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Alpha Wolf – USA, 2018

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‘Her husband was an animal’

Alpha Wolf is a 2018 American supernatural horror feature film co-produced and directed by Kevin VanHook (Slayer; Voodoo Moon; The Fallen Ones; Frost: Portrait of a Vampire) from a screenplay by Wes C. Caefer. The movie stars Casper Van Dien, Jennifer Wenger and Patrick Muldoon. Barney Burman handled the make-up effects.

Plot:

When Virginia (Jennifer Wenger) and her husband Jack (Casper Van Dien) spend a long weekend in the idyllic countryside, they encounter a creature that tears their lives apart. While the attack has an effect on each of them, it brings out the worst in Jack…

Cast and characters:

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The Rider of the Skulls – Mexico, 1965

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The Rider of the Skulls – original title: El Charro de las Calaveras – is a 1965 Mexican Western horror feature film written and directed by Alfredo Salazar (writer – and uncredited producer – of Night of the Bloody Apes; Doctor of DoomCurse of the Aztec Mummy; The Vampire’s Coffin; producer of The Brainiac, in which he also stars; et al). The movie stars Dagoberto Rodriguez, David Silva and Alicia Caro.

It is generally assumed that this movie is comprised of three episodes of a serial edited together.

Review:

Part of the brilliance of The Rider of the Skulls is its inane bending of genres: it’s a Mexican Western with a whopping dollop of horror. The Rider of the Skulls (Dagoberto Rodríguez) is the titular hero; a Zorro-esque, cowboy hat wearing tough guy clad in black clothing marked with skulls. He strolls through a town where a werewolf has been slaughtering the locals. Having beaten up the werewolf, he adopts an orphaned child (and an orphaned fully grown man – more on that later) and rides off into the sunset. The end, right?

Nope, this is not the end of the movie! This is only thirty minutes in…

The Rider of the Skulls – now with two sidekicks – rides across to another village. In this village, a vampire is sucking the blood of the innocent villagers. And guess what? He fights the vampire and even saves the heroine from an eternal life of vampirism. Finally, after skewering the vampire, our hero moves on to another town where he runs into the goddamn Headless Horseman.

And The Rider of the Skulls only gets madder as more monsters show up. While the costumes and monster masks are decidedly shabby, they have a creativity that elevates them above their rubbery silliness. I was disappointed to see the werewolf killed off, but the vampire that replaces him is even better. The vampire is both hilarious and genuinely unsettling, mostly thanks to his oddly creepy mask.

The Headless Horseman, the final monster for the Rider to battle, does the impossible by trumping both the werewolf and the vampire with his insane papier-mâché head and his onscreen tiff with God. While The Rider of the Skulls may appear to have no narrative structure, there is a steep climb of nuttiness in its monsters reaching an appropriately mad finale with the horseman and his skull-faced lackeys.

This three-part structure gives the feeling of an old serial (it is assumed it was originally penned as one). The hammy characters also emanate a serialised vibe. First off, we have the Rider himself. Goofy costume and all, the Rider of the Skulls is the perfect hero. Here is a guy who beats up a werewolf, yet still has the kindness to take young Perico, orphaned child of said werewolf, under his wing. The Rider is himself an orphan, giving him a classic vigilante back-story – although his strange retelling of his past is bizarre (confusedly involving three skulls left behind “in mourning” for the bandits that killed his parents).

But director Alfredo Salazar knows The Rider of the Skulls needs a dash of comedy too and gives us Cléofas (Pascual García Peña). Cléofas, an overweight and cowardly sidekick that the Rider literally adopts, is endearingly irritating and provides the film with many of its “laughs”. I must admit, I genuinely cracked up whenever the bearded Cléofas referred to the Rider as “daddy”.

Being that this is a Mexican film, you’d hope and assume to see some wrestling-inspired fights. And yes, damn right, you do! Better yet, you get to see the Rider fighting supernatural beings! The fights are a bizarre blast of fun, but its the smaller moments of weirdness that make this movie a truly unique experience. At one point, the Rider is led by a witch-woman to talk with “the dead” about the werewolf.  The final third of the film is also ripe with oddness.

The woman in possession of the head is an ancestor of the man that killed the horseman. She takes her troubles to a doctor who instantly assumes she is imagining things and tells her to bury the box and forget about it. Later on, when trouble with the head reappears, the doctor quickly changes his tune and launches into a supernatural diatribe that would make the most superstitious among us blush. I love abrupt character changes.

It shocks me that The Rider of the Skulls is not a household name among B-movie movie fans. Not only is it completely bizarre, it is also incredibly entertaining from start to finish. The Rider of the Skulls stands alongside films that break the barriers of good and bad. Films like Riki-Oh: The Story of Ricky and Mad Foxes – films that are both bad and brilliant at the same time. They are films beyond labels. I would, without irony, give The Rider of the Skulls a perfect ten.

Dave Jackson, HORRORPEDIA – guest reviewer via Mondo Exploito

Cast and characters:

  • Dagoberto Rodríguez … El Charro de las Calaveras
  • David Silva … Luis Alvatierra
  • Alicia Caro … Signora Alvatierra
  • Pascual García Peña … Cléofas
  • Laura Martínez … TBC
  • Rosario Montes … TBC
  • Carlos del Muro … TBC
  • Jose Luis Cabrera … TBC
  • Gabriel Agrasanchez … Perico (as Gabriel Agrasánchez)
  • Alfonso Ortiz Alfonso Ortiz … Juanito
  • Alfredo Salazar … Un campesino – First victim of the vampire (uncredited)

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Strippers vs. Werewolves – UK, 2012

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‘Stripping has never been so hairy!’

Strippers vs. Werewolves is a 2012 British comedy horror feature film directed by Jonathan Glendening (13Hrs aka Night Wolf) and produced by Jonathan Sothcott for Black and Blue Films. The screenplay was written by Phillip Barron and Pat Higgins.

Main cast:

Ali Bastian, Sara Douglas, Lysette Anthony, Martin Compston, Alan Ford, Marc Baylis, Billy Murray, Simon Phillips, Barbara Nedeljakova, Coralie Rose, Nick Nevern, Adele Silva, Steven Berkoff, and Robert Englund.

Plot:

Basildon, 1974: An exotic dancing club is inexplicably blown to pieces…

London, 2011: When Mickey (Martin Kemp), the member of a werewolf gang is accidentally killed in an exotic dancing club by one of the performers, the other young women who work there have until the next full moon before his bloodthirsty wolf pack seek murderous retribution.

Rumours abound about production problems with the film, and although not publicly confirmed, it has been alleged that director Glendening was fired towards the end of production and that some actors did not get paid.

The film was released in the UK on April 2012 and the USA on September 25th 2012.

strippers-vs-werewolves

Buy: Amazon.com

Review:

Strippers vs Werewolves falls apart because it doesn’t deliver enough of anything in either quantity or quality – strippers, werewolves, horror and comedy are all under/badly represented here.

Overall, the film was a intriguing concept, however it lacks vital energies, basic technical polish and a sense of fun. A wasted opportunity.

David Flint, HORRORPEDIA

“This low-budget British genre effort has an admirable streak of bloodied sweetness and decent performances going for it, but it’s also, frankly, a bit of a mess, and stronger on montages of characters getting ready for action than the action itself.” Kim Newman, Empire

“… Strippers vs Werewolves is not quite as horrid as it might have been. Director Glendening (fresh off serious werewolf film 13Hrs, aka Night Wolf) manages to make the film look decent on a clearly minuscule budget. However, all the split screen effects in the world cannot disguise a very poor script.” Screenjabber

strippers vs. werewolves-bar

“If viewed kindly Strippers vs Werewolves isn’t that bad at all. It obviously didn’t cost very much, and while some of the storytelling at the beginning is a little awkward, once it settles down the film is far more watchable than a lot of DVD fare that’s currently available.” This is Horror

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Vampz! – USA, 2019

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‘Sometimes… life sucks.’

Vampz! is a 2019 American comedy horror feature film – derived from a web series of the same name – directed by Ramsey Attia (The Mortician; Dark Web) from a script by co-producers Omar Attia and Leonard Buccellato. The movie stars Lilly Lumière, Christal Renee, Denis Ark and Louis Rocky Bacigalupo.

Plot:

A wanna-be vampire must team up with her ditsy, new roommate and a crazed vampire hunter to thwart an unexpected enemy’s despicable schemes…

Reviews:

Awaiting the first reviews of Vampz!

Cast and characters:

  • Lilly Lumière … Simone Castillo
  • Christal Renee … Ashlee Barnes
  • Denis Ark … Marcus Denning
  • Louis Rocky Bacigalupo … Sam Castillo
  • Guy N. Ease … Vin Ramakrishnan
  • Cliff Hunter … Werewolf

Technical credits:

76 minutes

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The Horrific Evil Monsters – USA, 2020

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The Horrific Evil Monsters is a 2020 horror feature film directed by Adam R. Steigert (Fang; A Grim Becoming; Ombis: Alien Invasion). The 388 Studios-ARS Films production stars Dawna Lee Heising, Kaylee Williams, Gregory Blair and Melodie Roehrig.

Plot:

A secret government agency code named T.H.E.M. recruits some of the most hazardous horror and science fiction characters of all time – a zombie, an alien, a werewolf, a grim reaper, and an unstoppable masked killer – to fight the Four Horseman of the Apocalypse…

The Horrific Evil Monsters is currently filming with the intention of a 2020 release.

Cast and characters:

  • Dawna Lee Heising … Winney Swinney – The Krampus Carol; Meathook Massacre 4; Amityville: Evil Never Dies; After School Massacre; et al
  • Kaylee Williams … Anna – Ahockalypse; Mrs. Claus; Porkchop 3D; et al
  • Gregory Blair … Famine – Ugly Sweater Party;Garden Party Massacre; Ooga Booga; et al
  • Melodie Roehrig … Samantha Romero – Fang
  • Chris Drexel … Agent Molson / Kufa
  • Bishop Stevens … Alex Creed
  • Jennie Russo … Olcay (Conquest)
  • Will Nemi … Obji
  • Jason John Beebe … Marcos (aka War) – Ombis: Alien Invasion, Crossbreed
  • Bill Smith … Agent Short
  • Xia Orozco … Mrs. Unknown
  • Taylor Martin … Geeky Pet Store Clerk
  • Sheri Fairchild … Stage Crew
  • Michael O’Hear … William Sanders
  • Kristin Steigert … Doctor Steigert / BGOAR

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Lycan – USA, 2017

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‘The beast has a name’ Lycan is a 2017 American horror feature film directed by Bev Land, making his feature debut, from a screenplay co-written with Michael Mordler. It was formerly known as Talbot County. The movie stars Dania Ramirez, Jake Lockett, Rebekah Graf and Parker Croft. Plot: When six college kids in a sleepy Southern town are assigned a group project to rediscover a moment...

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Good Manners – Brazil, 2017

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Good Manners – original title: As Boas Maneiras – is a 2017 Brazilian supernatural horror feature film written and directed by Marco Dutra and Juliana Rojas. The movie stars Isabél Zuaa, Marjorie Estiano, Miguel Lobo, Cida Moreira, Andréa Marquee and Felipe Kenji. Clara, a lonely nurse from the outskirts of São Paulo, is hired by mysterious and wealthy Ana as the nanny for her unborn...

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Overtime – short film, Australia, 2016

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‘Working late is a killer!’ Overtime is a 2016 Australian comedy horror short film directed by Craig D. Foster from a screenplay co-written with Emma McKenna. The Metro Screen production stars Aaron Glenane, Ainslie Clouston, Arka Das and Adam Dunn. Office worker Ralph (Aaron Glenane) is trying to avoid working late as the impending full moon will cause him to transform into a werewolf&

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The Return of the Vampire – USA, 1943

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‘Man? or Monster? or Both?’ The Return of the Vampire is a 1943 supernatural horror feature film directed by Lew Landers (Terrified; The Boogie Man Will Get You; The Raven) from a screenplay by Griffin Jay (Cry of the Werewolf; The Mummy’s Hand; et al), based on an idea by Kurt Neumann (The Fly). The Sam White produced movie stars Bela Lugosi, Frieda Inescort, Nina Foch and Miles...

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Alpha Wolf – USA, 2018

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‘Her husband was an animal’ Alpha Wolf is a 2018 American supernatural horror feature film co-produced and directed by Kevin VanHook (Slayer; Voodoo Moon; The Fallen Ones; Frost: Portrait of a Vampire) from a screenplay by Wes C. Caefer. The movie stars Casper Van Dien, Jennifer Wenger and Patrick Muldoon. Barney Burman handled the make-up effects. Plot: When Virginia (Jennifer Wenger)...

Source

The Rider of the Skulls – Mexico, 1965

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0

The Rider of the Skulls – original title: El Charro de las Calaveras – is a 1965 Mexican Western horror feature film written and directed by Alfredo Salazar (writer – and uncredited producer – of Night of the Bloody Apes; Doctor of Doom; Curse of the Aztec Mummy; The Vampire’s Coffin; producer of The Brainiac, in which he also stars; et al). The movie stars Dagoberto...

Source

Strippers vs. Werewolves – UK, 2012

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‘Stripping has never been so hairy!’ Strippers vs. Werewolves is a 2012 British comedy horror feature film directed by Jonathan Glendening (13Hrs aka Night Wolf) and produced by Jonathan Sothcott for Black and Blue Films. The screenplay was written by Phillip Barron and Pat Higgins. Main cast: Ali Bastian, Sara Douglas, Lysette Anthony, Martin Compston, Alan Ford, Marc Baylis...

Source

Vampz! – USA, 2019

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‘Sometimes… life sucks.’ Vampz! is a 2019 American comedy horror feature film – derived from a web series of the same name – directed by Ramsey Attia (The Mortician; Dark Web) from a script by co-producers Omar Attia and Leonard Buccellato. The movie stars Lilly Lumière, Christal Renee, Denis Ark and Louis Rocky Bacigalupo. Plot: A wanna-be vampire must team up with...

Source

The Horrific Evil Monsters – USA, 2020

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The Horrific Evil Monsters is a 2020 horror feature film directed by Adam R. Steigert (Fang; A Grim Becoming; Ombis: Alien Invasion). The 388 Studios-ARS Films production stars Dawna Lee Heising, Kaylee Williams, Gregory Blair and Melodie Roehrig. Plot: A secret government agency code named T.H.E.M. recruits some of the most hazardous horror and science fiction characters of all time –.

Source

Lycan – USA, 2017

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‘The beast has a name’ Lycan is a 2017 American horror feature film directed by Bev Land, making his feature debut, from a screenplay co-written with Michael Mordler. It was formerly known as Talbot County. The movie stars Dania Ramirez, Jake Lockett, Rebekah Graf and Parker Croft. Plot: When six college kids in a sleepy Southern town are assigned a group project to rediscover a moment...

Source


An American Werewolf in London – A new Arrow Video 4K Blu-ray coming

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An American Werewolf in London will be released on Blu-ray by Arrow Video on October 29, 2019. The film has been newly restored in 4K from the original camera negative, supervised by director John Landis, with original uncompressed 1.0 mono and optional 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio options. Graham Humphreys designed the new sleeve artwork; as per the norm, the original poster will be on the reverse.

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Desert Wolf – USA, 2019 – preview of new werewolf film

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Desert Wolf is a 2019 American supernatural horror feature film about a series of gruesome murders that take place in Arizona whenever there is a full moon. Writer and directed by Beau Yotty (Unearthed: The Curse of Nephthys; short: Call of the Babysitter), the Lone Gunslinger Pictures production also stars Hayley Vrana, John Carr, Jewel Bradford and Mark DeBoer. Plot: A series of gruesome murders...

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An American Werewolf in London – reviews and 4K Blu-ray details

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An American Werewolf in London is just out on Blu-ray by Arrow Video. The film has been newly restored in 4K from the original camera negative, supervised by director John Landis, with original uncompressed 1.0 mono and optional 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio options. Graham Humphreys designed the new sleeve artwork; as per the norm, the original poster will be on the reverse. The limited-edition set...

Source

Bride of the Werewolf – USA, 2019 – preview

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‘This honeymoon is going to be hell’

Bride of the Werewolf is a 2019 American supernatural horror feature film about a mad doctor using lycanthropic blood to resurrect a mummy

Written, directed and edited by Mark Polonia (Frozen Sasquatch; Sharkenstein; Bigfoot vs Zombies; Feeders; et al) the Polonia Brothers Entertainment stars Mel Heflin (It Kills; Bottom Creek; Halloween Horror Tales), Jade Michael LaFont (Indestructible movies; Dark Night; The Amityville Legacy), Tony Brown and Anna Tomic.

Plot:

Mysterious and bloodthirsty killings plague the countryside. While travelling abroad for a thesis project, two women are robbed and assaulted on a desolate road, but an unseen person intervenes, killing one of the assailants. Looking for a place to call for help as the car is now damaged, the women take refuge at the desolate home of Saul Ashley.

In love with Saul, one of the women agrees to take him back to the city, where her father may be able to assist. He is working on the resurrection secrets of the Pharaohs and has an actual mummy in his possession.

The doctor intends to use Saul’s lycanthropic blood to aid in his quest. The doctor’s plan backfires when the mummy, once revived, goes on a killing spree, and only the werewolf can stop it. A battle between monsters ensues…

Cast and characters:

  • Mel Heflin … Sylvia
  • Jade Michael LaFont … Saul Ashley
  • Tony Brown … Uncle
  • Anna Tomic … Joan
  • Natalie Hallead … Miranda
  • Yolie Canales … Village Woman
  • James Carolus … Hunter / Werewolf
  • Dylan Carver … Village Woman’s Baby
  • Kevin Coolidge … Thug
  • Tim Hatch … Hunter
  • Titus Himmelberger … Man Chopping Wood
  • Jeff Kirkendall … Hunter
  • Noyes J. Lawton … Thug
  • Jamie Morgan … Prostitute
  • Ken Van Sant … Thug

Technical details:

  • 71 minutes
  • Aspect ratio: 16:9 HD
  • Audio: Stereo

More werewolf movies

More mummy movies

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Bad Moon – USA, 1996 – reviews and new ‘5-Minute Movies’ overview

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bad_moon

‘Half man. Half wolf. Total terror.’

Bad Moon is a 1996 American supernatural horror feature film written and directed by Eric Red (Body Parts) and produced by James G. Robinson. It is based on the novel Thor by Wayne Smith, which mainly tells the story from the dog’s viewpoint.

The movie stars Mariel Hemingway (Rise of the Zombies; Tales from the Crypt ‘Loved to Death’), Michael Paré (Abbatoir; Bone Tomahawk; Sicilian Vampire), and Mason Gamble.

bad moon 2
A few seconds were cut from the opening scene in order to avoid an NC-17. The film was a box office flop – grossing just over $1 million domestically on a $7 million budget – although it has since built up a decent cult following.

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Bad Moon was released on Blu-ray by Scream Factory on July 19th 2016 with the following special features:

  • The high-definition theatrical cut of the film, plus a new director’s version supervised and approved by Eric Red (30 seconds difference – there’s slightly more gore and nudity in the prologue, while the digital transformation at the climax is trimmed down)
  • “Nature of the Beast: Making Bad Moon” featuring interviews with writer/director Eric Red, actors Michael Pare and Mason Gamble, Special Effects Make-up artist Steve Johnson, and stunt coordinator Ken Kirzinger
  • Audio Commentary with writer/director Eric Red (Director’s version only)
  • Audio Commentary with writer/director Eric Red and actor Michael Pare (Theatrical Cut)
  • The unrated opening scene from the Director’s first cut (Sourced from VHS)
  • Three Storyboard sequences
  • Original Theatrical Trailer

badmoon

Plot:

While on assignment in the jungles of Nepal, photojournalist Ted Harrison (Michael Pare) and his girlfriend are savagely attacked by a hideous beast which tears the woman to shreds and leaves Ted badly mauled.

He later returns to the States to live near his sister Janet (Mariel Hemingway), nephew Brett (Mason Gamble) and their German shepherd Thor, hoping the presence of family will dispel the horrific memories… until the inevitable effects of a werewolf curse begin to surface.

As Ted’s humanity begins slipping away, only the family dog begins to suspect something is wrong — but poor Thor ends up being the chief suspect in a string of recent mutilation murders…

Bad_Moon (1)

 Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Reviews

Bad Moon doesn’t have what one would call a complicated story. The wayward brother becomes a werewolf and moves in with his sister. That’s it. But the werewolf makeup was great and the kills were fantastic. The hot babe who gets it at the beginning was appropriately bloody and, of course, the big climax scene with Thor was great.” Dr Gore’s Movie Reviews

“This movie was so unbearable that I would have preferred a literal translation of the title. Two hours of looking up at Marlon Brando’s butt cheeks squashed flat against a glass tabletop would have been a preferable to this werewolf masterpiece — and probably more hairy.” Mr Cranky

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“While it is constantly dragged down by the complete lack of logic and shoddy performances, there are two distinct features that make this a hit amongst fans: Christopher Allen Nelson’s gory effects and one of the most convincing costume designs ever conceived … The film would be otherwise unremarkable were it not for the terrifying creature effects, but they are impressive enough to make this one of the better werewolf entries out of the 90’s.” I Like Horror Movies

“Michael Pare does a damn good job as villainous Ted, working hard to convey a sense of rotted humanity within him, doing the work until Red reveals the werewolf in the light, and then the bang up special effects complete the transformation. Considering the budget and period, the special effects and monster of “Bad Moon” still looks incredible in motion and Red’s strong direction matched with the excellent editing offer up a wonderful climax…” Cinema Crazed

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Bad Moon isn’t a great film, but it is a competent one with enough inspiration and individuality to impress. It is easy to see why it has built up an affectionate little following over the last few decades.” The Blu File

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

“It’s impossible to hate any movie in which the hero is a magnificent German Shepherd, but that angle is about all that Bad Moon has going for it … extremely thin on the narrative side, and Paré’s character fails to make consistent sense, but the effects aren’t bad.” Creative Loafing

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Cast and characters:

  • Michael Paré — Uncle Ted
  • Mason Gamble — Brett
  • Mariel Hemingway — Janet
  • Ken Pogue — Sheriff Jenson
  • Hrothgar Mathews — Flopsy
  • Johanna Lebovitz — Marjorie
  • Gavin Buhr — Forest Ranger
  • Julia Montgomery Brown — Reporter
  • Primo — Thor

The post Bad Moon – USA, 1996 – reviews and new ‘5-Minute Movies’ overview appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.

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