WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Horror >

Howling V: The Rebirth

Watch Howling V: The Rebirth For Free

Howling V: The Rebirth

When a group of people from different walks of life converge in a Hungarian castle situated in Budapest which has been sealed for 500 years, they bring with them a werewolf which slowly begins to cut their numbers down.

... more
Release : 1989
Rating : 4.4
Studio : Allied Vision, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Production Design, 
Cast : Phil Davis Victoria Catlin Ben Cole Mary Stavin William Shockley
Genre : Horror

Cast List

Related Movies

An American Werewolf in London
An American Werewolf in London

An American Werewolf in London   1981

Release Date: 
1981

Rating: 7.5

genres: 
Horror  /  Comedy
Stars: 
David Naughton  /  Jenny Agutter  /  Griffin Dunne
Planet of the Dead
Planet of the Dead

Planet of the Dead   1

Release Date: 
1

Rating: 5.5

genres: 
Horror  /  Action
Stars: 
Omari Hardwick
Deep Blue Sea 3
Deep Blue Sea 3

Deep Blue Sea 3   2020

Release Date: 
2020

Rating: 4.7

genres: 
Horror  /  Action  /  Science Fiction
The Unseen
The Unseen

The Unseen   2016

Release Date: 
2016

Rating: 5.4

genres: 
Horror  /  Action  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Aden Young  /  Camille Sullivan  /  Julia Sarah Stone
Neowolf
Neowolf

Neowolf   2010

Release Date: 
2010

Rating: 2.2

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller
Friday the 13th Part 2
Friday the 13th Part 2

Friday the 13th Part 2   1981

Release Date: 
1981

Rating: 6.1

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Amy Steel  /  Adrienne King  /  John Furey
Friday the 13th Part III
Friday the 13th Part III

Friday the 13th Part III   2007

Release Date: 
2007

Rating: 5.6

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Dana Kimmell  /  Catherine Parks  /  Richard Brooker
Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter
Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter

Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter   1984

Release Date: 
1984

Rating: 6

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Judie Aronson  /  Kimberly Beck  /  Joan Freeman
Friday the 13th: A New Beginning
Friday the 13th: A New Beginning

Friday the 13th: A New Beginning   1985

Release Date: 
1985

Rating: 4.8

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Tiffany Helm  /  John Shepherd  /  Juliette Cummins
Wolfen
Wolfen

Wolfen   1981

Release Date: 
1981

Rating: 6.3

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Albert Finney  /  Diane Venora  /  Edward James Olmos
Lunar Luperca
Lunar Luperca

Lunar Luperca   2014

Release Date: 
2014

Rating: 3.9

genres: 
Horror
Stars: 
Terri Claire
Poltergeist II: The Other Side
Poltergeist II: The Other Side

Poltergeist II: The Other Side   1986

Release Date: 
1986

Rating: 5.7

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller

Reviews

Hellen
2021/05/13

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

More
Protraph
2018/08/30

Lack of good storyline.

More
FrogGlace
2018/08/30

In other words,this film is a surreal ride.

More
Paynbob
2018/08/30

It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.

More
b_kite
2017/02/23

A Count (Phil Davis) assembles a group of people from different walks of life to tour a Hungarian castle situated in Budapest which has been sealed off for 500 years, they bring with them a werewolf which slowly begins to cut their numbers down. This one which was filmed in Budapest and directed by Neal Sundstrom, whose largest directing credit was that he co-directed 1988's Space Mutiny with Reb Brown. This one contains the same writing team as the boring fourth entry and its nice to see that they stepped it up by giving it a cool as hell castle in Europe with lots of snow going on, it takes on a Agatha Christie feel and ultimately is pretty much a variation of "Ten Little Indians", in parts you almost fill like your drawn into the castle at some points, so the plot is good and unique and fits well. As for the characters they are mostly a little flat but some are likable my three favorites were Ray Price played by co-writer, screenplay writer, and producer Clive Turner (whose name will return again in this franchise!), David Gillespie who was played by Ben Cole and Jonathan Lane who was played by Mark Sivertsen. One thing however I didn't like and I guess its all about the budget, which Wikipedia says was about $2 million, but, I don't think the film used much of the castle, characters stumble into the same places and venture into the same areas several times, but, still its nothing to rant about. The special effects are decent I think they used the wolf costume from the previous installment here and you really don't see any of it nor the werewolf itself, in one scene it looks to be a man in a waist high costume and its in the shadows so you don't see nothing, a better shot of the werewolf's face is later seen towards the end, but, still its not really shown at all, also take note that this is the only film in the entire series to not feature a werewolf transformation so that sucks, what also sucks is that in the very beginning of the film a group of Hungarian people living in the castle commit suicide, I want say why! but, the movie then tries to convince use towards the end SPOILERS! that the group are actually decedents of these people even tho most of them are American and one is Australian so that's kinda hard to believe. Also the film towards the third act kinda gives up who the werewolf is if you pay attention, and I was right! The acting here is decent I got more out of the male characters then the female characters, but, other then the performance by Elizabeth She as Mary Lou Summers and I don't know if she was putting on the whole airhead girl character or if she was acting it out but either way it wasn't that good, everyone else is decent and does a OK job (Davis and Catlin being the two best here), the dialogue however gets pretty stupid in some scenes, but, isn't all bad. The only person here that really went on to do anything else was William Shockley who is mostly known for playing bartender Hank Lawson on "Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman" and he serves as the only really familiar face, and Victoria Catlin who also played on "Twin Peaks". As for violence and nudity, there's some bloody throat ripping's, but, thats about it, and as for nudity Mary Stavin shows off her breasts in one scene while Elizabeth She despite her acting shows off her beautiful rump and body in another scene. If it wasn't for these two things the film could have probably past for a PG-13 rating. All in all I have to say "Howling V: The Rebirth" is the best of the sequels i have seen so far, its no masterpiece, it suffers from the usual problems here, bad acting, bad occasional dialogue, and also lacks a good soundtrack song like the previous three sequels had even tho the theme here is still good, but, to me it doesn't have to be great, it entertained me that's all that matters.

More
atinder
2015/03/08

The howling 5 1989Well this is like the Halloween 3 of this series , as there are only two/there brief moments of seeing werewolf in this movieThe opening scene was intruding , a couple who kill them self for some reason but you can here av baby crying in the back ground in the castle then the movie fast forwards , I forget how many yearsA number of stranger end up into same castle and there are picked of one by one by a werewolf. We don't get to see much of attack , only the aftermath of the death , so this did not much werewolf or even that gore.they later then sooner figure out that one of them is the werewolf. soon people start to kill each other, thinking they are the werewolf and the never actually tell you or show who actually werewolf but they do Seem to imply who it was the whole timeMore of a who done it movie then werewolf movie and the acting in the movie was some of the worst in the series3/10

More
capkronos
2014/09/09

Count Istvan (Philip Davis) invites nine strangers to an isolated Hungarian castle that has been closed down for 500 years after everyone inside was slaughtered save for a baby. Among the guests invited to the opening are photographer David Gillespie (Ben Cole), doctor Catherine Peake (Victoria Catlin), airhead aspiring actress Marylou Summers (Elizabeth Shé), writer Gail Cameron (Stephanie Faulkner), pro tennis player Jonathan Lane (Mark Sivertsen), adulterous playboy Richard Hamilton (William Shockley), historian Professor Dawson (Nigel Triffitt), Scandinavian actress Anna Benson (Mary Stavin) and ponytail-sporting Aussie Ray Price (Clive Turner, who also produced and wrote the script). Quite a varied group, but each turn out to be connected in some way they don't yet realize and all happen to share the same odd birthmark on their arm. Oh yes, and one just so happens to be a werewolf. The Count has lured them all there to find out just who it is and to finally put an end to the curse once and for all.Part V isn't at all like the previous four films. In fact, this is one bizarre series in general. The first is a vastly entertaining, in-joke- filled horror film with a sense of humor that helped put director Joe Dante on the map and was an entirely American production. The second is a misbegotten attempt at camp barely linked to the first film, which had UK backing and was filmed mostly in Prague. The third is a truly bizarre kitchen sink horror-comedy-social commentary that was an Australian production (with marsupial werewolves). Part IV was a serious and dull virtual remake of the first movie minus the professionalism and humor that was filmed in South Africa. And this one, which has clearly been influenced most by "Ten Little Indians," had UK, US and Hungarian backing and was filmed in Budapest. If you're keeping score, that's five different movies filmed in five different countries that seldom even relate to one another. None of the sequels come anywhere near the original film and this is no exception to that rule, but it's somewhat better than most of the other sequels.One of the things I liked best about this was the Gothic setting, which is quite unusual for a werewolf tale. There are secret passageways and an endless labyrinth of catacombs underneath the castle for the action to play out in and the art direction and sets are fairly good in this low-budget film. It's also set during a bad blizzard that traps all of the characters inside the castle, so the snowy atmosphere was a nice change of pace, as well. That said, every other component to this film was highly uneven. The cast was a mixed bag of competent actors (Davis, Catlin) and embarrassing amateurs (Shé being the worst offender there, though several of the male cast members give her a run for her money). The dialogue is frequently laughable and the whole mystery plot (possibly influenced by the earlier THE BEAST MUST DIE [1974]) also isn't anything to write home about. The filmmakers employ at least one 'cheat' scene to conceal the identity of the wolf, which isn't revealed until the very end.Perhaps the most disappointing thing of all is that this film is sorely lacking in werewolf scenes. You rent a werewolf movie to see werewolves, am I right? Well here we never once get a full view of one of the creature. It is almost always shown in silhouette or in shots too dark to make out and the werewolf's face is only shown two times that I recall, with both shots little more than brief flashes. Needless to say, that also means there are no man-to-wolf transformation scenes that the series bases hinges its reputation on and that all four previous films contain. Don't expect any blood, gore or on-screen deaths either. All of the victims either just react to an approaching werewolf or get pulled off-screen to die. If not for two instances of female nudity, this probably would have received a PG-13 rating.

More
Wuchak
2012/02/20

HOWLING V: THE REBIRTH (1989, 96 minutes) Shot in an actual Hungarian castle, the plot is borrowed from "The Beast Must Die" (1974) wherein a group of people spend the night in a huge European estate while one of the party, a werewolf, systematically butchers the guests. It's basically a whodunit a la Agatha Christie's "And Then There Were None." It's also reminiscent of the underrated "Devil's Nightmare" aka "The Devil Walks at Midnight" (1971), albeit not as good.Still, it comes close, and although the werewolf is barely seen I found this a solid low-budget mystery flick with a werewolf. Besides, Elizabeth Shé (Marylou) has an exceptional scene and there's a superb Gothic score. But gorehounds who want to see loads of bloody werewolf action should pass (there's a little, but not enough to appease modern gorehounds).GRADE: B-

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now