Movies List [patched] - Werewolf

Hammer Film Productions’ only major werewolf entry stars Oliver Reed at his most feral. Set in Spain, this film is unique because it traces the curse from birth—a child born on Christmas Day to a mute beggar woman. Reed’s performance is visceral, and the make-up is elegant. It is slower than modern films, but the tragedy is Shakespearean.

Neil Marshall’s directorial debut is essentially "Soldiers vs. Werewolves." A squad of British soldiers on a training exercise in the Scottish Highlands stumbles upon the remains of a Special Ops team and is hunted by werewolf movies list

Here’s a concise guide to , organized by category and era, to help you find exactly what you’re looking for. Hammer Film Productions’ only major werewolf entry stars

Neil Marshall’s directorial debut. Forget romance; this is military survival horror. A squad of British soldiers on a training mission in the Scottish Highlands finds themselves hunted by a pack of ruthless, tactical werewolves. The film is famous for its low budget, high impact, and the line: "There is no spoon." The werewolves are practical suit actors (not CGI), which makes them feel heavy and real. A cult classic for a reason. It is slower than modern films, but the

Set in 19th-century France, this is a slow-burn, atmospheric folk horror. A silver coin, a gypsy curse, and demonic children. The creature design is unlike anything you have seen—a skeletal, mud-covered creature that looks like a living statue. It is the most beautiful and brutal werewolf movie in a decade.

Nick Damici plays a blind, cranky Vietnam vet who moves into a retirement community that is terrorized by a werewolf. He decides to train for the next full moon with his service dog, a shotgun, and silver bullets. The werewolf suit is a bit clunky, but the emotional core—an old man refusing to go quietly—makes this one of the best character studies in the genre.

: Released just months after American Werewolf , Joe Dante's film takes a more sinister, community-focused approach to lycanthropy. The Wolf Man (1941)