En los misteriosos bosques de Pensilvania, un equipo de filmación se topa con una fuerza sobrenatural mientras rueda una película de terror, llevando a un aterrador enfrentamiento con un hom... Leer todoEn los misteriosos bosques de Pensilvania, un equipo de filmación se topa con una fuerza sobrenatural mientras rueda una película de terror, llevando a un aterrador enfrentamiento con un hombre lobo.En los misteriosos bosques de Pensilvania, un equipo de filmación se topa con una fuerza sobrenatural mientras rueda una película de terror, llevando a un aterrador enfrentamiento con un hombre lobo.
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Cocaine Werewolf is an Indie Horror film from Mark Polonia. When his Uber driver has to make a pit stop, Jack (Brive Kennedy) gets bitten by a werewolf. Jack also finds multiple bags of cocaine. Jackpot! Lol! So as Jack escapes the werewolf, he takes his newly found nose candy with him.
Having been bitten by a werewolf, Jack is now a werewolf himself. The cocaine seems to accelerate the transformation into a werewolf for Jack. Jack wakes up in the woods near the location that an independent horror film is being shot. The film's two female actresses bring Jack back to the house their filming at. The crew agrees to get him home in a day or two when they are finished filming. Jack's little secret comes out on the film set, sparked by doing coke with the film's director.
Cocaine Werewolf is a pretty fun film. It's a low budget indie film, so the costumes and special effects are on par with the budget.
Having been bitten by a werewolf, Jack is now a werewolf himself. The cocaine seems to accelerate the transformation into a werewolf for Jack. Jack wakes up in the woods near the location that an independent horror film is being shot. The film's two female actresses bring Jack back to the house their filming at. The crew agrees to get him home in a day or two when they are finished filming. Jack's little secret comes out on the film set, sparked by doing coke with the film's director.
Cocaine Werewolf is a pretty fun film. It's a low budget indie film, so the costumes and special effects are on par with the budget.
10Jottles
This movie made me laugh, scream, and cry. I'm now deep in parasocial relationships with half of the cast and crew. It's hard to believe a movie with such simple premise could change me forever.
Light entertainment is important in hard times that we currently live in, and it's easy to forget that. But then people like Mark Polonia come in and say "hey. Let's make a movie about a werewolf that's high on cocaine and kills people". And sometimes that's all you need. If art's goal is to comfort the disturbed and disturb the comfortable, I believe Cocaine Werewolf achieved that goal.
I love you Mark.
Light entertainment is important in hard times that we currently live in, and it's easy to forget that. But then people like Mark Polonia come in and say "hey. Let's make a movie about a werewolf that's high on cocaine and kills people". And sometimes that's all you need. If art's goal is to comfort the disturbed and disturb the comfortable, I believe Cocaine Werewolf achieved that goal.
I love you Mark.
Mark Polonia cranked out a good fun movie. Getting better with every movie I doubt he had the 100,000 dollar budget listed here on IMDB which makes the movie more impressive. I saw this movie in Lycoming County not far from where the move was made, the theater was about half full what a shame for such a fun movie and getting to meet there stars. Jamie Morgan kills it in this movie, well I think all the main characters all did great. Filler scenes to make the movie longer? Yes there is but in no way does it dull down the movie because you know something fun and exciting is coming soon. Could there be a Cocaine Werewolf 2 I hope so and if you like to have a good time at the theater you will too.
Great, another movie from Mark Polonia, whom isn't exactly known for his high quality movies. But the movie's title was funny enough to make me sit down and watch it, though I have to admit that my expectations were non-existing, as this was a movie directed by Mark Polonia.
The storyline was pretty straight forward, though you're not in for anything grand. So it wasn't as if writers Ford Austin and Tyger Torrez conjured up the next great thing in Hollywood here. Not that I was expecting them to.
The only face on the cast list that I was familiar with was Jeff Kirkendall and Jamie Morgan. Yeah, I have been watching too many Mark Polonia movies, I know.
With "Cocaine Werewolf" obviously being a werewolf movie, then you have a werewolf running around. And while this 2024 movie definitely was a step up from the usual crap that you get from Mark Polonia, it was by no means great effects. It was plainly just a Halloween latex mask, as there was no articulation to the werewolf's face.
The blood effects were laughably bad; it was painfully obvious that it was horribly rendered CGI effects. The CGI blood was so poorly made that even a blind man would go 'seriously?'
The intro sequence was actually quite good, and a step up from the usual stuff you get in a Mark Polonia movie.
While "Cocaine Werewolf" was by no means a great movie, it was actually better than the usual dung heaps you get from Mark Polonia movies.
My rating of "Cocaine Werewolf" lands on a three out of ten stars.
The storyline was pretty straight forward, though you're not in for anything grand. So it wasn't as if writers Ford Austin and Tyger Torrez conjured up the next great thing in Hollywood here. Not that I was expecting them to.
The only face on the cast list that I was familiar with was Jeff Kirkendall and Jamie Morgan. Yeah, I have been watching too many Mark Polonia movies, I know.
With "Cocaine Werewolf" obviously being a werewolf movie, then you have a werewolf running around. And while this 2024 movie definitely was a step up from the usual crap that you get from Mark Polonia, it was by no means great effects. It was plainly just a Halloween latex mask, as there was no articulation to the werewolf's face.
The blood effects were laughably bad; it was painfully obvious that it was horribly rendered CGI effects. The CGI blood was so poorly made that even a blind man would go 'seriously?'
The intro sequence was actually quite good, and a step up from the usual stuff you get in a Mark Polonia movie.
While "Cocaine Werewolf" was by no means a great movie, it was actually better than the usual dung heaps you get from Mark Polonia movies.
My rating of "Cocaine Werewolf" lands on a three out of ten stars.
There's something almost fascinating - in the worst possible sense - about Mark Polonia's cinema. His insistence on continuing to make films after the death of his brother John no longer stems from artistic vocation, nor even from the trashy underground spirit they once brushed against together. What drives Mark now is an obsessive, childish, and profoundly sad loop, based on recycling a flashy idea and squeezing it dry, as if each repetition added something new. It doesn't. And the most worrying part is: he seems genuinely convinced that it does.
Cocaine Werewolf is yet another example of this creative decay - an opportunistic ripoff of Cocaine Bear that neither parodies nor comments on anything, but simply grabs the formula "animal + drug" and presents it as if that alone should be funny. And that is its most fatal flaw: Mark Polonia genuinely believes his films are funny. He thinks there's humor in poorly composed shots, in senseless dialogue, in special effects that insult the viewer's intelligence. He thinks low-budget equals intentional comedy. It doesn't.
Polonia's films aren't funny - not even by accident. They lack timing, irony, and any shred of self-awareness. There's no sense of rhythm, no construction of absurdity, no well-measured exaggeration. There is, instead, a profoundly earnest clumsiness: Cocaine Werewolf seems made with the sincere belief that it will make people laugh - and that makes it even more unbearable. Because we're not dealing with a failed comedy; we're dealing with a comedy that never existed, dressed up as a joke.
Polonia's obsession with exploiting trendy themes with minimal variations is yet another sign of his complete disconnect from cinematic language. Once he finds a "funny" title (or one he thinks is funny), he runs it into the ground: he's done it with Amityville, with sharks, with dinosaurs, with Bigfoot. And now he'll do it with Cocaine Werewolf. How many installments? Three, five, maybe eleven. It doesn't matter. Each one will be worse than the last, because his work is void of content or intent - just an empty echo of himself and an endless catalogue of recycled ideas.
This film fails on every level. Its only virtue - that it ends - comes far too late. It can't even be salvaged as a failed short film: Cocaine Werewolf has no spark, no core, no anything. It's a one-line idea that anyone with a shred of self-criticism would've thrown out ten minutes into writing. Polonia, on the other hand, turns it into seventy minutes of pure nothingness, believing he's made people laugh.
And perhaps that's the saddest part: not that his films aren't funny - but that he truly believes they are.
Cocaine Werewolf is yet another example of this creative decay - an opportunistic ripoff of Cocaine Bear that neither parodies nor comments on anything, but simply grabs the formula "animal + drug" and presents it as if that alone should be funny. And that is its most fatal flaw: Mark Polonia genuinely believes his films are funny. He thinks there's humor in poorly composed shots, in senseless dialogue, in special effects that insult the viewer's intelligence. He thinks low-budget equals intentional comedy. It doesn't.
Polonia's films aren't funny - not even by accident. They lack timing, irony, and any shred of self-awareness. There's no sense of rhythm, no construction of absurdity, no well-measured exaggeration. There is, instead, a profoundly earnest clumsiness: Cocaine Werewolf seems made with the sincere belief that it will make people laugh - and that makes it even more unbearable. Because we're not dealing with a failed comedy; we're dealing with a comedy that never existed, dressed up as a joke.
Polonia's obsession with exploiting trendy themes with minimal variations is yet another sign of his complete disconnect from cinematic language. Once he finds a "funny" title (or one he thinks is funny), he runs it into the ground: he's done it with Amityville, with sharks, with dinosaurs, with Bigfoot. And now he'll do it with Cocaine Werewolf. How many installments? Three, five, maybe eleven. It doesn't matter. Each one will be worse than the last, because his work is void of content or intent - just an empty echo of himself and an endless catalogue of recycled ideas.
This film fails on every level. Its only virtue - that it ends - comes far too late. It can't even be salvaged as a failed short film: Cocaine Werewolf has no spark, no core, no anything. It's a one-line idea that anyone with a shred of self-criticism would've thrown out ten minutes into writing. Polonia, on the other hand, turns it into seventy minutes of pure nothingness, believing he's made people laugh.
And perhaps that's the saddest part: not that his films aren't funny - but that he truly believes they are.
¿Sabías que...?
- PifiasWhen Jones was shot in the head, he remained standing on his feet for 8 seconds, which is unrealistic. Once dead, he should immediately drop to the ground immediately.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Wellsboro, Pensilvania, Estados Unidos(Filmed in the northern woods of Wellsboro, Pennsylvania)
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
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- Presupuesto
- 100.000 US$ (estimación)
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What is the German language plot outline for Cocaine Werewolf (2024)?
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