Out Come the Wolves 2024
“Out Come the Wolves” is a 2024 Canadian horror-thriller directed by Adam MacDonald (known for Backcountry), featuring Missy Peregrym, Joris Jarsky, and Damon Runya. A tense love triangle unfolds amid a secluded cabin and forest hunting trip. When one of the men is mauled by wolves, the group’s survival instincts kick in—testing loyalty, courage, and moral limits.🧭 Release Info Theatrical & digital release: August 30, 2024. DV D/Blu‑ray: December 17, 2024. Streaming platforms: Shudder (Nov 29, 2024), Hulu (June 20, 2025).🎭 Critics Generally favorable reviews, with Rotten Tomatoes around ~63–72% critics and mixed user scores Metacritic score: 68/100 (based on critic reviews) Critics praised realism, tension, and performances, especially Peregrym’s, but noted pacing dips in the middle🎥 Highlights from Reviews RogerEbert.com: “the human drama in the first half is stronger than the wolf‑attack finale”. Collider: “intense survival thriller … a bloody wolf buffet”. CGMagazine: “practical effects … visceral … wolves were real”. Morbidly Beautiful and Loud & Clear: praised Peregrym’s performance and the film’s emotional arc.🍿 Is it worth watching? If you enjoy intimate character drama that shifts to raw, nature‑driven horror, this is worth a watch. Strong acting, naturalistic tension, real wolf effects, and a survivalist feel make it stand out—especially if you like Backcountry-style thrillers.🎥 Global Box Office Performance Here’s the box‑office summary for Out Come the Wolves (2024): Worldwide Gross: Approximately US $18,750. Domestic (U.S.): ~$9,649, including an opening weekend of $7,384 across about 16 theaters. International (recorded region, UAE): $9,101.Note: International totals may be incomplete; publicly available data appears limited to select regions (e.g. UAE), which suggests that full global distribution likely remained minimal.🎯 Conclusion Out Come the Wolves (2024) is a gritty Canadian horror-thriller blending emotional tension, survival drama, and visceral wolf-attack horror. Directed by Adam MacDonald (Backcountry), the film explores betrayal and loyalty in the wild, supported by strong performances—especially from Missy Peregrym—and practical effects that ground the terror in realism. It’s not a fast-paced gore-fest but rather a slow-burn survival story with a personal edge. If you're into nature-based thrillers with psychological weight and authentic atmosphere, it’s worth watching—particularly once it hits streaming (Shudder in Nov 2024, Hulu in mid-2025).
- English (Canada)


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