Quartile rating: 7/10 · 1 rating
The wolves are howling once again, as a terrifying ancient evil emerges in Beacon Hills. Scott McCall, no longer a teenager yet still an Alpha, must gather new allies and reunite trusted friends to fight back against this powerful and deadly enemy.
Teen Wolf: The Movie is a nostalgic reunion piece that largely plays it safe for its fanbase. The plot retreads familiar Beacon Hills territory — an ancient evil threatens the town, Scott rallies his pack — without meaningfully expanding the mythology or taking bold narrative risks. Acting is serviceable, with the returning cast settling comfortably back into their roles, though the TV-movie budget constrains ambition. Cinematography is competent and consistent with the series' visual style but nothing cinematically distinctive. As a sequel/revival TV movie, novelty is low — it's essentially a feature-length episode of the show rather than a reimagining. The ending resolves conflicts in a way fans may find satisfying emotionally but critics found underwhelming and rushed, with a major character death (Allison's controversial resurrection and re-death arc) feeling narratively unearned.