Production Year: 1985 - Comedy - Director: Rod Daniel, Christopher Leitch - Original Language: English - Classification: Parental Guidance - Starring: Michael J. Fox, James Hampton, Scott Paulin, Jason Bateman, Kim Darby, John Astin, Paul Sand more
The two TEEN WOLF movies, the first starring Michael J Fox as the high school werewolf basketball player Scott Howard, played by Jason Bateman in the follow up. TEEN WOLF: Scott... more
to contend with; he's a budding young werewolf! And when his new-found powers help him score at basketball - and with the popular girls - he has some pretty hairy...
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Allow up to 14 Days for delivery as item is manufactured to order. Your poster is professionally mounted on a High Quality Canvas resulting in a fine piece of Art for your enjoyment. A modern and popular alternative to framing a poster which also makes an ideal gift. Process is irreversible please see our help information for further details., Manufacturer: MoviePostersDirect
Teen Wolf/Teen Wolf Too
Teen Wolf:What's a high school kid got to do to be popular? Just let down his hair and ... more
howl! Starring Michael J. Fox (Back to the Future), Teen Wolf is an outrageous comedy about a shy teenager with more than a changing voice to contend with... he's a budding young were wolf! And when his new found powers help him score at basketball - and with the popular girls - he has some pretty airy decisions to make.Teen Wolf Too:Meet a college freshman who's having trouble fitting into his genes - family ones, that is - when he finds out his uncle and cousin are were wolves... and so is he! Now the clean-cut science student is the star of the boxing team with a hair-raising right hook and an animal attraction to his curvy coeds. Starring Jason Bateman (Necessary Roughness), this four-fang film is sure to bring out the party animal in everyone!
Comedy - Director: John Howard-Davies, Bob Spiers - Original Language: English - Classification: Parental Guidance - Starring: Connie Booth, Andrew Sachs, Prunella Scales, John Cleese
Comedy - Director: Blake Edwards - Original Language: English - Classification: Parental Guidance - Starring: Capucine, David Niven, Herbert Lom, Peter Sellers
Comedy - Original Language: English - Classification: 12 years and over - Starring: Tessa Peake-Jones, Buster Merryfield, David Jason, Nicholas Lyndhurst
A review by ThePolarOne on Teen Wolf / Teen Wolf Too (DVD) July 20th, 2007
Author's product rating:
Did you enjoy it?
Liked it
Story
Very ordinary
Characters / Performances
Good
Special Effects
Standard
How does it compare to similar films?
Good
Advantages:
Teen Wolf is a kitsch retro classic .
Disadvantages:
Teen Wolf Too is a steaming pile .
Recommend to potential buyers:
yes
Full review
Teen Wolf (1985)****
Straight after Michael J Fox shot to fame in Back to the Future this quirky teen comedy came out the same year. I recall it being received well, at least I know I rented it. It's a lot harder to explain why though, because Teen Wolf is one of, if not the, most ridiculous movies ever. And I don't say that lightly having watched Santa travel to Mars and cavemen fly hang-gliders.
The basic premise revolves around Scott Howard (Fox). He plays with the high school basketball team, who get routinely humiliated by every other team in the tournament. He's infatuated with the school beauty Pamela Wells (Lori Griffin), who won't even give him the time of day. He has a childhood friend, Susan, who he treats like a lad. He works at his Dad's hardware store and generally feels as if he doesn't make a significant difference with his life. Then suddenly he notices changes in his body, until one day a full on transformation into a werewolf takes place.
It's at this point the film trips out into total la la land. The school goes wolf crazy, the wolf goes basketball crazy proving to be a master on the court. Pamela wants the wolf in the most animal of ways! We even get wolf dance moves at the school disco. However, this new fame and glory isn't everything he imagined it would be. Is the wolf taking over? Despite already telling relatively little of the plot, as all this appears in the trailer or the back of the box blurbs, to say much more would give everything away. Although there can't be many people that wouldn't predict the ending of this movie within the first 10 minutes. If simplicity is a virtue then Teen Wolf is positively angelic.
In terms of production it's actually quite shabby. Rod Daniel is a decent director (he later made K-9), and does well with the basketball scenes, okay with the rest. Either the script or the editing is a little clunky, as it jumps from scene to scene without much sense of pace. There's a desire to keep getting to the juicy bits, and throw in a gag when nothing else is happening. There are even unresolved sub-plots that fade into the background. This was the first big screen script to come from Jeph Loab and Matthew Weisman. Their next writer's credit would amusingly be for writing the 'story' of Commando. Simplicity strikes again. Loeb has since gone on to write and produce for TV series Heroes. Surprisingly, there is some mysterious magical quality in this recycled formula that overrides all this, and makes it extremely watchable.
Aside from Fox, there are no big names in the film, but a couple of great performances. Firstly, Jay Tarses steals the show as basketball Coach Finstock. With only a few scenes he becomes one of the most memorable and likeable things due to a lovely character portrayal, and some of the most naturally funny moments. The second is Jerry Levine as Stiles; Scott's back-chatting best friend, and The Wolf's agent. It's a stereotypical role, played with conviction and in a multitude of brightly coloured skin tight pants, and T-shirts with the most bizarre slogans. “What are you looking at Dicknose?” readily springs to mind. He's so 80s it's painful and beautifully kitsch all at once. There aren't any particularly bad performances here, but Fox certainly breezes by the rest of the cast without any threat to his rapidly growing status.
On the whole there's an indefinable charm throughout. Maybe it's Fox, maybe it's the wolf, Stiles, Coach, or the crotchety liquor store guy. Perhaps it's just that the wolf make-up is so cuddly looking, and turns Fox into every fawning teens ideal teddy bear. Teen Wolf is played straight enough to become a cheese classic. Throw in a very of-the-time-soundtrack, and it's fun enough to forgive it's inadequacies. Sometimes hilarious.
Rated: PG Running Time: 91 minutes90. Teen Wolf Too (1987)*
Jumping right in we meet Todd Howard, Scott's cousin. He has been dubiously offered a sports scholarship by a prestigious university's Dean, who in turn hopes he will turn Wolf and win... college boxing matches. All Todd wants to do is study to become a vet, but is under pressure to perform in the ring or loose his university place. The first thing I noticed when watching was that the plot is blatantly going to be exactly the same as the original. The second, from seeing John Astin (the original Gomez Addams and a veteran of the Killer Tomato movies) playing the Dean, it was clear this would be a much hammier and in your face movie.
There are a lot of returning characters from the first film, but not all played by the same people. Harold Howard (Scott's father and Todd's uncle), makes a couple of appearances. Oddly still played by the same actor, but the character feels totally different. Instead of being the previously wise and responsible father figure, he spends most of his time goading Todd to become a wolf and singing it's praises. Coach Finstock has for some reason stopped being a lethargic high school basketball coach, and gone into university boxing; even orchestrating the scholarship. He's also now played by Paul Sand (?) and is largely forgettable. Another favourite character of mine, Stiles, has also become a student here and had a face lift. Now played by Stuart Fratkin, he has little of the charm of his former, and a script which does him no favours; wheeling out the fart gags early on. One of the original basketball team, Chubbs, does return, with face intact. Although he too has made the contrived move to this university and switched his preferred sport to boxing. Perhaps he and Finstock made the decision together.
Jason Bateman heads up the cast as Todd Howard. Now best known for his role in Arrested Development, I'm afraid to say he shows little promise here. Admittedly there's not much to work with, but he only makes an impression thanks to turning into a wolf. The wolf this time round feels even more like a Jekyll character than before. Whilst Scott Howard had a desire to be the centre of attention and misguidedly uses the wolf to do so, here the transformation seduces Todd to act like an egotistical jerk against his will. It's reminiscent of Spiderman's recent transformation whilst wearing the Venom suit in Spiderman 3. The personality change goes to great extremes, as he degradingly catches frisbees with his teeth in the park, laughs at people being knocked off their bikes by his corvette, and then the crowning glory of the film. He sings “Do You Love Me?” on a balcony of a house party, with a full formation dance routine from the party guests. It's a jaw dropping moment of unintentional hilarity.
Staying with the wolf for a moment, the choice of boxing felt a tad misjudged. It was humourous watching a wolf slam dunking a basketball, and running the court. Whereas there's something uncomfortable about sticking a 6ft wolf into the ring to knock ten shades of crap out of a college kid. Maybe the university's next sporting initiative will be to put their youngsters into a caged arena with a rabid bobcat and a starved panther. Nevertheless we get a rocky style montage of the 'wolf too' beating and prancing his way through the matches. Even though most of the boxing material feels poorly tacked onto the plot.
As I've mentioned the script is essentially a remake, which is probably why Loeb and Weisman get 'story by' credits. It's the same story with a few changes of detail. The screenplay comes from Tim Kring, who went on to create and write TV series Heroes. Once again, he shows little promise at this stage of his career. The most inventive thing about Teen Wolf Too is probably it's title. The production values are low all round, as even the wolf mask is noticeably loose and rubbery. Stuart Fratkin has said that it was “One of the most tense sets I've ever worked on. Nobody seemed happy and the “Studio” (Atlantic Entertainment) put a lot of pressure on everybody to surpass the first one.” You can safely assume that they failed.
Rated: PG Running Time: 95 minutesWatching the two films back to back sharply threw into focus the difference between something charmingly silly and something stupidly silly. As this double-bill can be picked up quite cheaply, I'd advise anyone thinking of getting it to treat Teen Wolf Too as a very long extra. The originals worth a watch, whereas the sequel may give you a laugh, but can be both cringe worthy and disappointing in a similar way to poor American remakes of British sitcoms.
Trivia: On 8th May 2007, Teen Wolf Too had an average score of 2.5 out of 10 from 3,550 votes. It placed at number 90 on the IMDB bottom 100.
Also, Teen Wolf is on the cards for a forthcoming remake – rumoured to have a female in the titular role.
Plot: In 'Teen Wolf' teenager Scott Howard is sick of being so average. He plays for the basketball team and never wins anything, he can't get served beer and the best looking girls seem to stare right through him. Then, one full-mooned night, he goes through a number of physical changes above and beyond the call of regular puberty. He's suddenly a hit at school - but his new found popularity with the 'cool' kids in class begins to effect his relationship with his old friends. In 'Teen Wolf Too' Scott's college-bound cousin Todd, a bookish freshman, carries on the family tradition. His full-moon transformation brings him girls and glory but, once again, a conflict of values.
DVD Description
The two TEEN WOLF movies, the first starring Michael J Fox as the high school werewolf basketball player Scott Howard, played by Jason Bateman in the follow up. TEEN WOLF: Scott Howard thought he was an ordinary teenager. But he soon realized, he's anything but average. The high school basketball player has noticed his body going through pretty odd physical changes. Growing excessive hair on his hands, ears and back has made Scott a little nervous. But rather than fight these werewolf tendencies he's gonna make the most of them. Who knows, they might just make life at school a little easier. TEEN WOLF TOO: Scott Howard inherited the family werewolf curse in "Teen Wolf." Now, Scott's college-bound cousin Todd, a bookish freshman, is carrying on and his full-moon transformation brings him girls, glory and a conflict of values.
Release details
DVD Region: DVD
Studio(s): MGM ENTERTAINMENT; CINRAM LOGISTICS
Release date: 06/09/2004
No of Discs: 1
Catalogue No: 10001174
Barcode: 5050070021745
Languages
Main Language: English
Ciao
Listed on Ciao since : 17/07/2000
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