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Listening is where love begins.
Listening to ourselves
and then our neighbours.
Mr. Rogers

Werewolves Within is a Horror Comedy movie by Josh Ruben, very loosely based on the Ubisoft game of the same name.

Finn Wheeler (Sam Richardson) is a forest ranger who's just arrived to his new station in Beaverfield, a small town due to have an oil pipeline built to run through it. The town itself is divided over it, some anticipating the income it will bring, others not wanting to deal with the environmental damage it's bound to cause. After being shown around by his new friend Cecily Moore (Milana Vayntrub), and getting to meet the locals, Finn books a room at the inn so he can get settled in.

However, not all is well in Beaverfield. When a snowstorm causes a power outage, Trisha Anderson's (Michaela Watkins) dog disappears, and the body of innkeeper Jeanine Sherman's (Catherine Curtin) husband is found under the inn, things go south quickly. Studying some hairs, visiting scientist Dr. Jane Ellis (Rebecca Henderson) concludes there's a werewolf lurking about the town. Now everyone is on edge, trying to decide who can be trusted.

The film was released on June 16th, 2021.


Werewolves Within contains examples of:

  • Absurdly Sharp Claws: The werewolf is able to tear through metal like it's nothing.
  • Accidental Murder: Whatever his intentions were when Joaquim hit Trish with a fire poker, it probably wasn’t his plan to have her fall face-first into the open fireplace.
  • Action Girl: All of the women in town have guns except for Cecily which they're quick to use (though not always skillfully). Jeanine also is the one to kill the werewolf using a crossbow.
  • Alliterative Title: Werewolves Within.
  • Almost Kiss: Finn and Cecily almost kiss in the Axe Den after spending a lot of time together. Then it's interrupted by a call from Finn's maybe-ex-girlfriend.
  • Ambiguous Situation: Dr. Ellis’ death. It happens behind a closed door, with Parker as the only witness. With two gunshots heard, it’s unlikely (though not impossible) that she was Driven to Suicide. The other options are that Parker took an opportunity to kill off a rival, or Dr. Ellis fired the first shot and Parker acted in self-defense. We never find out the truth.
  • Ankle Drag: The man in the prologue, Jeanine's husband Dave, is shown being dragged off by his legs by an unseen attacker.
  • Asshole Victim: Almost everyone in Beaverfield is a complete asshole, but special mention goes to Trisha and Pete Anderton, who actively antagonize and annoy everyone in the house with their conservative, aggressive beliefs on what's wrong with the town, and Sam Parker, whose pipeline is indirectly responsible for the entire town turning on each other.
  • Bait-and-Switch: When Finn and Cecily decide to leave Emerson's house, they find they can't open the door. Then Emerson starts walking toward them with his hand stretched out. It seems like he's coming to attack them. He reaches them... and unbolts the latch on the door.
  • Batman Gambit: Part of the reason Cecily picked to go after Beaverfield was because she guessed that the townspeople would be very eager to turn on each other due to resentment of each other's various quirks. She's right. The townspeople do more killing than she does.
  • Big Blackout: A blizzard ends up knocking out a power transformer, cutting off electricity for Beaverfield. This is further exacerbated by all the power generators in town being damaged by giant slash marks.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Emerson Flint shows up to take out Werewolf!Cecily and save Finn. Then Jeanine appears just in time to save both of them when Cecily turns out to be Not Quite Dead.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Cecily seems like a nice, if sarcastic, person before it's revealed this was all an act-she's the werewolf, and not in a Tragic Monster fashion either, but an utterly ruthless and remorseless killer who's simply skilled at acting otherwise.
  • Boom, Headshot!: Gwen is killed in this manner.
  • Brick Joke: Cecily dances with two beverages in her hand and then hands one to Finn. A minute later, he finally opens it, and it explodes with fizz from having been shaken up.
  • Camp Gay: Joaquim is this personality-wise.
  • Chekhov's Gun:
    • Snowshoes.
    • Dave's phone
    • The fuel injector.
    • The axes.
  • Closed Circle: In true Agatha Christie fashion, the small town loses power, and the only road in or out is cut off in a snowstorm.
  • Contrived Coincidence: An avalanche buries the road out of town on the same night the werewolf begins attacking people. Cecily even comments on it.
  • Curse Cut Short: When Finn finds what looks like a tag and pulls on it, a human hand bursts out of the snow.
    Finn: HOLY SHI-(cuts to the inside of the inn)
  • Dark Action Girl: Cecily turns out to be the werewolf, who's a cunning, fierce enemy as well who takes a lot of killing at the end before she's killed.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Cecily is a pretty sarcastic person, frequently spouting dry quips.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: His final parting shot is clearly what pushes her over the edge and into murder, but while it was unnecessary and rude, Devon hardly deserved to be murdered for just because he mocked Trish for never getting her craft store.
  • Distant Reaction Shot: The explosion from Parker's gas display being shot is shown from a shot of the forest several miles away.
  • Dwindling Party: The eleven people snowed-in together, plus a loner in the woods. Then bodies start piling up.
  • Dying Moment of Awesome: Joaquim, mortally wounded by Parker, gets revenge by shooting the gas display Parker's standing next to, killing him in the resulting explosion.
  • Eating the Eye Candy: After she's changed from her postal worker uniform, Cecily shows she has a rather large bust and dances around sexily as Finn watches with obvious interest.
  • Evil Cannot Comprehend Good: In the final confrontation, Cecily taunts Finn for his Nice Guy tendencies, viewing his kindness as nothing more than an annoyance.
    Cecily: In a dog-eat-dog world, you could be a nice guy... or you could be me.
  • Faint in Shock: Pete is so freaked out by losing half his hand, he doesn't notice he's been shot until somebody points it out. He passes out upon seeing it.
  • Flipping the Bird: Cecily flips the double bird in the inn.
  • Foreshadowing: Cecily mentions having six siblings and being the youngest. Joachim mentions that in Argentina, seventh sons are killed because they're werewolves, an actual werewolf origin myth. Cecily calls this idea crazy. Joachim was the first to correctly identify Cecily as a werewolf based on this logic, even if no one believed him. Though it isn't confirmed that Cecily is a werewolf because of her being a seventh child. It's even possible she's technically a "seventh son," if some rare genetic shuffles are in play.
  • Handgun: Most of the people in town have guns. The only people who don't include Cecily, Pete, Joaquim, and Devon.
  • Hidden Buxom: Cecily's postal worker uniform conceals her large bust effectively, which is shown when she's changed into a low cut tank top afterward and dances around. Finn responds by Eating the Eye Candy.
  • Humans Are the Real Monsters: Played with. Despite the looming threat of a werewolf, most of the conflict in the film stems from the greed, grudges and incompetence of the people of Beaverfield. That said... Cecily was counting on that. She deliberately set up the townspeople to kill each other so she wouldn’t have to, giving her a reliable food source for the winter. And she doesn’t feel a single shred of regret.
  • In Name Only: The movie has almost nothing to do with the game it’s named after outside of the premise of trying to discover the identity of a werewolf. The game is an E-rated, lighthearted VR party game set in a medieval village, while the movie is an R-rated horror comedy set in a modern day town.
  • Insistent Terminology: Cecily prefers to be called a “mailperson” rather than a “mailwoman”. Or worse, "mailman."
    Cecily: Mailperson. Gender is a construct.
  • It Can Think: The werewolf proves it’s not just a mindless animal when it sabotages all of the generators in town, leaving the residents without power.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: While not exactly the friendliest and certainly a little snooty, married couple Devon and Joaquim Wolfson at least try to help when they can, and not wanting a pipeline built through their town isn't exactly unwarranted when some of their neighbors are actively harassing them over their decision to not support it, yet even then Joaquim sympathizes with the fact they're effectively denying them paychecks. Their deaths are among the few that are treated with any bit of sympathy by the film.
  • Lethally Stupid: Gwen. She manages to shoot Pete and later run over Marcus, both completely by accident.
  • Meaningful Background Event: In the end, we can see the werewolf stand up again as the survivors chat obliviously.
  • Never a Runaway: Cecily tells Finn near the start that Jeanine's husband left town with his mistress for Belize. Finn actually discovers his gored body under the porch at her inn.
  • Nice Guy: Finn is always polite to everyone, tries to play peacemaker when they fight and is overall just a kind man. Cecily mocks him as a result toward the end, though he fires back that being nice is nothing to be ashamed of.
  • No Ending: The moving ends with Emerson and Finn looking at Jeanine, who had just shot Werewolf!Cecily with Parker's crossbow and then cue credits.
  • Only Sane Man: Devon, while just as vocal about his dislike of his neighbors as anybody else in town, is also one of the only people in town not throwing around firearms as if they're toys and is actively stunned by everybody's stupidity when they all get into a massive standoff.
    Devon: ...Are we seriously in a Mexican standoff right now?
  • Our Werewolves Are Different: Being bitten by one apparently does not transmit the condition, and it’s left ambiguous as to whether silver is effective.
  • Pet the Dog:
    • Despite having a profound dislike of Dr. Ellis, Parker still offers her a drink from his flask when she is shaken by the sight of a mangled body.
    • Jeanine breaks down and confesses her husband left her because she gained too much weight. Devon and Joaquim are quick to try and console her.
  • Pop-Cultural Osmosis Failure: Emerson Flint is so out of touch with the world, he has no idea who Mr. Rogers is.
  • Precision F-Strike: Finn does not swear. Usually.
    Finn: It's fucking OK to be nice! Sorry! It's f-ing OK to be nice!
  • Red Herring: Cecily notices a newspaper headline announcing deaths at two national parks that Finn said he visited. She gets suspicious of him, but it's later revealed that she's the werewolf.
  • Quirky Town: Destructed. Beaverfield is set up to be this. It’s a small, isolated town filled with very weird people. However, Surprisingly Realistic Outcome surfaces when things get bad, the resentment bred by everyone’s quirks and past misdeeds is the biggest obstacle keeping them from pulling together. They all end up killing each other.
  • The Reveal: Cecily is the werewolf. She was using Beaverfield as a new hunting ground, because she kept being discovered in previous ones. She was counting on the citizens of Beaverfield to be too eager to turn on each other over the pipe line drama for them to realize it's her.
  • Rewatch Bonus:
    • Most of Cecily’s interactions with Finn and the other residents of Beaverfield can be viewed in a very different light after watching the film through once.
    • On a second viewing, it’s easier to see why Trish targets Devon first when she goes on her murder spree. Of the people remaining, Devon was the most outspoken against the pipeline being built. There’s also his “Say goodbye to your stupid craft store,” remark. It’s easy to miss, given the lack of reaction to it in the moment, but that was probably the final straw for Trish.
  • Rousing Speech: Finn tries to give one to the people of Beaverfield to get them to stop fighting.
  • Sanity Slippage: While her sanity was already questionable, Trish has a major breakdown after her dog is killed. Over the course of one day, she goes from a sobbing wreck to Ax-Crazy, threatening the townspeople’s lives over petty slights.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: A number of the townsfolk, instead of rallying behind Finn's Rousing Speech, leave the inn and go home. The only ones who stay are Finn, Cecily, and Jeanine.
  • Ship Tease: There's plenty in the movie between Finn and Cecily, especially in The Axe Den. They even have an Almost Kiss before it's interrupted by Finn's phone. Shame she turns out to be the werewolf, and also reveals it was just a plot, never having felt anything really for Finn.
  • Shovel Strike: Emerson Flint smacks the werewolf in the back of the head with a shovel.
  • Smash Cut: Jeanine's husband being dragged off by an unseen attacker cuts to Finn shouting in his van as he's driving on the highway.
  • Super-Strength: The werewolf is strong enough to throw a grown man across a room.
  • Super-Toughness: The werewolf only stops temporarily when stabbed twice (even in the neck the second time) before finally being killed by a crossbow quarrel in the heart.
  • Surprisingly Sudden Death: Marcus and Gwen, both within the span of a few seconds.
  • Time Skip: The movie shows a man being attacked and dragged off by some unseen assailant. Then it jumps ahead 29.5 days to Finn driving his van to Beaverfield.
  • Transformation Sequence: Happens near the end of the film.
  • Wham Shot: Finn looks in the back room of The Axe Den, and finds a package from a different Beaverfield postal worker.
  • Wolf Man: The werewolf looks more human than wolf.
  • Wrench Wench: Gwen is a mechanic who runs the town's garage, and she's a tough, self-confident person who was introduced wearing coveralls berating her husband over showing up late for work.

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