IMDb > Full Eclipse (1993) (TV) > Reviews & Ratings - IMDb
Full Eclipse
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosfull cast and crewtriviaofficial sitesmemorable quotes
Overview
main detailscombined detailsfull cast and crewcompany credits
Awards & Reviews
user reviewsexternal reviewsawardsuser ratingsparents guidemessage board
Plot & Quotes
plot summarysynopsisplot keywordsmemorable quotes
Did You Know?
triviagoofssoundtrack listingcrazy creditsalternate versionsmovie connectionsFAQ
Other Info
box office/businessrelease datesfilming locationstechnical specsliterature listingsNewsDesk
Promotional
taglines trailers and videos posters photo gallery
External Links
showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clips

Reviews & Ratings for
Full Eclipse (TV) More at IMDbPro »

Filter: Hide Spoilers:
Page 1 of 2:[1] [2] [Next]
Index 13 reviews in total 

14 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
URBAN WEREWOLF VIGILANTE COPS, 21 July 2000
10/10
Author: blackstone454

The title explains it all.

If you get a bunch of friends together, on a rainy Saturday night and all of the new releases are gone from the shelves, make you own horror festival: BLADE, VAMPIRE$, FROM DUSK UNTIL DAWN and this kick butt flick. Like the aforementioned movies, it is a purely escapist fantasy, done just well enough as to not insult your intelligence TOO MUCH. A good sense of humor, some snacks and some suspension of disbelief will help make this movie more enjoyable.

There is some sex,plenty of gore, fangs, claws and guns...

The cast seemed to have had a blast in this movie. If you like this kind of stuff, you will enjoy this film.

Was the above review useful to you?

12 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Sleek, sexy, and kind of like X-Men, 10 March 1999
10/10
Author: anonymous

Full Eclipse was a cool werewolf film. It had it all. Action, romance, sex, violence, and cool special effects. Mario Van Peebles is great as Max Dire, the cop who becomes involved with a top secret group of werewolf cops led by Bruce Payne. He is lured into joining by the sexy Patsy Kensit. She is the real reason why I love this film so much. She is so fine, and she is also a good actor. The love scene between her and Mario is the best one I have ever seen in on film. The film is loosely inspired by X-Men, as director Anthony Hickox once said in an interview. With Wolverine type claws, the werewolves take on gangs and other bad guys. I recommend it to werewolf fans.

Was the above review useful to you?

6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Highly unusual and entertaining werewolf flick **SPOILERS**, 7 December 2004
Author: STEVEN DANKO (chesslover55@aol.com) from Brooklyn, NY

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

FULL ECLIPSE is an unusual and offbeat type of werewolf movie. It's a bit different from other films of its genre in that the werewolves are depicted as performing a socially useful function- ridding society of criminals. This is certainly not something one would expect from lycans (as they prefer to be called). But in this instance the werewolves are police officers in a special squad of the Los Angeles Police Department. The squad, referred to as the Pack, is run by Detective Adam Garou. He is played by Bruce Payne, who is one of the finest actors around. Even though he plays to type in most of his roles, as the sinister but suave villain, he never fails to create an uneasy feeling in the viewer. He is very good at his craft and he delivers a sterling performance here. The good guy cop is Detective Max Dire, played by Mario Van Peebles. He is a troubled Officer, trying to deal simultaneously with the aftermath of seeing his partner shot and critically wounded during a police raid on a criminal's hangout and having marital problems at home. He is referred to the Department's police crisis counselor and we see that it is Detective Garou. For those familiar with the werewolf legend in Western Europe, this name holds significance. I caught it right away. The medieval French term for a werewolf is loup-garou, so I knew immediately what Bruce Payne's character really was. Garou invites Dire into his home, ostensibly to involve him in group therapy with a small group of other troubled police officers. But Garou's real motive is to recruit Dire into the Pack and have him become a werewolf, too. This is all being done with a clear purpose in mind. In their werewolf state, the Pack goes after the criminal parasites who prey on society and dispatches them in the style werewolves are famous for. No Miranda Warnings needed here. It's DIRTY HARRY MEETS THE HOWLING! Garou asks Officer Casey Spencer(PATSY KENSIT) to help "recruit" Dire. There's an obvious physical attraction between them and before too long, they're emotionally involved with each other. In a scene which I found unsettling yet tantalizing, the two of them are at the Los Angeles Zoo, sitting in front of the wolf cage. The white wolf in the cage looks at Kensit in a way that suggests he sees her as kin. Kensit is seen talking to a reluctant Van Peebles in a soft and seductive manner about joining the Pack and then she gives him an erotic lick on the mouth. Detective Dire isn't exactly sure just what he's dealing with here, but he knows there's something about this group that isn't kosher. His suspicions were aroused earlier when his partner, who had been mortally wounded, suddenly reappears looking fit, hale, hearty and none the worse for his ordeal. In a prelude of what will later become more apparent, someone had entered the wounded Officer's hospital room and injected a golden brown liquid into his IV drip. Next thing you know, the Officer is back in the saddle chasing down the bad guys like Superman. He can leap great distances and run like a gazelle. Nothing seems to faze him and he is seemingly impervious to harm. And then one day he shows up at one of the local police watering holes where his partner Dire is and blows his brains out right in front of him. Turns out the slug he used was fashioned from a silver dollar he carried for luck. And we all know what silver does to a werewolf. Anyway, Dire and Spencer wind up making love and while he's taking her from behind, we see her sprout fangs and claws and growl in ecstasy. She then explains to Dire that the members of the Pack are able to transform themselves into lupine entities by injecting a serum provided by Garou. She tries to convince him to try it. But Dire wants no part of this and starts to leave. She then shoots him and he falls to the floor, mortally wounded with a bullet in his chest. She then administers the serum to him and it miraculously cures the gunshot wound and "reorders" his internal composition. As it turns out, the serum is Garou's own brain fluid which he extracts with a hypodermic needle and then transfers into quick-shot dispensers. I'm not sure, but I think the FDA might have some issues with that. He then joins her on a two-cop raid against a heavily fortified local drug factory. They shoot up again, turn into fanged crusaders, rip down the protective steel barrier and proceed to turn the pharmaceutical entrepreneurs into hamburger meat. When Garou finds out that she had sex with Dire, he goes ballistic, sprouts fangs and rapes her to teach her a lesson about messin' with the new guy. This sets the stage for the usual macho duelling between two guys who are into the same babe- figuratively and literally. We know it's going to wind up in a fight to the death because Los Angeles isn't big enough for two good-looking werewolf dudes. When the fight to the death occurs, it happens during a full lunar eclipse. Garou is shot in the chest with a silver bullet- not by Dire, but by one of the female members of the Pack. He falls down and we think that's the end of him. But, in Michael Myers fashion, he suddenly gets up and plucks the bullet out of his chest. Hey wait- that's not supposed to happen. We all know that silver can kill a werewolf. Ah- but there's one exception apparently. Seems that a full lunar eclipse protects a werewolf against everything- including silver. Uh oh. Here comes Garou and now he's really pissed. He turns into the biggest werewolf I have ever seen- all fur and fangs and claws. He's like the title character in GRIZZLY. He chases Dire and they fight some more. It looks like he's got the upper hand(or paw) but suddenly the eclipse starts to wane as the Earth's shadow moves off the Moon. Now Garou is no longer protected and he falls off a raised container box that he and Dire had been fighting on. He has now reverted to his human form and we see that he has been mortally injured. He also looks a whole lot older- a sure sign that he's dying. We don't know exactly what does him in-whether it was the residual effect of being shot with silver that could now do its job with the eclipse having passed or whether some silver object pierced his body when he fell off the container. He is covered in blood though and as he lays dying, he makes an entreaty to Dire to carry on his work eradicating criminals lycan style. Dire touches his finger to Garou's blood and we wait to see if he will put it in his mouth. I won't give away the ending here except to say that it's more than a little unnerving. I liked this movie quite a lot and I'll give it an 8 out of 10.

Was the above review useful to you?

6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
"There's a new police force on the streets...and they only come out at night.", 14 January 2002
Author: Backlash007 from Kentucky

Full Eclipse is an excellent spin on the classic werewolf tale and just a fun, cheesy B movie. From the get-go you feel as though you're watching Lethal Weapon 7. There's even the "I'm getting too old for this..." line. Then the "Bionic X-Men" show up in the form of a secret werewolf police squad and it turns into one of my guilty pleasure werewolf flicks. It doesn't touch "The Howling", but it's on the right track. Bruce Payne and Mario Van Peebles are hamming it up a bit but it fits the tone. I always enjoy watching both of those guys. This may be director Anthony Hickox's last good film (besides Warlock: The Armageddon which was made the same year). If so, it's a great way to cap off an impressive but short-lived horror career. Full Eclipse is a little hard to find, but well worth it for a good mix of action, horror, and cheese.

Was the above review useful to you?

5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
This is a good one!, 27 February 2000
8/10
Author: Werewolf-6

As a self-proclaimed werewolf fanatic, I highly suggest this movie! After his partner dies, a dedicated police officer is invited to join a "special unit" on the force. the team is using a special serum, which gives them animalistic qualities. Our hero is forced to take the magic potion, which gives him quite a rush. But it doesn't compare to the shock he gets when he discovers were the serum comes from! Nicely written, good effects, and Paula Marshall! who could ask for anything more?

Was the above review useful to you?

6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
The Stylish werewolf flick., 7 December 2001
Author: Brandon Hamilton (Blade_running)

This is a great movie!!! Quite possibly one of the coolest werewolf movies I've ever seen. First off the action sequences are incredible, John Woo had a major influence on the style of this film. There's jumping with guns'a'blazing, cool slow motion shots, and to top it off...WEREWOLVES!!! The performances couldn't be better, Mario Van Peebles is extremely underrated and Bruce Payne is the quintessential bad guy. The only thing that holds this movie back from true cinematic greatness is probably the fact that is a made for T.V. movie and had to be edited and the budget was not as high as the concept...great concept though!!! This movie is Shaft meets The Howling, throw in Hong Kong-flavored action and you've got Full Eclipse. Coolest Werewolf movie around.

Was the above review useful to you?

3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
An enjoyable werewolf action movie., 6 April 2005
6/10
Author: Noel (Teknofobe70) from Bromsgrove, England

This action-packed thriller is more of a twist on the traditional LAPD action movie rather than a twist on the werewolf movie. It's starts off with two cops, Max Dire and his partner, and his partner is telling him how he's going to quit the force and get married. And he gets shot in the first ten minutes. Also, Max himself has a troubled marriage. But just as I was about to sit back and let ninety minutes of cop movie clichés wash over me, the movie goes in several new and interesting directions ... it's not great, but it definitely kept me entertained.

It comes from director Anthony Hickox, who's first movie was Waxwork in 1988 (which also featured werewolves), and he does a particularly good job here at emulating John Woo -- the action sequences are very exciting, adrenaline-fueled affairs and in the other scenes there are plenty of close ups and interesting sound effects to set the mood of the movie. Mario Van Peebles does his usual action hero thing with great flare, and Bruce Payne makes an excellent villain as Mr A Garou (Garou is French for werewolf, see -- pretty much the only high-brow werewolf reference in the movie). All in all, the directing is expertly done, the script is decent enough and the acting is competent.

But as a movie, it has it's problems. It doesn't really pick up it's pace until the the second half, when Max Dire becomes one of the pack, and that's when things really start to get interesting. The characters aren't really that likable or original, although the cast on the whole do their best. But as a pilot for a TV series, it almost works, and that's what I initially presumed this was. Or perhaps it just sets itself up for future movies. Who knows. If it was intended as a pilot, that kind of explains why the first forty minutes of the movie are so dull.

In conclusion, it's a fairly entertaining movie elevated by some great directing, but the storyline could definitely have used a bit more work. If you're in the mood for a decent action movie, this is one that I might recommend.

Was the above review useful to you?

1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Another guilty pleasure, 14 September 2006
9/10
Author: sarastro7

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

Mario Van Peeples is a cool cat, and he's been in a couple of really cool movies. I love Posse, for instance, but in my opinion his best role is probably as Max in Full Eclipse. This is an underrated, superhero-inspired dark action flick about a secret police task force who are really werewolves. I call them "Team Wolverine", because, well, they're like a team of Wolverines! Max is the promising rookie cop who gets inducted into this task force (without being made a werewolf - at first), among other things by being seduced by the delectable Patsy Kensit, whose role here is also one of her very best.

This movie's got style and coolness oozing out of every orifice. Stylistically, it is brilliant. Lots of cool scenes, cool lines and situations that are just outrageous enough to be very cool and very funny at the same time. As when the team returns to the police station with torn, smoking uniforms and the steering wheel of their van, demanding of the receptionist, "We need a new vehicle". These are some dad-burned cool mudderfokkers!! Of course, the movie is not for everyone. It's a B-movie, sure. I understand why some people would find it silly, or even bad. But it's got a style all its own, and I love it.

9 out of 10.

Was the above review useful to you?

"Go ahead make your day"., 23 July 2011
6/10
Author: lost-in-limbo from the Mad Hatter's tea party.

Anthony Hickox at this time of his career could have been seen as a horror journeyman with such films behind him like; ""Sundown: the Vampire in Retreat", "Hellraiser III", the first two "Warlock" features and the two "Waxwork" films. Also he acted in some other features around this time too. So "Full Eclipse" was another addition to the cycle.

Los Angeles is filled with crime, as detective Max Dire sees his partner brutally gunned down and to make matters worse his girlfriend left him. Soon he's invited to join an elite police group, who would do anything to cut down on crime. Their leader Adam Garou has a serum which he injects into his team that gives them the ability to take on criminals. However Max is hesitant about it, but soon he is seduced into joining them.

After a tough, cracking opening half-hour, from then on it becomes a brooding cop melodrama with a supernatural edge that harboured character conflicts, bemused performances and plenty of posturing. It's a formulaic cop feature with a werewolf twist, but while the pulpy b-grade premise is thoughtfully laid out it's not as rocking as it could have been. More so it gradually gets silly and then lumbers along. While the first half-hour consists of vigorous, but ultra slow-motion action. And boy did director Hickox go mad with his glorious slow-mo. At least the energy levels were high and the violence quite bloody. However when the werewolf angle kicks in (an elite group of cops are dosing up on a serum that gives them superhuman abilities to tackle crooks), it can get sidetracked (you know the stress of the job) and becomes a little preachy (with some sort of parallel to drug addiction -- "At least try it" and "Just watch, then decide."). Where you just wished it would pump out the action. Sure it still stays quite graphic, but then some things happen off screen and its climax pretty much ends on a whimper to only cement its obvious low-budget. Even with these restrictions, Hickox's handling remains crisp with some flashy techniques, slick decors and smooth camera-work.

The stunt-work also has a lot of people rev up and jumping around, especially through things and these werewolves leave plenty of destruction ("He's Acting like Dirty Harry on crack"). As for the make-up effects… it's quite standard and minor. The usual sharp teeth, pointy ears, morphed facials and long claws. Nothing special, but acceptable. Although in the latter stages we do get some guy dressed up in a werewolf costume. Someone says "You want to see something really scary." and then there we go. Even though for me it looked like a fury bear at times. Also these werewolves like to growl… like a panther. Yeah it sounds like something out of those old jungle movies. The performances are agreeable, notwithstanding the stereotypical character arches. Mario Van Pebbles gets by, that is because of that powerful name "Max Dire". Bruce Payne camps it up in a very cold, but lethal manner and Patsy Kensit simply sizzles.

Junky, but mildly satisfying.

"Sometimes its good to know your not alone."

Was the above review useful to you?

Poor film but entirely watchable, 11 July 2008
5/10
Author: SmokeyTee from Wellington, New Zealand

Let's face it this is a bad movie. It has a TV-movie average budget and an average b-list cast. But it keeps the pace up throughout most of the movie, yes a bit slow in places but if you like cheesy aging actions you will probably go in for Full Eclipse.

If you want something just a little better try *One tough Bastard*. It doesn't have werewolves, the main actor is torture and the child's character is dumb as a fence post but Bruce Paine as the villain saves it with some of the best one liners you are likely to get in an action movie - much better than any of the Die-hard sequels anyway! Plus it scores about .4 points better than Full Eclipse. You can't lose!

Was the above review useful to you?


Page 1 of 2:[1] [2] [Next]

Add another review


Related Links

Plot summary Ratings External reviews
Parents Guide Plot keywords Main details
Your user reviews Your vote history