Kickstart “Undead Apocalypse” & rule post-apocalyptic Europe

As ubiquitous life-long aspirations go, “ruling the irradiated supernatural wasteland that used to be Europe” is up there with “building a log cabin” or “publishing a novel”, but it’s also the kind of life goal that’s difficult to self-start. You can take carpentry or writing classes at your local community college, but there’s no Learning Annex course on “Instigating World War III” or “Facilitating a Transnational Nuclear Exchange”. But here’s the good news! Now you have a chance to act out a monster apocalypse with your friends and loved ones, thanks to the Kickstarter for Undead Apocalypse: War of the Damned.

Undead Apocalypse is a fast-paced, beautifully-designed board game for 2 to 4 players. Each game lasts 30 to 90 minutes and pits factions of Zombies, Vampires, Werewolves, and post-apocalyptic Humans against each other in a fight to the death (or undeath, as it were).

After World War III the people of Earth thought it couldn’t get any worse; they were wrong. The nuclear devastation was bad enough, reducing once-great cities to rubble and forcing hardy survivors to scavenge for resources. But soon—whether the result of radiation, toxins, or supernatural wrath—ancient evils long thought mere legend awoke and took hold in the real world.

Undead Apocalypse was designed by Ben Radford, a “real-life scientific paranormal investigator” who has previous game design experience with Playing Gods, and features high quality miniatures (including an aerobics-enthusiast werewolf) created by Lasha Tskhondia.

Monster Minis

Ben and his army of designers and game experts are trying to raise $50,000, which might seem like a lot, but producing something as complicated as a boardgame is expensive. Luckily, boardgames on Kickstarter have a tendency to end up well-funded – for instance, the Machine Of Death game Kickstarter raised over 10 times as much. The minimum pledge to get a physical copy of Undead Apocalypse is $65, but you can get a print-and-play PDF version for a minimum contribution of a dollar. A dollar. I spent more on electricity to power my computer while writing this post, and I’m no closer to being werewolf monarch of post-apocalyptic Europe. Guess I better go contribute!

Jack Black & Kyle Gass in Teen Wolf sequel “Adult Wolf”

Jack Black was just on Jimmy Kimmel Live to talk about Festival Supreme, the upcoming comedy extravaganza he and Tenacious D bandmate Kyle Gass are organizing. He also announced that he and Kyle are starring in “Adult Wolf”, a sequel to Teen Wolf – and I don’t mean the current MTV series. See for yourself.

Werewolf rampage game “Moon Waltz” is the most fun you can have with a spacebar

Get ready to have the rest of your day murdered in the name of a cigarette and the moon. Werewolf News reader Sam (and a few other folks) have pointed me at the hilarious and gleefully gory Flash game Moon Waltz by Major Bueno. The game’s only control is your spacebar, and pressing it accomplishes just one thing: the clouds part, revealing a full moon that instantly changes your character, who’s on a late night stroll through town, into a ravening werewolf. Releasing the spacebar hides the moon, and just as quickly your character resumes his innocuous appearance. Virtually every object (and person) you pass while wolfed out gets destroyed in an amusing fashion, but the real fun comes from finding out how to mix the two modes in a pattern that will keep you from being robbed, shot or arrested. Try it out, and if you can get to the end in fewer than five tries, you’re better than I at containing your laughter.

Moon Waltz

Major Bueno is the game-makin’ name for interactive media students Benedikt Hummel and Marius Fietzek. The duo are Interactive Media students at Filmacademy Baden-Württenberg, and Moon Waltz is the May entry for the One Game a Month (#1GAM) challenge they’ve taken up for 2013. May’s optional #1GAM theme word was “grow“, and you have to respect the kind of warped creativity that would turn a word like that into a game about turning into a werewolf and killing bikers, tourists and priests. The limited amount of development time is probably the main reason the game is such a terrific little nugget of gold – the gameplay is simple but rewarding, and the art, animation and sound design are all perfectly crafted in a faux-16-bit style that would loose its goofy energy if it was polished for too long. I’d buy it in an instant if it was available in the iOS App Store or on Steam, but considering these guys are students and committed to creating seven more games this year, I’m content to bash away at my spacebar in a browser window.

Double Helix making new Killer Instinct game; Sabrewulf looks rad

Sabrewulf

I’d made up my mind to skip the Xbox One and get a PlayStation 4, but Werewolf News reader Gothic Guido has just informed me of an Xbox One launch title that might make me reconsider. Earlier this week at E3, Microsoft announced that the classic SNES / arcade fighter Killer Instinct is being revived by Double Helix Games. From the official announcement on Double Helix’s blog:

The announcement showcased three completely redesigned characters already familiar to fans of the franchise. Jago, clad in shredded tapestries and ropes that evoke his monastic background, went head to head with an all new Sabrewulf, bristling with hypodermics, but free of the cybernetic augmentation he sported in past installments. Also making an appearance was Glacius, the cold-blooded alien who can create deadly constructs of water and ice.

In an interview with Kotaku, Microsoft producer Torin Rettig described the updated Sabrewulf:

…Sabrewulf is a man and beast in constant conflict with each other. If you look at Sabrewulf, he’s got like the torn jeans and everything, but if you look at his idle animations, he’s got a twitch. He’s basically a mad scientist trying to cure himself.

And here’s some gameplay footage showing Sabrewulf wiping the floor with Jago. Listen to that sound design! I half-expected Sabrewulf’s breath to fog up my screen.

There’s been some confusion over the pricing and configuration of the game, but the latest on Shoryuken.com and MTV’s gaming blog describe a standard “buy the game, get the game” model, accompanied by what amounts to a generous, upgradable demo.

I was a Sega kid in the 90’s and I didn’t have access to arcades, so I missed the whole Killer Instinct craze, but this certainly has my attention!

Sabrewulf vs. Jago

WolfCop wins the big CineCoup prize: $1mil financing & theatrical release

Great news in Banff tonight: WolfCop has officially won the CineCoup film accelerator competition, securing $1 million CDN in financing and guaranteed release in Cineplex theatres across Canada in Winter 2014! The announcement was made less than an hour ago, during a Final 5 panel at the Banff World Media Festival. As of this post the CineCoup web site hasn’t been updated, and I have a feeling the WolfCop crew are in full celebration mode right now (or they well be, once they’re done with the TV interviews), but I expect more details (hopefully including release outside Canada) will be available when the confetti and werewolf fur settle. Congratulations to Lowell Dean, Bernie Hernando, Hugh Patterson and the rest of the WolfCop team!

WolfCop Wins!

Headbutt cats with a werewolf in Hackycat game for iOS

Tandye and I have been in Halifax, Nova Scotia for the past week, visiting with my parents and brother. Halifax is just about as far away from Vancouver as you can get and still be in Canada, and my primary source of entertainment during the many hours of air travel has been Hackycat for iOS. Hackycat is a score-attack style game in which you save adorable cartoon cats from exploding… by kicking and head-butting them into the air. Repeatedly.

The gameplay and animation alone is enough to qualify this as a great game, but what had me tapping like like a woodpecker at 40,000 feet was the unlockable character Ramirez, a werewolf from Madrid who wears a sweatband and kneepads, “dislikes tofu” and “doesn’t understand computers”. I mean, come on, check this guy out. With feet that big, no wonder he’s a gifted hackycat athlete.

Ramirez - Hackycat

Hackycat was designed, animated & programmed by Ken Wong, and is currently available from the App Store for 99¢. I highly recommend it!

Watch Super 8 werewolf film “Coyote” for free right now

Via Bloody Disgusting comes the news that you can watch the filthy, druggy, dance-tastic 2010 werewolf short film “Coyote” on Vimeo right now.

Coyote was written and directed by Joel Potrykus, and examines the life of “a distraught squatter”, portrayed to wonderful effect by Joshua Burge, who ” tries to cope with his werewolf nature through drugs and music.” In an interview with Michigan Film News, Joel ascribed the film’s Super 8 filmstock to his desire to capture the “grit and grain” of monster movies from the 70’s – a choice that serves the film’s grimy, washed-out vibe well. The slow pace reminds me of the build-up to David Kessler’s first transformation in An American Werewolf in London, and overall I really enjoyed it!

“Scarlet Huntress” comic is about killing werewolves but Kickstart it anyway

The ongoing saga of the Scarlet Huntress is a passion project in comic form by husband and wife team Sean and Stephanie Forney. Right now they’re running a Kickstarter project for The Scarlet Huntress Anthology, a graphic novel collecting three new stories by John Barker, Bryan K. Borgman Stephanie Forney herself. I haven’t read any of the previous Scarlet books, and when I do I’m sure I’ll shake my head at all the senseless werewolf-murder, but I’m a big fan of spouses teaming up to make cool shit, and I like this project a lot.

In addition to a copy of the new book in a variety of formats, rewards for backers include:

  • copies of the previous three Scarlet books (one of them’s a children’s book, which is an idea I love)
  • photo prints of the live-action inspiration for Scarlet, model Brianne Jeanette
  • metal and resin miniatures sculpted for use in Bryan’s tabletop game Kaiju Kaos
  • other stuff, including advertising space in the new book, a t-shirt to cover your frail human form, and artwork to increase the werewolf-quantity of your living space

Below you’ll find the cover for the Anthology, Brianne in full-on Scarlet mode, and examples of the miniatures. For more details on the history of Scarlet Huntress and the stories in the Anthology, go check out the Kickstarter campaign. Best of luck, Forneys and friends!

scarlet-huntress-cover

scarlet-huntress-figs

scarlet-huntress-brianne

It’s your last chance to vote for WolfCop & guarantee my friendship!

Today marks a dividing line on the calendar, people. It’s the beginning of the CineCoup Final 5 voting period, and it’s the last chance for movie fans to have a direct influence on which films go to the Banff World Media Festival and have a chance at the $1 million prize.

If you’re visiting a site called Werewolf News it’s pretty obvious which of the films you want to win, but as I recently learned, there’s a humongous gulf between wanting a thing and actually doing something about it. So let me lay it on the line: voting closes on June 2, and if you haven’t voted for WolfCop by then, we’re through. Our friendship will be over.

I’ll take down your pictures, throw your Xbox games in the trash and put your clothes in a cardboard box by the dumpster. Your remote access to my movie collection? Gone. Your invitation to attend the next werewolf fan gathering at Steamworks in July? Rescinded.  That may seem harsh, but honestly, in the time it’s taken you to read this far you could have logged in to CineCoup for the first time using your Facebook account and cast your vote. It takes virtually no time, and it will increase the likelihood that we get to see a feature-length version of this:

You want that, right? Of course you do! So please, if you value our friendship, go vote for WolfCop now!

Full Moon Features: Welcome to the Summer of Syfy!

Dog Soldiers (2002)Summer won’t officially be here for another month, but the summer movie season has already been in full swing for the past few weeks. Alas, we won’t be seeing any werewolves at the multiplex this year, but Syfy has our back with Battledogs, which our esteemed webmaster was kind enough to bring to our attention. Sure, it actually premiered back in April, but Syfy is giving fans another chance to check it out on Saturday, June 29, at 3 p.m. In the meantime, I figured it would be worthwhile to run down some of the other werewolf films the channel has seen fit to grace us with over the past decade and change.

It may surprise some to know that back in the Dark Ages, Syfy was the Sci-Fi Channel, and it actually gave Neil Marshall’s Dog Soldiers its US premiere. For those who have been living under a rock for the past 11 years, the film is set in the Scottish highlands, where an Army patrol on a routine training mission finds themselves up against a pack of werewolves (who are, I’m happy to report, almost entirely men in werewolf suits — and pretty good-looking ones at that). Sean Pertwee stars as the squad’s sergeant, who gets eviscerated by one of the beasts early on, leaving private Kevin McKidd in charge. This leads to some conflict with the Special Ops officer they run into (Liam Cunningham), who has a history with McKidd and knows more than he’s letting on about their furry foes. And the same goes for zoologist Emma Cleasby, who picks the soldiers up in her Land Rover and takes them to a remote country house where they hold up for the night.

Marshall may have gone on to bigger (and occasionally better) things like The Descent and Doomsday, but this was his feature film debut and he pulled out all the stops for it. His characters are well-drawn, their dialogue is snappy, the action sequences are exciting (and edited in such a way that you can tell what’s going on), and the special effects are much better than you would probably expect from such a low-budget film. Even given Marshall’s predilection for blowing shit up (which he indulges on a few occasions), I’ll take this over the much more extravagant Underworld films any day. It’s just too bad the proposed sequel has had so much trouble getting off the ground, but I’ll happily lap it up should it ever see the light of day (or night).

Like Dog Soldiers, 2005’s The Beast of Bray Road wasn’t produced by the Sci-Fi Channel (as a matter of fact, The Asylum is the company that holds that dubious distinction), but that is where I got to see it. You know you’re in for something different when you’re watching a werewolf movie and the first words that pop up on the screen are “BASED ON A TRUE STORY.” Thanks to the Asylum connection, my expectations weren’t very high going into The Beast of Bray Road (which is apparently based on actual werewolf sightings that took place in rural Wisconsin), but at least it had the good sense not to take itself too seriously.

Written, directed and edited by Leigh Scott, the film has more than a few parallels with Jaws. For example, star Jeff Denton is the new deputy in town who moved there from the big city for the peace and quiet, with Thomas Downey in the Richard Dreyfuss role as a cryptozoologist working on his Ph.D. who is attracted by internet reports of an unidentified wild beast. (Downey was something of an MVP on the film since he also served as production designer and stunt performer and did the special effects.) There’s even a budget-conscious sheriff who’s more concerned about selling hunting licenses and the tourist trade than hunting down the creature.

Speaking of the beast, it would probably be more frightening if it didn’t look like a guy wearing a collection of throw rugs, which makes it doubly confusing why the director would show it so fully and so early in the film. He also gives the new deputy a seemingly pointless love interest in local roadhouse owner Sarah Lieving (who could probably use a bouncer like Patrick Swayze), which I suppose is meant to heighten the drama at the climax, but it ends up seeming as random as most every other element in the film. Still, if all you’re looking for is a cheesy werewolf movie, you could probably do a lot worse than this one — and cheesy is definitely the word for it. What else would you expect from a film that is “dedicated to the Great State of Wisconsin”?

Next Up: Syfy goes the hybrid route, and I don’t mean they bought a Prius…