Teen Wolf: The Movie is a streaming feature film based on the supernatural drama television series Teen Wolf created by Jeff Davis. It debuted January 26-27, 2023 on the Paramount Plus streaming service in the US and select international markets. It's expected to be available on SkyShowtime streaming service in some European countries in the coming months. Both streamers are owned by Paramount Global (formerly ViacomCBS).
Teen Wolf: The Movie was part of an overall three-project deal with Executive Producer Jeff Davis that would also include a new streaming show about werewolves. The new show, Wolf Pack is unrelated to Teen Wolf and is instead based on a series of novels by Canadian author Edo Van Belkom. Davis was also set to write, direct, and executive produce a new live-action series based on the Æon Flux animated series. All these projects were cancelled by a financially struggling Paramount Plus in 2024.
Production
In November of 2021, Jeff Davis, Teen Wolf series executive producer Joe Genier, director Russell Mulcahy and longtime Teen Wolf series writer Will Wallace gathered at Teen Wolf headquarters in the San Fernando Valley to begin working on the story. Davis told Teen Wolf News in an exclusive interview that their goal was to make everything bigger than the series. Davis used the difference between the film Alien and its first sequel Aliens as an example of how different the Teen Wolf movie will be from the series.
Jeff Davis Exclusive Interview
Production officially began at Capital Arts Stages and Standing Sets in Los Angeles on March 21, 2022. Actors filmed on existing Beacon Hills sets (High School, McCall House, Sheriff's Station, underground tunnels) during the first couple of weeks before moving into Capital Arts studios and various locations in Atlanta, Georgia on Monday April 4, 2022.
While rain hampered location shooting during the first three days in Atlanta, the production used that time inside by filming driving shots in front of large screens to simulate traffic. The familiar Stilinski Jeep (affectionally known as Roscoe) was seen on set during this time.
On Thursday April 7, Ian Bohen, Melissa Ponzio, JR Bourne, Vince Mattis, Tyler Posey, Shelley Hennig, Crystal Reed, and Holland Roden began filming in a wooded area just outside Atlanta near Stone Mountain. The location included dense forest and a small river.
On April 25, production moved into Fifth Third Bank Stadium on the campus of Kennesaw State University. Several days were spent filming a Lacrosse game and a big action sequence with more than 15 named characters involved during a night shoot on Wednesday, April 27, 2022. Orny Adams, Amy Lin Workman, Dylan Sprayberry, Khylin Rhambo, Seth Gilliam, Colton Haynes and Linden Ashby were among those shooting at Kennesaw State during the week.
After Kennesaw State University, cast and crew returned to Capital Arts for more interior and green screen work and to the woods around Stone Mountain where the final confrontation scenes were done. Tyler Hoechlin was on hand during the final days of production. Principal photography in Atlanta officially wrapped on May 13.
Jeff Davis and his team returned to Atlanta in August and September 2022 for additional filming at the stadium and a location near Stone Mountain.
Casting
Shortly after the announcement, Tyler Posey publicly stated that he would return and Davis said he was hopeful to get much of the original cast back to Beacon Hills.
On February 15, 2022, Paramount+ released a partial cast list[1] confirming much of what Teen Wolf News reported earlier. In addition to those actors already reported to be returning, Crystal Reed, Ryan Kelley, Orny Adams, and Seth Gilliam will appear. The full list from the official announcement as well as what Teen Wolf News has learned from other sources is below.
Attempts were made to include Arden Cho and Dylan O'Brien, but no contracts resulted from those efforts[2].
On February 20, 2022, Teen Wolf News confirmed through sources within the production that Tyler Hoechlin will reprise his role as Derek Hale. In addition to acting in the new movie, Tyler is producing as well. He worked closely with the team despite being in Canada for filming on the second season of Superman and Lois.
On March 25, Paramount Plus released additional names including new cast members Vince Mattis and Amy Lin Workman and returning cast members Nobi Nakanishi and Khylin Rhambo. The network announcement also admitted Ian Bohen will appear as Teen Wolf News had reported months earlier.
On May 13, the last day of principal photography, MTV Entertainment and Paramount Plus officially admitted Tyler Hoechlin's involvement in a press release.
Plot
The story for Teen Wolf: The Movie takes place In the Year of 2026. 13 years have passed since we last saw the characters in 2013 in-universe (Season 6 ended in the real world in 2017).
The film involves the return an antagonist from Season 3, the Nogitsune which is now possessing a new host and is seeking "retribution" in Beacon Hills. The mysterious return of Allison Argent is also a primary focus of the 02:24:00 film.
The movie continues the adventures of the Scott McCall Pack in Beacon Hills. Davis wrote the script based on a story developed by Davis, Russell Mulcahy, Joe Genier and Will Wallace. Russell Mulcahy directed.
A brief, nondescript synopsis was included in the initial announcement.
...a terrifying evil has emerged in the town of Beacon Hills. The wolves are howling once again, calling for the return of Banshees, Werecoyotes, Hellhounds, Kitsunes, and every other shapeshifter in the night. But only a Werewolf like Scott McCall, no longer a teenager yet still an Alpha, can gather both new allies and reunite trusted friends to fight back against what could be the most powerful and deadliest enemy they’ve ever faced.
Cast
Returning Cast
- Tyler Posey as Scott McCall
- Tyler Hoechlin as Derek Hale
- Holland Roden as Lydia Martin
- Shelley Hennig as Malia Tate
- Dylan Sprayberry as Liam Dunbar
- Melissa Ponzio as Melissa McCall
- Linden Ashby as Sheriff Stilinski
- JR Bourne as Chris Argent
- Ian Bohen as Peter Hale
- Crystal Reed as Allison Argent
- Orny Adams as Coach Bobby Finstock
- Seth Gilliam as Alan Deaton
- Ryan Kelley as Jordan Parrish
- Colton Haynes as Jackson Whittemore
- Khylin Rhambo as Mason Hewitt
- Aaron Hendry as The Nogitsune
- Adam Fristoe as Adrian Harris
- Eaddy Mays as Victoria Argent
- John Posey as Conrad Fenris
New Cast
- Vince Mattis as Eli Hale (fifteen year-old son of Derek Hale)
- Nobi Nakanishi as Deputy Ishida
- Amy Lin Workman as Hikari Zhang
Other
- L. B. Fisher as Coach Hogan
- Jesse Posey as Raymond Delgado
- Manuel Rafael Lozano as Lieutenant Ibarra
- Chloe Bremer as Alicia
Archive Footage
- Jill Wagner as Kate Argent
- Haley Webb as Jennifer Blake
- Brian Patrick Wade as Ennis
- Caitlin Dechelle as Kali[3]
Partial Crew
- Executive Prod/Director: Russell Mulcahy
- Executive Prod/Writer: Jeff Davis
- Executive Producer: Joe Genier
- Director of Photography: David Daniel
- Story By: Jeff Davis, Joe Genier, Russell Mulcahy, Will Wallace
- 1st Assistant Director: J.D. Taylor
- Camera "A" operator: Todd Barron
- Makeup Department Head: Carleigh Herbert
- FX Makeup Department Head: Adrien Morot
- FX Makeup: Erik Porn
- Costume Deisgner: Barbara Vazquez
- Costume Supervisor: Daniel Flores
- Composer: Dino Meneghin
Award Nominations
At the 2023 MTV Movie & TV Awards, Teen Wolf: The Movie was nominated for Best Kick-Ass Cast, losing to Stanger Things.
Possible Sequels
Teen Wolf News reported on September 28, 2021 that MTV Entertainment has an option for two additional Teen Wolf movies if the first attracts enough new subscribers to the Paramount+ streaming service to be deemed successful. Sources close to the project say the number of new sign-ups to the streamer will be the primary measure of success in determining the future of the franchise.
In May 2024, Jeff Davis told Teen Wolf News that a sequel is unlikely. Subsequent reporting by Paul V. Rea found that the cancellation of the planned sequels is due mainly to the financial difficulties suffered by Paramount Global and the ongoing debt crisis suffered by its primary shareholder and controlling interest Shari Redstone.
With the primary Teen Wolf intellectual property now owned by Amazon and Paramount too poor to exploit their 2021 agreement, industry insiders tell Teen Wolf News that the "Jeff Davis Universe" will be nearly impossible to revive.
Teen Wolf News
- ↑ ttps://teenwolf.fandom.com/wiki/Special:NewFiles?file=Teen_Wolf_Cast_Release_FNL-1.png
- ↑ https://youtu.be/ia7U6rP4cuo
- ↑ The scene used was where Dechelle doubled for Kali's actor, Felisha Terrell in Unleashed