Slake your appetite for indie werewolf horror films with “Hunger Unholy”

Get ready for an ultra-efficient information bullet: Hunger Unholy is an upcoming independent werewolf horror/thriller written and directed by Nicholas Holland. You can follow its post-production journey on Facebook, and a synopsis, teaser tailer and poster are below.

After the funeral of her boyfriend Gabe’s parents, Kelly heads up north to the family cabin with him and a few of their friends as he prepares to sell it. Things quickly begin to spiral out of control, though, when their friends begin to disappear one by one with the rising of the full moon.

Hunger Unholy poster

Hey you, listen to “Hey You” by Drop City Yacht Club

The only werewolf-related things in this video for Drop City Yacht Club‘s Hey You are the gloves A-Wolf is wearing, but the track is a fucking ear-worm, so hit “play” and turn it up. Watch out for kitchen ninjas.

Bubba The Redneck Werewolf: lycanthrope, dog-catcher, feature film

Bubba!As reported by Dread Central and Horror-Movies.ca (and brought to my attention by Tah), shooting for a live-action film based on the late-90’s underground comic Bubba The Redneck Werewolf begins tomorrow in Florida. Fans have been speculating about a live-action Bubba film since at least 2006, when there were rumours that Sid Haig would direct and star as the dogcatcher-turned-werewolf. That doesn’t seem to be the case anymore, according to the press release below, but hey, at least the thing’s getting made, and by a company that certainly seems twisted enough to do justice to the subject. I don’t know about that poster, though.

In the town of Broken Taint, a vicious evil is unleashed, offering the dreams of humanity if you just sign on the dotted line. One lovesick dog catcher makes a deal with the Devil, and not only is his life turned upside down, but so is Broken Taint. Bubba the Redneck Werewolf is born, and the town goes to Hell while his local bar is filled with the Damned, Bubba figures out how to beat the Devil—but first, he needs another beer and maybe some hot wings. When the fate of humanity is in Bubba’s hands, Heaven help us all!

Based off the underground comic book classic Bubba the Redneck Werewolf by Mitch Hyman, the film was written and directed by Stephen Biro and produced by Unearthed Films, And You Films, and Two Rubbing Nickels Ltd.

Bubba the Redneck Werewolf has been a comic book series for over ten years. Bubba will be a horror comedy in the vein of– all of them. Shooting for Bubba begins on August 2nd in Crystal River, Florida.

For more on Bubba and his background, check out this Mitch Hyman interview from last year on Strange Kids Club.

Lyra Lycan and WOLFEN JUMP

It’s Friday and I want to cram something awesome in your face! Get ready for WOLFEN JUMP! “Now, what is Wolfen Jump?” you might ask as you brush its crumbs off your cheeks. Here, direct from their site, is all you need to know:

WOLFEN JUMP IS POWERFUL COMICS INFUSED WITH THE POWER OF WOLF
WOLFEN JUMP IS RALLYING YOUR FRIENDS & LOVED ONES WITH A GREAT HOWL
WOLFEN JUMP HAS MIGHTY JAWS AND FANGS
WOLFEN JUMP IS AN ANTHOLOGY IN THE MAKING FEATURING A MIGHTY COMICS WOLFPACK

If that didn’t clear things up, let me explain: it’s an anthology of short comics that all revolve around the theme “wolf”. There are already a lot of great entries, but I want to share with you two pages from the middle of my favourite, “Lyra Lycan” by Lauren Zukauskas. The setup should be familiar to anyone who’s seen Sailor Moon, Cardcaptor Sakura or any other “magical teen girl” manga or anime.

Lyra Lycan 1 Lyra Lycan 2

Lauren’s a cartoonist from Connecticut and you can see more of her work on Tumblr, Twitter and her kick-ass web comic Rachel & Penny, which is about the irresponsible rockstar problems of Rachel Amps and her long-suffering manager Penny (who seems to be me in lady format).

Wolfen Jump is still in production but you can see all of the completed entries on its web site. When it’s finished, it’ll be available as a free e-zine, and Rigged Books will be issuing a print copy for glasses-wearing traditionalists like Penny and I. Enjoy!

What you need to know about George R.R. Martin’s “The Skin Trade”

As the San Diego Comic Con dust finally settles, there’s been some chatter about The Skin Trade, the 1988 werewolf novella by hat & beardsman (and bestselling Game of Thrones author) George R.R. Martin. Here’s what you need to know about the activity surrounding the award-winning werewolf story.

First, the official synopsis:

When a string of grotesque killings begins to strike her small city, private detective Randi Wade becomes suspicious. A serial killer is taking the skin of its victims and the grisly murders remind her all too much of her own father’s death almost twenty years ago. As the police hit a dead end, Randi goes on a search for answers of her own… But when a close friend suddenly becomes a target, he is forced to reveal a startling secret about himself and Randi is quickly pulled into a dark underworld where monsters exist and prey on the living.

The story was originally published in Night Visions 5, a 1988 horror anthology that featured stories by Martin, Stephen King and Dan Simmons. The same anthology has also been published under the titles Dark Visions, Dark Love and The Skin Trade. The story won the World Fantasy Award for Best Novella in 1989, and has generally been hailed as the American Werewolf In London of short fiction. To the best of my knowledge, the only way you can read The Skin Trade today is to buy one of these anthologies from a used book seller (unless you’re fluent in French) Correction! Pennington Beast points out that The Skin Trade is included in Werewolves and Shape Shifters: Encounters with the Beasts Within, which is currently available for purchase on Amazon. But don’t despair! Don’t freak out. As mentioned by Martin himself, Avatar Press has just published the first issue of the official Skin Trade comic.

Skin Trade 01 Wrap cover

The story was adapted (to Martin’s great satisfaction, apparently) by Daniel Abraham and illustrated with gritty, gruesome aplomb by Mike Wolfer (hold the puns, please). There are a variety of covers, including a Limited SDCC version, a gory version and a wrap-around version. This issue is in stores now, and the second issue comes out next month. It’s not clear how many more issues will follow after that, but I’m hoping for a total of six at the least. This first issue was good but exposition-heavy, and it didn’t blow the lid off the werewolf “mystery” – but give it time, baby bird, give it time. This is a horror novella they’re adapting, not a children’s fairy tale, and if you’re at all familiar with Martin’s writing, you know that a slow burn always pays off.

The Skin Trade - movie posterIf you like comics but prefer your adaptations to take the form of light, sound and moving images, I have more good news for you: a film version is in the works. The movie rights to The Skin Trade are resting with Mike The Pike Productions, who have the screen adaptation tagged as “in development”. Details on just what that means are scarce – the latest news I can find is from this 2011 post on Shock Till You Drop – but there are recent signs of life: the film’s web site got a recent facelift, and during last week’s Skin Trade SDCC panel (see Collider’s great recap) Martin briefly discussed his ideal casting for the “asthmatic, hypochondriac and not very formidable werewolf” character, saying that Paul Giamatti, William H. Macy or Steve Buscemi would all be great choices. You can follow the film’s development progress on Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr.

And that’s the extent of my knowledge regarding The Skin Trade, in any format. I have a copy of Night Visions 5 coming to me in the mail, thanks to a packrat friend, and I’m looking forward to reading what all the fuss is about. If you’ve read the story, tell me and your fellow Werewolf News readers what you thought of it in the comments!

Weekly Werewolf Art: Werewolf Lady Portrait by Lindsay Small

Werewolf Lady Portrait by Lindsay Small

This week I want to introduce you to Lindsay Small and the delights she and her husband Alex are responsible for: Baman Piderman, and more recently, the animation for the new Mappy animated series. I love Lindsay’s design sense, colour choices and vector art, and recently she combined all three on an awesome monster lady spree. This werewolf gal looks like she’d give you a bloody nose and make you clean up the mess.

Next in the series of monster lady portraits! A werewolf aaaaaAAAAAAA!!!!

See the rest if you please herehereherehere, and here! Thank you!

Full Moon Features: Summer of Syfy: Never Cry Werewolf

Never Cry WerewolfFrom the first time I heard about the Canadian direct-to-video horror movie Never Cry Werewolf (which premiered on the Sci-Fi Channel in 2008), I knew it was one that I was eventually going to get around to seeing. I just had no idea that I had essentially already seen it, only with a different supernatural monster.

Directed by Brenton Spencer and written by John Sheppard, Never Cry Werewolf owes a huge (and completely unacknowledged) debt to Tom Holland’s 1985 film Fright Night. That film (which received the official remake treatment in 2011) was about a teenage boy who can’t make anyone believe him when a vampire moves in next door. In this film the teenager is a girl and the new neighbor is a werewolf, but otherwise the parallels are unmistakable. There’s even a washed-up television star (played by Roddy McDowell in the original Fright Night and here by Kevin Sorbo) in both that the hero goes to for help. The main difference between them is McDowell is a horror movie host who comes through in the clinch and Sorbo is a self-involved hunter/sportsman who actually gets treed at one point. (No one could ever accuse Sorbo of not having a sense of humor about himself.)

Anyway, enough about Fright Night. What about Never Cry Werewolf? Well, it kicks off with an attack on a registered sex offender (never let it be said that werewolves are too picky about the class of their victims), after which we start to get to know our protagonists. The girl (Nina Dobrev) is a vegetarian who believes something is up almost right away when she finds out their hunky new neighbor (Peter Stebbings) has hair on his palms. Her younger brother (Spencer Van Wyck) is impressed by his Harley, though, and starts hanging out over at his place, helping him with his remodeling. (I’m guessing the sex offender scene may have been added to deflect any speculation that anything else was going on between them.) The other major character is the dorky guy played by Sean O’Neill, who has a huge crush on Dobrev and gets turned into a werewolf by Stebbings in much the same way that the best friend in Fright Night gets corrupted. (Okay, that’s the last Fright Night reference, I promise.)

The lack of originality on display in Never Cry Werewolf would be bad enough, but it’s fairly cheesy to boot. The special effects aren’t very special and the werewolf is mostly shown in extreme closeups or long shots because of how fake it looks when we finally do get a good look at it. It’s also very telling that the big transformation takes place entirely offscreen. Still, it’s amusing that the film makes up its own mythology and then tries to pass it off as common knowledge. (Werewolves travel with demon familiars that take the form of big, black dogs? Really?) The most overwrought part of the story, though, is Stebbings’s belief that Dobrev is the reincarnation of his long lost love, Melissa (who looks like Alyssa Milano in the picture that he carries around with him). Too bad that’s also something that this movie cribbed from Fright Night. (Sorry, couldn’t help myself.) In the end, the best way not to cry werewolf is not to watch it in the first place.

Next Up: A Syfy double feature that’ll have you seeing red and bayin’ at the moon…

Book Review: “Fenrir” by M.D. Lachlan

M.D. Lachlan is the only author who’s made me involuntarily swear out loud twice. The first time was at the end of Wolfsangel, and now he’s done it to me again with its successor, Fenrir. I think you should give him a chance to do the same to you, but to properly explain why, I have to dance around spoilers for two books.

Fenrir is the second instalment in Lachlan’s exploration of the brutal cycle of strife, power and death prophesied to end (along with most of the world) when the Norse god Odin is killed by the monstrous wolf Fenrisulfr. You can certainly read this book without first reading Wolfsangel, but you’ll deprive yourself of the joy that comes from watching Fenrir‘s main characters rediscover who they were when they were alive before, in the pages of that first book. The echoes of those previous lives – glimpses of golden fields and icy ocean spray – will merely be beautiful, and will lack the joyful hints of recognition you might feel while scanning a crowd for a friend you haven’t seen in a few years.

Despite Fenrir‘s deep connection to its predecessor and its focus on the inevitability of fate, Lachlan isn’t one for foreshadowing (beyond the scope of the existing Norse mythology, anyway), and his poetic, almost detached prose belies his skill with unexpected and staggering plot developments. One such sucker-punch was the cause of my “loud cuss in a quiet place” moment, and it comes fairly early on in the story. I won’t give any specifics, but the scene involved an hitherto mild-mannered character accidentally being forced to rediscover one of his (or her, no spoilers) core competencies. Suffice it to say, motherfuckers die. This character’s sudden connection to her (or his) previous incarnation came so suddenly and took me by such surprise that I found myself making a fist and shout-whispering “oh FUCK” to the full cabin of an otherwise silent red-eye flight. These are the kinds of delights that Fenrir holds for people who know enough about Wolfsangel to groan at this terrible t-shirt suggestion I made to Lachlan on Twitter.

Fenrir side-steps the tropes often found in stories about prophecies and inescapable futures. Its characters react to the revelations of their (often terrible) fates not with rebellious bombast – there are no Sarah Connor moments – but with resignation, patience and, in the case of one schemer, an ingenious attempt to “hack” the whole group’s future lives by using one of the most powerful tools available at the time. Fenrir isn’t a “guess this character’s past identity” mystery or a Paul W. S. Anderson “SURPRISE loud noise” thriller, though. Once all of the characters are in motion, the narrative thread leads down a path of love, resignation and devotion that alternates between stoicism and aching melancholy. Fenrir is a thriller, but Lachlan always makes sure the reader knows – and more importantly, cares – what’s at stake.

If Fenrir has a shortcoming, it has more to do with the stage than the actors on it. There’s a lot of travel in this book, and while the terrain is described beautifully, the locations feel slightly disconnected from each other. It might be a natural consequence of Fenrir‘s setting (9th century northern Europe) being a little easier to identify (Paris is on fire, and the Vikings did it) than its predecessor’s, but the world never quite bloomed for me like I wanted it to. When Lachlan lets the characters rest, though, the surroundings are beautifully rendered, however briefly we might be staying there.

Beauty? Yuck! Don’t worry, for all the sun-dappled forests and verdant gardens surrounding them, the people inhabiting Lachlan’s Medieval Europe are still doing terrible things to each other. Returning after its profoundly creepy debut in Wolfsangel is an order of magic that rewards its practitioners for their suffering… or the suffering of unlucky bystanders, who become fodder for producing visions and carrying out little odd jobs like murder. In terms of sheer results it easily outmuscles the Christianity that spurs on the book’s Frankish faithful, and it even unsettles the spiritually mercenary Vikings. I don’t know if this concept comes from Norse history or if Lachlan just made it up, but it’s disturbing and does a great job of reminding the reader that secret knowledge and far sight come at tremendous cost. It’s also made me really nervous about certain kinds of birds.

The book’s other source of suffering (and the reason I’m able to post about this book on this site) is the werewolf. Everything I loved about the physicality of Wolfsangel‘s werewolf – the transformation, its playful ferocity – is back, but in greater quantity, perfect detail, and presented in a way that will make readers squirm with conflicted emotions. You will suffer as the beast suffers, exult with it as many (many, many) men die under its claws, and share in the disgusted horror afflicting the werewolf’s small but bright human core. Reading about Fenrir‘s werewolf is like reading about a sentient knife that knows it is sharp, and loves to cut.

Despite its darkness and unflinching brutality, Fenrir is full of beauty, humour and exhilarating action. Fate casts a shadow over its characters, and a less skilled writer would let that shadow crush the story into a grim march of futility, but Fenrir‘s characters are bright even in the darkness. They laugh with broken limbs, cast riches into the sea, embrace God while gulping down bloody snow, and scheme to do better the next time they live. May we all do so well with our own days!

Buy, borrow or skip?

Buy, and see if it doesn’t make you swear out loud too. Lachlan’s Wolfangel series has usurped many of my favourite book series. The trilogy’s concluding volume is right here on my desk, and I’m starting it tonight.

“A Pack Of Wolves” Signed, Limited Edition Hardcover

From Grand Mal Press, “a small press publisher of genre fiction”: Three of Eric S. Brown‘s A Pack Of Wolves novellas collected in a signed hardcover. $49.99, limited to 100 copies.

For the first and only time, all the Pack of Wolves novellas, including the previously unpublished 3rd book, are collected into one hardcase edition signed by Eric S. Brown.

Play “Blood of the Werewolf” demo, give it Steam Greenlight love

Blood of the Werewolf CoverThis Joystiq piece on Nathaniel McClure just reminded me to remind you of three things:

  1. McClure’s Scientifically Proven Entertainment is working on a game called Blood of the Werewolf, which I wrote about in March.
  2. I want to play this game, and so should you, because werewolfing out and then fucking murdering other monsters because they messed with your family is righteous on every level.
  3. I want to buy this game via Steam, and for that to happen, I really, really need you to go vote it up on Steam Greenlight.

Blood of the Werewolf was originally scheduled to come out last month, but has been pushed back to September for PC, Wii U eShop and PSN. If you’re on a Windows PC you can download a demo right now, and if you’re on a Mac, you can join me in watching these videos from the game’s official web site and sighing wistfully (once you’ve done the Greenlight thing).