Teen Wolf: The movie picks up 15 years after Allison Argent's death at the conclusion of season 3 and finds Scott McCall's pack members dispersed all over the world while Scott is working with his former boss Deaton. But when Liam Dunbar's trapped Nogitsune is taken and released, Scott and chris Argent (JR Bourne) start to have visions of Allison. Scott, Lydia Martin, and Jackson Whittemore go back to Beacon Hills to investigate the cause of the visions. For the fight against the Nogitsune, they reunite with other allies Derek Hale, his son Eli


Although Davis's script makes an effort to put the Nogitsune menace at the forefront of the story, the movie is far too packed with characters for each one's story to seem like a satisfying and cogent addition to the Teen Wolf franchise. While the reunited cast members continue to mesh well, some stick out more than others. We get to see the werewolf in a new perspective as a father, which softens the character's more jagged edges. Hoechlin, who later went on to star in Superman & Lois, is nonetheless captivating as Derek Hale. The adorably annoying Jackson played by Haynes fills some of the vacuum left by O'Brien's snide Stiles.


The faults of Teen Wolf: The movie are all the more obvious because it doesn't have as strong of an anchor as the original series, especially when it comes to the mythology. Even while Teen Wolf has always strayed from known mythology, the movie ups the ante by revising significant portions of the Nogitsune's lore. It's pointless frustrating, especially given that it's obviously done so Teen Wolf: The movie can attempt to cash in on one of their most well-liked antagonists while still raising the stakes. However, the outcome is a disaster that degrades one of the best plotlines from the show.


Teen Wolf: The movie is ultimately exclusively for followers of the original series. For newbies to really comprehend the events of the movie, there is too much history present, both in terms of the characters and the mythos. Even the most ardent fans may not be completely satisfied, despite the fact that it is wickedly amusing to witness the Teen Wolf characters suddenly use profanity. Given what they had to work with, Teen Wolf: The movie is probably the greatest continuation Davis, Mulcahy, and the cast could have hoped for, but it's ultimately a letdown for Beacon Hills.


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