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Howling II: Stirba - Werewolf Bitch

Howling II: Stirba - Werewolf Bitch

  • Status: Released
  • 28-08-1985
  • Runtime: 91 min
  • Score: 4.879
  • Vote count: 224

When a young journalist dies in violent circumstances, her brother soon learns, by way of the mysterious Stefan Crosscoe, that his sister has succumbed to the werewolf curse.

Christopher Lee

Stefan Crosscoe

Annie McEnroe

Jenny Templeton

Reb Brown

Ben White

Marsha Hunt

Mariana

Sybil Danning

Stirba

Jimmy Nail

Punk

Judd Omen

Vlad

Ferdy Mayne

Erie

Patrick Field

Deacon

Steven Bronowski

Moon Devil

James Crawford

American Priest

Jiří Krytinář

Vasile

Ladislav Krečmer

Father Florin

Jan Kraus

Tondo

Jared Seide

Chuck

Srance Leclerc

Mourner

Joyce Walker

Mourner

Carolyn Doyle

Mourner

Courtney Leonard

Mourner

Ron Leonard

Mourner

Terry Coppersmith

Mourner

Jill Sinclair

Mourner

Alex Kleynen

Mourner

John Brown

Priest

Miriam Lugerova

Young Girl

Valerie Kaplanová

Old Stirba

Ludmila Šafářová

Florica

Shirley Hanson

Mother

Jitka Asterová

Girl in Punk Club

Anna Maria Kolarova

Halloween Child

Miro Sustr

Neighbor

Simon Etchell

Punk Group Babel: Keyboard

Stephen W. Parsons

Punk Group Babel: Lead Singer

Ed Kleynen

Fred Francis

Ivo Niederle

Grigore

Igor Smržík

Luca

Petr Skarke

Konstantin

Wuchak

**_Good bad movie or just boring?_** At the funeral of the news anchor who died at the end of the first film, her brother and her friend (Reb Brown and Annie McEnroe) meet an occult investigator (Christoper Lee) who insists on going to Transylvania to destroy the werewolf queen (Sybil Danning). They join him for the mission. "Howling II" (1985) shouldn't be spoken of in the same breath as the original 1981 "The Howling" because that film is a werewolf classic. "Howling II" is just too ‘B’ grade and campy to compare, not to mention dull. Every sequel in the Friday the 13th franchise is a masterpiece compared to it. Don’t get me wrong, there are several positives, such as the priceless title ("Your Sister is a Werewolf"), Christopher Lee, Sybil Danning’s voluptuous beauty in various eccentric outfits, the memorable theme song by Stephen Parsons (including a live lip-syncing), and the Czech Republic cinematography (featuring lots of Gothic props, buildings and the like). Unfortunately, the story isn’t compelling and there’s too much silliness to take it seriously. The campy werewolf sex scenes are a good example. Speaking of which, the later orgy sequence was ripped off from “Conan the Barbarian” from four years earlier. It doesn’t help that Reb Brown and Annie McEnroe as the protagonists are no-names who are quite forgettable. What went wrong? The first draft by author Gary Brandner was closer to his book "The Howling II,” but he had to leave the time-consuming project to complete a deadline. Thus novice screenwriter Robert Sarno took over and scrapped all of Brandner’s work, using his own unproduced script about vampires, just replacing them with werewolves. Since the story is dreadfully dull, I lay the blame for the film’s failings at Sarno’s feet. But what of director Philippe Mora? His original version was supposedly more tongue-in-cheek with a garnishment of horror, but it was recut by producers to emphasize the serious horror. Mora also did the next sequel "The Marsupials: The Howling III," where he had more control over the finished product. It is slightly better, but somehow less memorable. As far as I know, "Communion" (1989) is Mora's only real notable film, but then I don't recognize the movies in his filmography beyond these three. It runs 1 hour, 31 minutes. GRADE: D+/C-