Bye, George. Russell Tovey Leaves BBC’s “Being Human”

I love George. If you’ve seen the show, you love George too – and I don’t need to qualify that because you’re reading this post. He’s sweet, dorky, and a bad-ass werewolf – what’s not to adore? So, get ready to have your hairy little heart broken: as announced on his Twitter account and in this Guardian article, Russell Tovey has left BBC’s Being Human. Series 4 (airing 2012) will be the last in which he plays our favourite werewolf.

Tovey cites co-star Aidan Turner‘s departure from the show as a factor in the decision. “Aidan’s left to film The Hobbit in New Zealand,” he told The Guardian, “and going on without him on this fourth series felt strange.” That’s fine, that’s understandable, and it’s also deliciously ironic if you OH WAIT SPOILERS. Tovey’s other show Him & Her probably (definitely) had something to do with the decision as well – the first series was well-received, and the second series is currently earning positive reviews on BBC3.

Of course, George isn’t the only werewolf on Being Human, but dang, he’ll be missed. No word yet on how he’ll will be written out of the show– how would you do it, if you had a say in the story?

Help Support Local Werewolves & Fund Werewolf Short Film “Having a Drink”

Director Randy Smith wants to shoot a 20-minute short film called “Having a Drink”, based on a John Graham short story called Oges, and he’s using IndieGoGo to raise the (relatively trivial) $5,500 budget. I intend to help out, and I encourage you to consider it as well. My decision to contribute was based on the artwork alone (I’m a sucker for vector art, and come on, a werewolf’s hand holding a highball glass? Badass!), but the pitch video might help seal the deal. Observe:

So. Practical effects. At least two werewolves.  A sense of humour. Some pretty terrific perks for contributing (including editorial input on the film itself). Have a look at the campaign page for Having a Drink and help out if you can!

Full Moon Features: The Howling series, Part Two

When last we left the Howling series, director Phillipe Mora had just made a complete hash of the first sequel, 1985’s Howling II: Your Sister Is a Werewolf, yet somehow felt qualified to take a crack at another one. How he was able to convince novelist Gary Brandner that he was the man for the job I have no idea, but once he had secured the sequel rights Mora set about writing a script that had no connection whatsoever to the earlier films and, in fact, took place in Australia, the land of kangaroos, koala bears and a once-thriving exploitation film industry (lovingly eulogized in the 2008 documentary Not Quite Hollywood). And that, for better or worse, is how 1987’s mind-bogglingly bizarre Howling III: The Marsupials came to be.

I knew going into it that Howling III wasn’t exactly going to be a work of high art. (As one of the interview subjects in Not Quite Hollywood put it, “We all knew it was rubbish. We knew everything was a joke.”) In this regard, it helps that Mora always intended it to be a comedy, as evidenced by the over-the-top characters and dialogue, but that still doesn’t excuse how slapdash the whole enterprise feels pretty much from the word dingo. And even if there are no actual dingoes in the film, its lycanthropes are descended from an extinct species of Tasmanian wolf, which explains why they have pouches. (Unsurprisingly, this is the only Howling film where this is the case.)

In an odd way, the film suffers from an overabundance of ideas. For starters, there’s the story of a rebellious young werewolf (Imogen Annesley) who leaves her tribe and resettles in Sydney, where she almost immediately meets an ambitious assistant director (Leigh Biolos) who casts her in a horror film called Shape Shifters, Part 8 (a joke that the series has actually caught up with thanks to this year’s The Howling: Reborn). To this, Mora adds a subplot about a Russian ballerina (Dasha Blahova) who defects to Australia in order to find her werewolf mate. (Her transformation in the middle of a rehearsal provides one of the film’s highlights.) Then there’s the college professor (Barry Otto) who’s eager to study the creatures and eventually develops something of an affinity for them. If only people could understand them, he believes, we wouldn’t be so afraid of them.

Even if the whole thing falls apart well before the climax (at a tacky-looking awards show hosted by Dame Edna Everage, of all people), Howling III is almost worth seeing for the early scene where Biolos takes Annesley to her first horror film (she’s lived a sheltered life in her remote hometown of Flow — yes, that is “Wolf” backwards) and she is decidedly unimpressed by the lengthy transformation sequence. Of course, since it was done for the movie within the movie, Mora and his crew deliberately set out to make it look as ridiculous as possible, which is not a claim that the makers of the next sequel can make — at least, not credibly.

Having reached a narrative dead end in the Australian outback, the Howling series was given a pointless reboot with 1988’s Howling IV: The Original Nightmare, which harkened back to Gary Brandner’s source novel. Actually, according to the opening credits, it’s based on all three of the Howling books, but for the most part the screenwriters stick to the story of the first one, save for the fact that the main character is no longer the victim of a savage rape. Instead, Marie (Romy Windsor) is a bestselling novelist who’s having such disturbing dreams and visions that her doctor prescribes a liberal dose of rest and relaxation. This prompts her bearded husband Richard (Michael T. Weiss) to rent a rustic cabin up in the mountains so she can get away from the big, bad city, but the peace and quiet is shattered their first night there when Marie hears a wolf howling nearby and stupidly asks, “What was that noise?” (Just once I’d like a character to hear a wolf howl in a movie and immediately know what it is.)

To his credit, director John Hough manages to bring a sense a menace to the scenes that take place in the nearby town of Drago, but his efforts are hampered somewhat by the barely passable American accents on most of the townspeople (not much of a surprise considering the film was shot in South Africa). This problem also extends to Marie’s agent, who mostly exists so Richard can have someone to be jealous of after he’s been seduced and bitten by she-wolf Eleanor (Lamya Derval), an artist who runs the local knickknack shop. The other major character is an ex-nun named Janice (Susanne Severeid) who helps Marie investigate the strange goings on in town, but their sleuthing skills are amateurish at best. In fact, it takes them so long to put things together that nearly an hour elapses before somebody says the word “werewolf” — and that’s a hell of a long time to keep your monster off-screen.

Then again, that was probably entirely by design because the werewolves in Howling IV are pretty pathetic. The main problem appears to be the makeup department’s inability to pick one design and run with it. Instead, there are at least half a dozen werewolf concepts ranging from ordinary wolves with glowing red eyes to an upright wolf man on two legs. Then there’s the matter of Richard’s ludicrous transformation, during which he dissolves into a puddle of goo and then reforms as a wolf-like thing. Meanwhile, all the other werewolves just sort of tease their hair out and glue on fangs and claws so they can swipe at Marie when she attempts to escape their clutches. It’s all pretty half-assed, which is why it’s not too surprising that the filmmakers can’t even be bothered to stick a proper ending on the thing.

Given its tiny budget and poor production values, it’s not surprising that Howling IV was the first sequel to go direct to video. And it was soon joined on the shelves by the likes of Howling V: The Rebirth (1989), Howling VI: The Freaks (1991) and Howling: New Moon Rising (1995). The last one even tried to tie together the events of the previous three, and topped Howling III‘s marsupial werewolves by adding line dancing into the mix. More an act of desperation than a legitimate film, New Moon Rising sounded the death knell for a series that had been thoroughly run into the ground in the space of a decade and a half. No wonder it took just as long before the time was ripe for it to be Reborn. (The fact that a little something called Twilight came out in the interim may have something to do with that, but that’s a discussion for another time.)

Play as a Werewolf in The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim

Quite a few people have emailed and tweeted me with news that the upcoming The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim has werewolves as playable characters – and that is completely awesome. Reader Leventa writes:

From what I’ve seen of the game being played, you can transform into a werewolf once per day at will, and can run on all fours, stand up, attack people with claws, do finishers where you shove people to the ground and maul them, eat bodies to prolong your transformation (its on a fairly lengthy timer), and there are quests associated with werewolves including a faction of werewolf hunters.

Skyrim comes out next week – until then, enjoy this screenshot sent in by reader Simon:

That is an awesome-looking werewolf.

A Spanish Werewolf Film to Look Out For – “Game of Werewolves”

Shock Till You Drop has some great scans from the promo booklet for an upcoming Spanish horror/comedy, Game of Werewolves. I don’t want Werewolf News to be one of those sites that copy-pastes all the juice from another site’s articles, so I’m going to post two photos and the teaser trailer. Check them out, then go see the rest at STYD!

You might also want to have a look at the film’s official web site, which has more video and a weekly production blog.

Yes, that’s a lot of werewolves at once!

President of Universal Calls “The Wolfman” one of “the shittiest movies we put out”

From a Movieline article about Universal’s COO & President Ron Meyer speaking at the Savannah Film Festival:

Universal’s biggest recent disappointment? The Wolfman.
“We make a lot of shitty movies,” Meyer admitted. “Every one of them breaks my heart.”

“We set out to make good ones. One of the worst movies we ever made was Wolfman.Wolfman and Babe 2 are two of the shittiest movies we put out, but by the same token we made movies we believe in. We did United 93, which is one of the movies I’m most proud of.”

A little later in the interview, Wolfman producer Stratton Leopold ambles over from his “family-run ice cream shop across the street” (I swear I’m not making this up) to contribute his two cents.

Meyer, good naturedly: “It’s one of those movies, the moment I saw it I thought, ‘What have we all done here?’ That movie was crappy.”

Leopold: “I said the same thing before the reshoot. I said, ‘Why are we spending all of this? Let’s shoot two scenes to create some sympathy for the [hero] and that’s it,’ but…”

Meyer: “We all went wrong. It was one of those things… like I said, we make a lot of bad movies. That’s one we should have smelled out a long time ago. It was wrong. The script never got right…”

Leopold: “The cast -”

Meyer: “—was awful. The director was wrong. Benicio [del Toro] stunk. It all stunk.”

The board of directors at NBCUniversal need to hand these two gormless, spineless motherfuckers their walking papers on the double. These guys contributed directly to the mis-management of an A-list film that subsequently flops, then they casually shit all over the cast and crew they let down with their miserable leadership. What a great way to inspire the people working for you – and cultivate a loyal audience.

You can read the entire interview on Movieline if you want – Meyer’s reasons for getting into the film industry are oh so noble – but I’m going to go look at pictures of Rick Baker holding his Oscar.

photo: WireImage

A New “Underworld Awakening” Trailer To Get Excited(?) About

Inter-species war? A werewolf-vampire hybrid? “Lycans” in the sewer? Black PVC and improbable acrobatics? I’m worried that the Underworld franchise is starting to edge into self-parody. Kate looks like she’s having fun, though. Plus, that giant guy could make for an interesting mini-boss, as long as he avoids falling helicopters (insert slide-whistle sound here).

Finally! A “Strippers Vs. Werewolves” Trailer

And on an evening where the streets are crawling with werewolves and ladies in vinyl “sexy fill-in-the-blank” Leg Avenue costumes! This looks really silly but also delightfully self-aware. Plus, dang, that Robert Englund!

From the “Community” Halloween Episode – Annie’s Discompassionately Macabre Scary Story

From last night’s Community episode, “Horror Fiction in Seven Spooky Steps”.

“Teach me to read?” “Awww!

Also, in case NBC kills the video, here are some animated GIFs of the scene you came to this post to see (thanks to drain-the-blood for posting and @Salome for pointing these out).

David Lapham’s Upcoming Comic “Ferals” Promises Fur, Claws & a Killer Story

The magic of Google Alerts has brought to my attention an upcoming comic series written by David Lapham (Stray Bullets, Crossed: Family Values) and illustrated by Gabriel Andrade Jr. (Lady Death). If this interview at Bleeding Cool (and the issue 1 “gore” cover) is any indication, “Ferals” is going to be a delightfully fucked-up gore-fest – and with Eisner-winner Lapham at the wheel, you know the story’s going to be great.

“If you were longing for an HBO series about werewolves, forget that and buy FERALS,” Lapham says. “It’s everything that TV show would be if it existed — which it doesn’t — and more, because we have no rules. This is a solid series full of true horror and violence, and built on strong characters that has no limits in terms of where we take it.  No limits.”

Despite appearances, the creatures in Ferals aren’t strictly werewolves.

…this isn’t a take on the mystical werewolf, full moon and all that. This is about a different kind of person. There are different forms to them but they don’t change back and forth like the Hulk… There are several other tricks up a Feral’s sleeve, and we’ll see that and some other more altered forms of the Feral condition, but we’ll save that for the comics.

The title will be published by Avatar, and issue 1 should be out in January 2012. For more, read the full article at Bleeding Cool. Below are two more issue 1 cover treatments – a wrapper version, and the (NSFW) “gore” cover the wrapper is ostensibly covering. Werewolves or not, Andrade Jr. can draw some mean monsters.