It takes a monster to fight a monster.
Director: David Axe
Writer: Darien Cavanaugh, David Axe
In the year 500 A.D., a jealous, decapitating monster terrorizes the drunken revelers of Heorot. A fearless princess goes in search of a hero who can save her people. But that hero guards a secret more dangerous than any monster.
87 min
Rating: 4/10
Released
Watch Trailer
Top Cast

Aaron Blomberg
Unferth
Movie Info
Director: David Axe
Writer: Darien Cavanaugh, David Axe
Production Companies: DRAX Films, Defiant Productions
Countries: United States of America
Now Streaming On

Screambox Amazon Channel

FlixFling
User Reviews
What Others Said
tmdb28039023:
Bae Wolf is clearly not meant to be taken seriously, but being painfully unfunny, itโs also impossible to take it lightly. Itโs not enough to be irreverent, for even parody needs to be done well, and evidently no one involved in the making of this movie took any pride in their work; from the writing to the acting to the photography to the editing, itโs all shoddily and choppily put together.
The only person who did a good job here is the location scout, and even that backfires because the woods where Bae Wolf was shot would have lent themselves better to a serious treatmente of the material โ which, even without the budget (which this movie obviously lacks), could have at least still had a sense of awe for the original source, as well as the conviction of belief (two qualities that can recently be found in the somewhat similar but comparatively quite superior Werewolf Castle).
Now, there is nothing wrong with putting a humorous spin on an ancient tale; go no farther than Monty Python, who hit back-to-back homeruns with Holy Grail and Life of Brian. So if you want to turn Beowulf into a comedy, by all means go ahead, but first make sure to write some jokes, why donโt you? I mean, the word โdudeโ stopped being funny in and of itself a long, long time ago, and thatโs generously assuming that it ever was; putting it in the mouths of Danes from 500 AD does not by any stretch of the imagination give it a new lease on life.