So that the beast would not cut your way, Find quickly who would blow... Have we ever been invited? We weren’t even invited...
“Virgins, beware!” is how Russian distributors called a youth comedy horror movie about werewolves, the name of which would be more correctly translated as “Bite of Love”.
I did not have any high hopes for this film, although somewhere in my heart of course I wanted to see another British comedy horror at the level of “Sean vs. the Dead”, “Lesbian Vampire Killers”, “Konours”, “Fucked up”, etc., only this time on the subject of werewolves. Unfortunately, this did not happen.
If the first half of the film turned out to be very successful, with a bunch of youthful, of course, vulgar jokes, between which a couple of meaty moments were inserted. Then, closer to the middle, the action began to frankly sag and tire. The murders almost evaporated, but I wanted the film to go on the principle of “the further, the more blood”. The jokes also became less, or they just did not have so much fun. Plus, the appearance of the werewolf, which in the beginning was hidden, and in the end was more and more shown, disappointed me. Not only was it in vain that the creators used computer graphics in a cheap film, of course not of high quality, so the design of a werewolf with a disproportionately large head came out frankly unsuccessful. In the second half, the only thing that pleases is that at least the plot tried to twist and bring the effect of surprise (although as a result they did not bother to explain “how it happened”). So with the personality of the werewolf will not be as obvious as it seems at first glance. Although I still guessed "hoo-hoo," ahead of time. Well, but the ending itself turned out really extraordinary, from the series “what is not done, everything is for the best.”
In general, the film clearly had the potential to become a good comedy horror. The film was shot decently, the actors are normal, among which there are more or less well-known: Jessica Zor (Piranha 3D), Timothy Spall (Harry Potter), Edward Speliers (Eragon). If you added more meat scenes and made a normal werewolf (using a high-quality suit, not cheap graphics), it would be great, and so, unfortunately, it would be a movie of medium lousy. In general, it is watchable and copes well with the entertainment function, but you should not expect anything amazing from it.
5 out of 10