Main Cast: Jason Bateman, Kim Darby, John Astin, Paul Sand, James Hampton
Release Year: 1987
Country: US
Run Time: 95 minutes
MPAA Rating: PG
Plot
Jason Bateman stars in this sequel to Teen Wolf as the original's cousin, Todd. Though not a boxer, he receives a college boxing scholarship, and upon discovering that he is afflicted with the same werewolf genetics, transforms from unremarkable to unbelievable. ~ Kristie Hassen, All Movie Guide
Mark Holton - Chubby; Estee Chandler - Nicki; Robert Neary - Gustavson; Stuart Fratkin - Stiles; Beth Miller - Lisa; Rachel Sharp - Emily; Janelle Brady - History Student; Billy Burton - Pug; Kathleen Freeman - Admissions Lady; Kevin Kaye - Fight Announcer; Sally Murphy - Biology Girl; Michael Zorek - Squirrely Assistant; Marty Denkin - Referee; Eric Matthew - Admissions Kid; Patrick McCord - Referee; Joey Meran - Party Student; Kelly Reed - Student; David Burton - Peter
Credit
Peg McClellan - Art Director, Pamela Rack - Casting, Heidi Kaczenski - Costume Designer, Christopher Leitch - Director, Raja Gosnell - Editor, Steven Polivka - Editor, Harvey Rosenstock - Editor, Kim Secrist - Editor, Michael Rosenblatt - Executive Producer, Thomas Coleman - Executive Producer, Mark Goldenberg - Composer (Music Score), Jules Brenner - Cinematographer, Kent Bateman - Producer, Michael Rosenblatt - Producer, Thomas Coleman - Producer, Matthew Weisman - Screen Story, Jim Cox - Screenwriter, R. Timothy Kring - Screenwriter, Joseph Loeb III - Screenwriter
Todd Howard (Jason Bateman), the cousin of Scott Howard, has recently been accepted into Hamilton University on a full athletic scholarship. Having never been much good at sports he soon realizes that he is there for one reason - because werewolves run in the family. At first Todd is certain that Coach Finstock (Paul Sand) has got the wrong guy, but at the first boxing match of the year the wolf in him emerges.
With his new found fame comes girls, top grades and even the dean's car but as the year goes on, Todd realizes that he is losing his friends and self respect. Can he be a winner without the wolf?
Critics almost universally panned the film. Siskel and Ebert specifically gave it two enthusiastic thumbs down, with Roger Ebert complaining that they had picked, along with Date with an Angel, the two worst movies possible to be released on the same day.[1]