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Werewolf (also known as Arizona Werewolf) is an American direct-to-video horror film directed by Tony Zarrindast and starring Jorge Rivero, Richard Lynch, Federico Cavalli, Adrianna Miles, and Joe Estevez. The film received negative reception from critics. It is best known for being lampooned in a 1998 episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000.
The film follows a group of people in a small Vermont town who get trapped in a snowstorm while suspecting one of them is a werewolf. Plans for a Werewolves Within film adaptation began in October 2018, with Wolff writing the script and Ubisoft Motion Pictures producing it.
One year ago, during the supermoon, humans transformed into monstrous werewolves that hunt humans. During the supermoon night, anyone exposed to the moonlight becomes one. In response, humanity is preparing for another supermoon event, barricading their homes with weapons and self-defense traps, and military personnel caging humans who were exposed to the moon a year ago while scientists try ...
Gavin shaves off all of his body hair as he begins giving in to his new werewolf alter ego and howls at the Moon in his final form. In the commotion at the crash site, Talan kills Eric. Talan moves to attack Kate next, but Gavin arrives to battle the other werewolf. The fight ends when Gavin strangles Talan, presumably killing him.
Steven C. Miller has directed a movie with a concept that is, simply put, fuckin’ cool. “Werewolves,” written by Matthew Kennedy and now in theaters via Briarcliff Entertainment, is about a ...
The movie was directed by Steven C. Miller, who has one of those super-niche indie-B-movie cult followings; they prize his intermittent action ingenuity combined with his lack of pretension. But ...
This werewolf film from 1985 may not be the best Stephen King adaptation of its time, but that does not change that the film is suspenseful and engaging in the way King's work often is while being ...
Time Out called it a "werewolf movie," [11] but Roger Ebert asserted Wolfen "is not about werewolves but is about the possibility that Indians and wolves can exchange souls." [7] It was nominated for Four Saturn Awards including Best Horror Film, Best Director for Wadleigh and Best Actor for Finney. [12]