rad people in general!

Full Moon Features: Battledogs and the end of the Summer of Syfy

BattledogsEver since I first saw how the scenario played out in 1995’s Project: Metalbeast, I’ve never understood why anybody would think turning soldiers into werewolves (or vice versa) is a good idea. I mean, I get that werewolves are unstoppable killing machines, but they’re also uncontrollable killing machines — and giving one a metal exoskeleton is just plain begging for trouble. Even if the feral creatures in Syfy’s Battledogs aren’t metal-plated, they’re still highly unsuitable for military use, but you just try telling that to lieutenant general Dennis Haysbert, who’s willing to put the entire island of Manhattan at risk if that’s what it takes for him to get hairy super-soldiers.

The directorial debut of Alexander Yellen, cinematographer of such Asylum classics as Mega Shark vs Giant Octopus and Mega Shark vs Crocosaurus, and boasting a teleplay by Shane Van Dyke of Titanic II and Transmorphers: Fall of Man fame, Battledogs opens with an outbreak of lycanthropy at JFK International when an airline passenger, wildlife photographer Ariana Richards (the little girl from Jurassic Park, all grown up), spontaneously turns into a ravenous, four-legged (and unfortunately entirely CGI) beast and starts attacking her fellow travelers. Some of them die, but many more don’t, and the survivors are quick to change themselves, which is how the situation quickly snowballs. Much to the relief of president Bill Duke, the military is on the scene in a jiffy and gets things under control and the infected quarantined, which is when by-the-books Army medical researcher Craig Sheffer and CDC official Kate Vernon get involved, much to the annoyance of Haysbert and, by extension, his right-hand man, Wes Studi.

The only other actor of any note is Ernie Hudson, who plays JFK’s director of security and is keen to show off their state-of-the-art hologram surveillance system when Sheffer comes by in search of any clues that will lead them to the identity of the Lupine Virus’s Patient Zero. When Haysbert seizes the opportunity to test one of his unwilling recruits in the wild, Sheffer reveals himself to be the Werewolf Whisperer — a gift that comes in handy on more than one occasion — but he doesn’t really get a clue until all the major players (with the exception of Duke, who’s off doing something presidential) are gathered together in a cramped operating room and Haysbert lays his cards on the table. Eventually we reach the point where Sheffer and Haysbert have both been infected and start whaling on each other, but the film takes its sweet time getting there. In the meantime, we get to watch the spectacle of a bunch of computer-generated werewolves get mowed down on the streets of Manhattan. That’s nothing, though, compared to the spectacle of a fleet of CGI jets blowing up all of the bridges leading out of the city. Now I can’t wait for Battledogs 2: Escape from New York to be announced.

Next Up: We check in with a werewolf based out of our nation’s capital.

Full Moon Features: Summer of Syfy: Wolvesbayne & Red: Werewolf Hunter

WolvesbayneThe Sci-Fi Channel rebranded itself Syfy in the summer of 2009, making that year’s Wolvesbayne the first official werewolf-centric “Syfy Original Movie.” I went into it hoping for the best, which I’ve always found to be preferable to the alternative, but alas, Wolvesbayne is a sorry slice of sub-Underworld schlock with a convoluted plot about a rogue vampire clan collecting magical trinkets to resurrect their queen and a newly minted werewolf who’s recruited to help stop them.

A puffy-faced Jeremy London stars as Russell Bayne, a slimy real estate developer (is there any other kind?) who’s rebuffed by occult book store owner Christy Romano (the lone holdout holding up a major property deal), but has bigger problems to contend with when he is attacked by a werewolf and survives. Soon he’s dreaming about transforming into a hairy beast, waking up covered in blood and finding animal carcasses in his house, and looking up information on “WEREWOLVE” on the popular Internet search site BooYah! And screenwriter Leigh Scott (the auteur behind The Beast of Bray Road) leaves no cliché unturned since he also includes the requisite moment where London discovers that he has super-sensitive hearing. Before he can get too bogged down in the bewildering changes he’s going through, though, he’s rescued from two hot vampire chicks by Romano, who also turns out to be a werewolf because why the hell not?

From there, London finds himself caught between the vampires (headed up by clan leader Mark Dacascos, who amply illustrates the difficulty of speaking intelligibly with fangs) and the slayers (led by Rhett Giles as Jacob Van Helsing because of course he’s a Van Helsing) who keep them at bay. Director Griff Furst does them no favors, though, by intercutting their first fight scene with two other, unrelated melees. And he also does little to restrain Yancy Butler, who devours scenery left and right as vampire queen Lilith, who turns out not to be that much of a threat, really. Sure, she was planning to blot out the sun so vampires could take over the world, but I never believed for one second that she was going to pull that off. As for London, by the time he masters the ability to wolf out, he looks silly enough that he probably should have just stayed hairy on the inside.

Things didn’t improve much the following year when Syfy unveiled Red: Werewolf Hunter, which somehow managed the trick of being a knockoff of Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters years before that even existed. As the film opens, federal agent Felicia Day is bringing jerky fiancé Kavan Smith (also a federal agent) home to meet her family — headed up by wise, all-knowing grandmother Rosemary Dunsmore — for the first time and let him in on the family secret — namely, that they hunt werewolves. Smith barely has time to process this before he’s bitten by a particularly nasty customer named Gabriel (Stephen McHattie) who is able to “phase at will,” but he’s able to keep this a secret long enough to put Day and her family in danger.

Between action beats, writer Brook Durham gives smartass younger brother David Reale (who comes across as vaguely B.J. Novakish) a hair more complexity than older sibling Greg Bryk, but Durham’s least compelling contribution to werewolf lore has to be the notion that they burst into flame when they’re killed. (Really? That’s your choice? What were your other options?) Also, while I was expecting the transformations to be computer-assisted (this is a Syfy Original Movie, after all), the fact that the werewolves are completely digital creations was a major letdown to me. I guess director Sheldon Wilson couldn’t be bothered to have an actual werewolf suit made. (Even a guy in a crappy werewolf suit — like the ones on display in The Beast of Bray Road or Never Cry Werewolf — would have been preferable to the rail-thin, virtually weightless creatures in Red: Werewolf Hunter. Ish.)

Next Up: The embattled Summer of Syfy reaches its conclusion by going to the dogs…

Listen to “Werewolf” by father & daughter grindcore band Sockweb

sockweb

Grindcore band Sockweb have just released a video for their song Werewolf. What makes this especially awesome is that Sockweb’s two members are Adam “Blackula” Young and his 6-year-old daughter Joanie “Bologna” Young, and that the video is done entirely with sock puppets. Just… just watch it.

Werewolf is the lead single off Sockweb’s debut record of the same name, which comes out later this month Monolithic Records and features guest appearances by some big names from the grindcore scene. Adam describes the album as

Sockweb Werewolf Cover Art possibly the first concept album written by a seven year old – as Joanie writes all of the lyrics herself – Werewolf chronicles the friendship of Joanie and Wolfie, a werewolf she found hiding under her bed from a storm. All starts off well, but then Joanie and Wolfie run into trouble with mean bullies, vampires who steal jewellery, and ultimately the wicked witch who originally cursed Wolfie…

You might have heard another track from the record, Pancakes, which went viral earlier this year. If you dig the song and want to support Sockweb, check out their IndieGoGo campaign, which is a great way to pre-order the album and help them raise money for producing CDs and other kick-ass merch like the poster and shirt below.

This song and the whole project are exactly why I love running this site!

Sockweb Poster

sockweb-shirt