"It starts with a scratch, then a silence, then something in you howling back."
Those who vanish never really vanish.
The wolf doesn’t hunt for hunger—it hunts for silence.
Wolfs drags you into a world where the real threat isn’t what lurks in the dark—it’s what you become when instinct takes over.
A remote village sealed off. A string of brutal killings. And suspicion creeping under every door.
Set in an isolated rural town, the story begins with a series of disappearances and savage killings—claw marks, torn bodies, and howls in the night.
As fear spreads, neighbors turn on each other, trust decays, and survival becomes personal.
Enter Mara, a wildlife biologist returning home to search for her missing brother. But what she finds isn’t a beast—it’s something between.
The wounds aren’t just animal. They’re human.
The village whispers grow louder.
Who’s still a man? Who’s already changed?
This isn’t just about werewolves—it’s about what we’re willing to lose to survive.
Wolfs explores more than horror. It dives into paranoia, identity, and the terrifying urge to surrender control.
Some embrace the transformation to gain power.
But in doing so, they sacrifice everything that made them human.
Cinematography captures shadow and light with eerie beauty—moonlit forests, twisted silhouettes, and slow, haunting metamorphoses that mesmerize as much as they disturb.
Becoming a monster is easy—when you believe you need to be one to live.
Beyond the blood and fur, Wolfs raises hard questions:
Would you bite to survive? Or hold onto your soul and risk dying human?
It’s a primal, moral war fought not with claws—but with choices.
When night falls and the moon hits its peak—it's not the howlers you fear. It’s the ones who stay silent.