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  • Full Eclipse (1993): Bad Moon Rising on Basic Cable

Full Eclipse (1993): Bad Moon Rising on Basic Cable

Posted on September 2, 2025 By admin No Comments on Full Eclipse (1993): Bad Moon Rising on Basic Cable
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Some movies slip through the cracks of history because they’re underrated gems. Others, like Full Eclipse, were shoved into HBO’s late-night programming lineup because even the Syfy Channel said, “nah, that’s too dumb for us.” Directed by Anthony Hickox and starring Mario Van Peebles and Bruce Payne, this “sci-fi crime thriller” is proof that cocaine was still alive and well in early ’90s Hollywood boardrooms.

The premise? A secret police squad in Los Angeles that can turn into werewolves. Yes. Werewolf cops. That’s the pitch. Somewhere, a studio executive signed off on this after a three-martini lunch and probably thought he was funding the next Predator. What he actually got was Teen Wolf with a badge, a syringe, and a really bad mullet.

The Plot That Chewed Its Own Tail

Max Dire (Mario Van Peebles) is a detective whose life is falling apart. His wife doesn’t love him, his partner kills himself, and his acting choices suggest he didn’t read past page two of the script. Enter Adam Garou (Bruce Payne), a “high-ranking officer” whose name is literally French for “werewolf.” Subtle, huh? That’s like naming your vampire villain “Count Bloodsucker” and hoping no one notices.

Garou runs a self-help group for troubled cops, but instead of hugs and trust exercises, he hands out syringes full of mystery goo harvested from his own brain. The injection turns them into bulletproof, superpowered vigilantes who only come out at night. In other words: LAPD, but with extra hair and worse accountability.

Max eventually joins, gets furry, and learns the hard way that Garou isn’t exactly a motivational speaker—he’s a manipulative alpha werewolf who uses cops like chew toys. There’s also a subplot about romance with Casey (Patsy Kensit), but it’s about as hot as a microwaved burrito left under a desk lamp. The climax pits Max against Garou in a showdown so anticlimactic it makes Underworld: Rise of the Lycans look like The Godfather.


Mario Van Peebles, Patron Saint of Bad ’90s Action

Van Peebles is a charismatic guy—he made New Jack City iconic—but here he looks like he’s trapped in a bet he lost. His Max Dire is supposed to be a tough, brooding cop, but he spends most of the movie looking vaguely annoyed, like someone stole his parking space.

He delivers lines with the intensity of a man trying to remember if he left the oven on. When he finally wolfs out, the transformation is less “feral monster” and more “guy who fell asleep in a barber’s chair halfway through a perm.”


Bruce Payne: Chewing the Scenery (and Maybe the Carpets)

If anyone deserves credit, it’s Bruce Payne, who plays Garou like he’s auditioning for the role of “Sleazy Eurotrash Werewolf” in a nightclub-themed porno. He whispers, he growls, he injects brain juice into his skull while looking like he’s on the world’s worst ayahuasca trip.

Payne clearly knew this script was a joke and decided to just lean in. If Van Peebles is trying to make this serious, Payne is doing interpretive dance in a fur coat.


The Rest of the Pack

The supporting cast includes:

  • Patsy Kensit as Casey Spencer: Max’s love interest, whose main job is to stare meaningfully at him and occasionally inject wolf juice. Their chemistry is like two mannequins shoved together in a store display.

  • Anthony John Denison as Jim Sheldon: Max’s partner who checks out of the movie early by blowing his brains out—smartest character in the film.

  • Dean Norris (yes, Hank from Breaking Bad): He shows up long enough to cash a paycheck and probably regrets every second.


The Werewolf Effects: Spirit Halloween Clearance Bin

For a movie called Full Eclipse, the werewolves look like they escaped from a mid-tier haunted hayride. Forget Rick Baker or even The Howling. These beasts look like fuzzy rejects from Cats: The Musical. The makeup budget must’ve been $35 and a coupon for dog shampoo.

When the cops transform, they don’t even get scary—just slightly hairier and sweatier, like dudes at a 24-hour gym after too much pre-workout powder. The claws? Plastic. The fangs? Walgreens Dracula starter kit. The growling? Like someone’s stomach after Taco Bell.


Action Scenes That Barely Have a Pulse

For an “action-horror thriller,” Full Eclipse spends a shocking amount of time on exposition and slow-motion shots of Van Peebles looking constipated. When the fights do come, they’re as choreographed as a drunk bar brawl at 1 a.m. A lot of running, some growling, a few squibs, and one-liners that land with the grace of a dropped toaster.

The vigilante missions, where wolf-cops take down criminals, should be badass. Instead, they feel like rejected pilot footage for Baywatch Nights. Even the final fight between Max and Garou is shot so darkly you can’t tell if it’s two werewolves or two raccoons fighting over a trash can.


The “Message”

The film wants to be edgy, exploring vigilantism, corruption, and the cost of power. Instead, it delivers the moral complexity of a Saturday morning cartoon. “What if cops could break the law because they’re also wolves?” the movie asks. The answer: “Then you’d have a stupid movie where a guy milks his own brain for steroids.”


HBO, What Were You Thinking?

This was an HBO Original Movie, back when that still meant something. And by “something,” I mean “cheap schlock we can air between reruns of boxing and softcore erotica.” Someone at HBO thought Full Eclipse could be their edgy entry into action-horror. Instead, it became the cinematic equivalent of a wet carpet: dark, soggy, and stinking of regret.


Legacy? Or Lack Thereof

Unlike Blade or Underworld, which found cult audiences, Full Eclipse is remembered only by diehard werewolf fans and people who accidentally taped over it with Real Sex. Its only claim to fame is that Mario Van Peebles can say he was in a werewolf cop movie before the genre was put out of its misery.


Final Thoughts: Put a Silver Bullet in It

Full Eclipse is not scary. It’s not thrilling. It’s not even so-bad-it’s-good. It’s just… furry mediocrity. A film with a premise so dumb it could’ve been genius, but instead, it slogs along with bargain-bin effects, lifeless performances, and dialogue that sounds like it was scribbled on a napkin during a blackout.

If you want to watch werewolves, pick An American Werewolf in London. If you want to watch cop dramas, go for Training Day. If you want both? Sorry—Full Eclipse is the worst of both worlds.

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