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‘Werewolves’ Review – Frank Grillo’s Action Horror Movie Has a Great Premise… and Not Much Else

Dec 6, 2024

2024 hasn’t exactly been a banner year for werewolf movies. Outside a few tiny, little-seen indies and Z-grade junk (Cocaine Werewolf anyone?), significant releases in the genre have been limited to this summer’s The Beast Within, a flimsy domestic abuse allegory that keeps forgetting it’s a werewolf movie, and now Werewolves, a new action-horror film that stars Frank Grillo and releases in theaters this coming weekend. Werewolves is the better of the two, as it wisely eschews any deeper meaning in favor of being a straight B-movie romp. But B-movie romps also don’t get free passes because they plainly state their nature. They still need to bring the goods, whether that’s via colorful characters, an exciting plot, or just by presenting a world that feels uniquely bizarre. Werewolves, unfortunately, fails to provide any of these things, ultimately offering up little beyond a neat premise.

What Is ‘Werewolves’ About?

At the least, director Steven C. Miller’s film has a killer logline: The Purge but with werewolves. Seriously! In Werewolves, the most recent supermoon (a full moon that’s the closest possible distance to Earth) awakens a dormant gene in human beings that turns every single person touched by moonlight into a snarling, fanged monster. Anarchy obviously ensues. Cut to some time later when the next supermoon is about to rise into the night sky, and humanity is bracing for a second werewolf outbreak. Grillo plays Wesley Marshall, history’s buffest CDC scientist who’s part of a Lou Diamond Phillips-led team to find a cure for humanity’s sudden werewolf problem.

They’ve invented “moon screen,” a spray-on treatment that they hope will shield anyone who applies it from the supermoon’s effects, and plan to test it on some caged volunteers at a government research facility. Unsurprisingly, things don’t go as planned. The moon screen only works for roughly one hour, and their facility really could’ve done with better security measures. After the movie’s first bloodbath, Wes and a fellow scientist named Amy (Katrina Law) attempt to cross a werewolf-infested city to make it back to his widowed sister-in-law (Ilfenesh Hadera) and niece (Kamdynn Gary), who are under attack back home. All everyone needs to do is stay alive until sunrise.

‘Werewolves’ Doesn’t Make Full Use of Its Interesting Plot Idea
Image Via Briarcliff Entertainment

It’s a cool set-up for a werewolf movie, but that’s exactly what makes Werewolves so disappointing, as Matthew Kennedy’s script does little with it. For starters, the film is extremely small in scope. Now, maybe that’s a budget issue more than anything else, but when I say “Wes and Amy attempt to cross a werewolf-infested city” what I really mean is “Wes and Amy attempt to cross a couple of desolate city blocks where the occasional werewolf or two pops up.” This setting screams for an overhead shot of packs of werewolves roaming the streets, but the movie never provides it.

Related ‘Watchmen: Chapter II’ Review: Even a Great Voice Cast Can’t Get This Adaptation Over the Line This animated take on ‘Watchmen’ stars Titus Welliver and Matthew Rhys.

It also doesn’t bother to really examine what happens to society as it exists in this new world. How tough is it for folks to stay out of the moonlight on supermoon night? Where do those without homes go? Are there people who want to become werewolves and wreak havoc until the sun comes up? On that last question, the movie hints that there are … but only barely. What Werewolves needed to do was blow out its ingenious concept in every direction. (Where’s the quasi-religious group who couldn’t wait to be out in that moonlight?) But, instead, it narrowly focuses on Wesley’s uninspired journey back to his sister-in-law and her kid in a city that seems mostly empty.

Even the motivations of the werewolves remain unclear, as their behavior is often dictated by what the scene needs. Sometimes they’re just killing machines; other times, they retain some of the humanity within. Their intelligence levels fluctuate wildly. While sometimes they pack up together in groups, when it’s convenient, they’re just as much a danger to each other as they are to any unchanged humans nearby. There’s little to no consistency in how the wolves interact with the world around them.

‘Werewolves’ Is Light on Thrills but Heavy on Lens Flare

Werewolves isn’t terribly interesting on a technical level either. The wolves themselves appear to be mostly a practical effect with a heavy CG assist on the transformations. Their design feels too clunky, with a large wolf’s head on furry, stuntman-sized bodies. A few of them are designed to stand out, including a “punk rock” werewolf with a nose ring and an ooh-rahing gun fanatic whose red, white, and blue face paint remains applied even after he transforms. (Gremlins fans might appreciate that the latter guy essentially becomes the “Stripe” of this movie.)

But even they don’t separate themselves from the pack as much as they should, and the movement of the wolves, perhaps restricted by the practical FX, feels clumsy and unthreatening. Early on, Werewolves has a bit of a local funhouse vibe, with strobe lights flashing through its first big action sequence. But that gives way to the non-stop lens flares that blanket the rest of the film. (Even J.J. Abrams would take one look at this and say, “Okay, let’s go ahead and dial those flares back by at least half.”) There are a few seconds of decent gore, earning the film its R rating.

Frank Grillo Doesn’t Have Any Interesting Characters to Bounce Off Of
Image Via Briarcliff Entertainment

Grillo, who also starred in a couple of actual Purge movies (which have a bit more going on under the hood), is his usual, reliable self, despite Werewolves being devoid of fun or interesting characters for him to bounce off of. Everyone else in the movie feels completely disposable, and characters who seem like they should be important are quickly removed from the board in ways that aren’t emotional or gnarly enough to resonate. Werewolves is stuffed with overwrought inspirational speeches that read like mantras you might find on a police or fire department’s wall. (“Always ready!” is a repeated battle cry.) It all leads to a final fight that should feel epic but ends up being more disappointment.

For some genre fans, the inventive premise here might be enough. And if watching Grillo yell “Bite me!” at a werewolf before unleashing a hail of bullets from a machine-gun turret is your kind of thing, there are certainly some small pleasures to be had. But those pleasures are far fewer than they should have been, and the “super” part of “supermoon” is really overselling the B-movie thrills that Werewolves is able to provide. Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man is coming soon, so maybe 2025 will be more of a howling success when it comes to werewolf flicks.

Werewolves opens in theaters this Friday in the U.S.

Your changes have been saved Werewolves Werewolves certainly has a neat premise, but, sadly, the movie fails to ever fully live up to it.Release Date December 6, 2024 Director Steven C. Miller Runtime 94 Minutes Writers Matthew Kennedy ProsThe Purge but with werewolves isn’t a bad idea for a movie at all!Frank Grillo is the perfect lead for a film like this. ConsWerewolves fails to expand on its premise in ways that are intriguing or surprising.The wolf FX feel clunky, and the supporting characters are uninteresting.Soooooo much lens flare.

Your changes have been saved Werewolves is a film directed by Steven C. Miller, exploring a world where humans struggle to navigate tensions with werewolves. Amidst rising chaos, both species face questions of identity and survival as conflicts escalate.Release Date December 6, 2024 Director Steven C. Miller Runtime 94 Minutes Writers Matthew Kennedy

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